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Pregnant and Rejected by My Fated Alpha Mate Novel Cover

Pregnant and Rejected by My Fated Alpha Mate

The Grand Hall of the Dark Moon Pack smelled of pine, roasted meat, and the heavy, electric scent of anticipation. Hundreds of eyes watched me as I walked toward the dais, the silk of my white ceremonial gown whispering against the stone floor. This was it. The moment I had prepared for since I was a child. The moment I would finally become Luna. At the end of the aisle stood Jonas. My Alpha. My mate. He looked devastatingly handsome in his formal black suit, his dark hair swept back, revealing the strong line of his jaw. But it was his eyes that held me captive—golden and burning with the same fierce love that thumped a chaotic rhythm against my ribs.
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Chapter 3

The bond didn’t die quietly. It screamed.

My father drove like a man possessed, his knuckles white on the steering wheel as we tore down the interstate, putting miles between me and the territory line. But distance didn’t dull the pain. It amplified it.

The Rejection Fever hit me somewhere around the state border. It started as a shivering cold in my marrow, then exploded into a fire that felt like it was boiling my blood. I curled into a ball in the passenger seat, my teeth chattering so hard I thought they might crack. My wolf was howling—a long, mournful sound that echoed endlessly in the cavern of my mind. She was grieving the loss of her mate, thrashing against the emptiness where Jonas used to be.

“Leslie?” My father’s voice was tight with panic. “Hold on, honey. Just hold on.”

“I’m… okay,” I gasped, though sweat was pouring down my face. I pressed my hand harder against my stomach. *The baby. I have to survive this for the baby.*

Every mile was a battle. My body wanted to shut down, to succumb to the shock of severing a soul bond. But my mind was a fortress. I focused on the road ahead, on the blurry taillights of trucks, on anything but the gaping hole in my chest. I thought of Jonas on the floor, writhing in agony, and a dark, vindictive part of me hoped it hurt him more. He had chosen his pain. I was just escaping mine.

By the time we reached the airport, I was weak, trembling like a leaf in a storm, but I was standing. My father hugged me briefly at the curb, slipping a thick envelope of cash and a burner phone into my hand. He didn’t say goodbye. He couldn’t. If he spoke, he would break, and an Alpha’s Beta could not be seen breaking.

I walked into the terminal alone. I boarded the plane to London alone. And as the plane lifted off, leaving the continent behind, I felt the last phantom thread of Jonas finally snap. Silence fell over my soul. It was lonely, terrible, and completely free.

***

Six months later, the rain in London felt like a second skin.

I adjusted the strap of my bag, carefully navigating the slick cobblestones of the narrow street. My belly had popped, a firm, undeniable curve hidden beneath my oversized wool coat. I was no longer Leslie Hamilton, the rejected Luna of the Dark Moon Pack. Here, I was just Leslie, a quiet American archivist with a passion for history and a penchant for solitude.

The Lycan Historical Society was housed in a building that looked more like a cathedral than a library. It smelled of old paper, dust, and the deep, earthy scent of ancient magic. It was a sanctuary. The Lycans here didn’t care about American pack politics. They didn’t know about Jonas, or Amoura, or the scandal that had nearly destroyed me. To them, I was just a pregnant woman who knew how to translate Old High Wolf tongue.

“Morning, Leslie,” old Mr. Henderson grunted from behind the front desk. He was a Gamma from a local pack, retired and grumpy, but kind enough.

“Morning, Arthur,” I replied, keeping my voice low. I kept my head down, avoiding eye contact. Old habits died hard.

I made my way to the archives in the back, a labyrinth of towering wooden shelves filled with manuscripts that predated the founding of the United States. My job was simple: organize, catalog, preserve. It was quiet work. Safe work.

Today, I was looking for a specific ledger from the 17th century—a record of Lycan bloodlines that my supervisor needed for a symposium. According to the catalog, it was on the top shelf of aisle four.

I sighed, looking up at the shelf. It was at least eight feet high. Usually, I would just grab the rolling ladder, but my center of gravity had shifted in the last few weeks, making heights dizzying and dangerous.

“Okay, little wolf,” I whispered to my belly, rubbing the fabric of my coat. “Let’s be careful.”

I dragged the heavy wooden ladder over, checking the lock on the wheels. I climbed slowly, one rung at a time, my breath coming a little shorter than usual. I reached for the ledger, my fingers brushing the leather spine.

Just a little more.

I stretched, my shirt riding up slightly. Suddenly, a wave of dizziness hit me—a remnant of the morning sickness that still plagued me occasionally. My foot slipped on the rung.

I gasped, grabbing the shelf for support, but the heavy ledger tumbled out, falling straight toward my head.

I flinched, bracing for the impact.

It never came.

A hand—large, pale, and impossibly fast—snatched the heavy book out of the air inches from my face.

I froze, my heart hammering against my ribs. I looked down.

Standing at the bottom of the ladder was a man I hadn’t heard approach. He was tall, wearing a charcoal suit that looked tailored to the millimeter. His hair was the color of sand, his eyes a piercing, intelligent grey. He held the heavy ledger in one hand as if it weighed nothing.

“Careful,” he said. His voice was deep, smooth like polished river stones. It wasn’t an Alpha’s bark. It was something far more potent: absolute, quiet authority.

I scrambled down the ladder, my face burning. “I… thank you. I’m sorry. I slipped.”

He didn’t move away as I reached the floor, but he didn’t crowd me either. He maintained a respectful distance, handing me the book with a slow, deliberate movement.

“These shelves are treacherous even for those without… extra cargo,” he said, his eyes flicking briefly to my bump before returning to my face. There was no judgment in his gaze, only a calm curiosity.

I instinctively wrapped my arms around my stomach. I was wearing a scent blocker—a heavy, herbal paste I applied every morning to mask my status and the scent of my pup—but powerful wolves could sometimes see through it.

“I can manage,” I said, my voice sharper than I intended. Defensiveness was my default setting now.

He tilted his head, studying me. He didn’t smell like the wet dog scent of the local pack wolves. He smelled of rain, cedar, and old parchment. Clean. crisp. Expensive.

“I am sure you can,” he agreed effortlessly. “But there is no shame in assistance. I am Wells. Wells Morgan.”

He extended a hand.

My breath hitched. Morgan. That was a Royal Lycan name. One of the ruling families of the European council. I hesitated, then took his hand. His skin was cool, his grip firm but gentle. He didn’t squeeze. He didn’t try to dominate.

“Leslie,” I said. Just Leslie.

A spark jumped between our palms—not the overwhelming, consuming fire of a mate bond, but something softer. A hum of recognition. A question.

He didn’t pull away immediately. He looked at me, really looked at me, as if he were reading the invisible scars etched into my skin.

“Well, Leslie,” he said, releasing my hand slowly. “Perhaps next time, you might allow me to reach the high shelves for you. The history of our kind is heavy enough without risking a fall.”

He offered a small, polite smile—one that didn’t demand anything in return—and turned to walk away, disappearing into the shadows of the library as silently as he had arrived.

I stood there in the dust motes, clutching the ledger to my chest, my heart beating a strange, new rhythm. For the first time in six months, the silence inside me didn’t feel quite so lonely.

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