
Rejected and Claimed by the Rogue
Chapter 5
The drums began. A low, rhythmic thrumming that vibrated through the floorboards of the empty Pack House, syncing with the frantic beating of my heart. Outside, hundreds of pack members were chanting, their voices rising in a feverish crescendo. "Luna Isabela. Luna Isabela."
Each syllable was a fresh insult, but today, they were also my salvation.
I pressed the stolen black ledger tight against my chest, the cold leather warming against my skin. It was heavy—not just in weight, but in the innocent lives it represented. Pierce’s treason was written in ink on these pages, and I was the only one who could deliver it to the right hands. But first, I had to survive leaving the territory.
I slipped out of the study, moving like a ghost through the corridors that had once been my home. The servants, the guards, even the omegas were all gathered at the ritual grounds for the coronation. The house was eerily silent, smelling of stale cigar smoke and the lingering rot of Pierce’s cruelty. I didn't look back at the infirmary door. The Sloan who healed quietly in the shadows was dead. The woman walking out was a survivor.
I burst through the rear kitchen door and sprinted toward the treeline. The cool night air hit my face, smelling of pine and freedom. My legs burned, weakened from days of starvation in the omega cells, but my wolf surged forward, lending me her strength. *Run,* she urged. *Run before he claims her. Run before he remembers us.*
I tore through the underbrush, thorns snagging my gray rags, tearing at my skin. I didn't stop. I couldn't. The border was a mile out—a mile between me and the neutral lands where Pierce’s Alpha command would lose its absolute hold.
The chanting grew fainter behind me, replaced by the sounds of the night forest. Finally, I saw it. The ancient oak tree that marked the northern edge of the Blood River territory. Its bark was scarred with the claw marks of generations of wolves who had patrolled this line.
I skidded to a halt before it, my chest heaving. I could cross now. I could just step over the line and disappear. But if I left the bond intact, Pierce would always be able to track me. He would feel my emotions, sense my location, and his Alpha voice could still bring me to my knees if he got close enough.
I had to break it.
I reached into the pocket of my rags and pulled out a crumpled piece of parchment I’d stolen from the study, along with a silver letter opener I’d swiped from a desk. My hands trembled, not with fear, but with the magnitude of what I was about to do.
I placed my left hand against the rough bark of the oak. With a sharp inhale, I drew the silver blade across my palm.
Pain flared, hot and sharp, but it was nothing compared to the agony of the last three days. Blood welled up, dark and thick in the moonlight. I pressed my bleeding palm flat against the parchment, leaving a stark, crimson handprint—the ancient symbol of a blood oath.
Dip, write. Dip, write.
Using my own blood as ink, I scrawled the words that would shatter my world.
*"I, Sloan Morgan, formerly of the Blood River Pack, do hereby reject you, Alpha Pierce, as my mate. I reject your title. I reject your bond. I reject your blood."*
I took a breath that rattled in my lungs. *"Let the Moon Goddess witness my release."*
I slammed the parchment onto the trunk of the border tree, driving the silver letter opener through the center of the bloody handprint to pin it in place.
The moment the metal pierced the wood, the world stopped.
A soundless crack echoed in the center of my chest, followed by a blinding, white-hot pain. It felt as if an invisible hook had been ripped violently from my heart. I gasped, falling to my knees in the dirt, clutching my chest. My wolf howled in mourning—not for Pierce, but for the loss of the mate bond itself, a sacred connection now severed beyond repair.
The pain was suffocating, a vacuum where a soul should be. But then, it cleared. The heavy, suffocating pressure of Pierce’s dominance vanished. The invisible chain around my neck dissolved.
Silence hung heavy in the forest for one heartbeat. Two.
Then, from a mile away, a sound tore through the night that made the birds scatter from the trees.
It was a roar. A guttural, agonizing scream of pure, unadulterated loss. It wasn't human, and it wasn't entirely wolf. It was the sound of an Alpha being brought to his knees.
I squeezed my eyes shut, imagining the scene. Pierce, standing on the dais, the crown in his hands, ready to place it on Isabela’s head. And then—the snap. The sudden, violent emptiness. He would be on the ground now, gasping for air, his wolf thrashing in confusion and pain as the bond he had ignored was ripped away from him.
He knew. He finally knew what he had lost.
"Goodbye, Alpha," I whispered into the dark.
I stood up, my legs shaking but my spirit lighter than it had been in years. I turned my back on the Blood River territory, stepped over the boundary line, and disappeared into the shadows of the neutral lands.
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