
My Mate Rejected Me and Crowned His Mistress Luna
Chapter 2
The growls grew closer. I could smell them now—rot and blood and something feral that made my stomach turn. Three shapes emerged from the darkness, circling me like I was prey.
I was.
The first Rogue lunged, and I didn't even have time to scream before a massive black wolf exploded from the trees. It moved like liquid shadow, tearing through the Rogues with terrifying precision. Claws. Teeth. The sound of bones snapping.
In seconds, it was over.
The black wolf stood in the center of the carnage, its chest heaving. Then it shifted, bones cracking and reforming until a man stood where the beast had been. Tall. Broad-shouldered. Dark hair plastered to his forehead from the rain.
He walked toward me, his expression cold and calculating. I tried to move, but my body wouldn't cooperate. The rejection had drained everything from me.
"Another Rogue," he muttered, crouching beside me. His hand reached for my neck, checking for a pulse.
The moment his skin touched mine, the world exploded.
Electricity shot through my veins, white-hot and overwhelming. I gasped, my back arching off the wet ground. The man jerked back, his eyes wide with shock.
"Mine," he growled, the word rumbling from somewhere deep in his chest.
And for the first time in my life, something inside me answered.
A presence. Faint, buried deep, but there. My wolf.
"What—" I tried to speak, but he was already lifting me into his arms.
"We need to move. Now."
---
I woke up burning.
Fever consumed me, turning my skin to fire. I thrashed against the sheets, but strong hands held me down.
"Easy," a voice said. His voice. "Your body's trying to shift. The mate bond is forcing it."
Mate bond. The words should have terrified me, but all I could focus on was the pain. It felt like my bones were trying to break free from my skin.
"Something's wrong," he said, his tone sharp. "Your scent—it's muted. Suppressed."
I felt his fingers at my throat, and then the weight of my mother's locket was gone. The one thing I had left of her.
"No—" I tried to protest, but the words died as a wave of power flooded the room.
My scent. Rich and potent, filling every corner of the small space. The man inhaled sharply, his eyes flashing gold.
"Alpha," he breathed. "You're an Alpha."
The pain intensified, and then my body gave in. Bones cracked. Skin stretched. I screamed as fur erupted across my arms, my legs, my entire body reshaping itself into something new.
When it was over, I stood on four legs, panting. The world looked different—sharper, clearer. I could smell everything. The rain outside. The earth beneath the floorboards. And him.
He shifted beside me, his black wolf dwarfing mine. But he didn't dominate. He waited, patient, until I took the first step.
Then we ran.
The forest blurred around us as we moved through the trees. For the first time in my life, I felt whole. Complete. My wolf sang with joy, and I let her lead, trusting her instincts.
When we finally stopped, the man shifted back. I followed, my body remembering how to be human again.
"I'm Jericho," he said, his voice softer now. "Jericho Hayes."
I stared at him, still trying to process everything. "Kaia."
"I know." He stepped closer, his hand reaching up to cup my face. "You're my mate, Kaia. And I'm going to make sure no one ever hurts you again."
---
The Lycan Palace was nothing like Shadow Ridge. Where my old pack had been all sharp edges and cold efficiency, this place felt alive. Warm. Safe.
Jericho didn't coddle me. He could have—I was broken, traumatized, barely holding myself together. But instead, he handed me over to his Gamma, a woman named Sera who looked at me like I was a challenge she intended to win.
"You've got Alpha blood," Sera said on our first day of training. "Time to act like it."
She worked me until I couldn't stand. Then she worked me harder.
But Jericho was always there afterward. Not hovering, not controlling. Just present. He'd sit with me during meals, asking about my day. He'd walk with me through the gardens, telling me stories about his pack. He courted me the way Alistair never had—with patience, with respect, with partnership.
"You don't have to be afraid here," he told me one night, his hand finding mine in the darkness. "You're not wolfless. You're not weak. You never were."
I wanted to believe him. And slowly, as the weeks turned to months, as my body grew stronger and my wolf grew louder, I started to.
I wasn't the girl Alistair had rejected anymore.
I was something else entirely.
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