Follow
Chapters
Share
Rejected at My Own Birthday Celebration Novel Cover

Rejected at My Own Birthday Celebration

During my birthday gathering, Erik Hawkins, the Lycan Prince and my mate, wrapped his arm around Gracie Shaw, his childhood crush and unattainable dream. He gently patted her belly and turned to me, his voice dripping with false concern. “She’s pregnant. What should we do, darling?” The room fell silent, the tension thick enough to choke on. No one at the table dared to stand up for me, nor did they worry I might make a scene. I stood calmly, my voice steady despite the storm raging inside me. “Congratulations.” Congratulations to him for achieving what he’d always wanted, and congratulations to me for finally letting go. Loving him had long since become a draining effort. --- An hour had passed since the party was supposed to begin. The dishes were cold, and even the server, a young Delta from our pack, had asked multiple times if it was time to bring out the cake.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 5

I tossed my belongings into the suitcase hastily, my hands trembling with urgency. I needed to leave—now. The pack’s airport wasn’t far, and I didn’t care where I was going. The sudden freedom felt foreign, overwhelming. Since my awakening at sixteen, my life had revolved around Erik. What began as guilt for the death of Officer Timothy Rice—the Beta who saved me from drowning—morphed into a suffocating concern. I’d watch him, the Lycan Prince, standing alone on the balcony of the packhouse, a cup of espresso in his hand, his gaze distant. My wolf whimpered softly in the back of my mind, but I ignored it. Loving him had become my purpose. But he never needed it, and now, I no longer had to offer it.

My phone buzzed incessantly—calls from Alpha Ambrose and Luna Sariyah, my parents. Their voices were laced with worry, their alpha and luna auras pressing against me even through the phone. “I’m fine,” I assured them, my tone firm despite the ache in my chest. “I just need some time to myself.” I silenced my phone as the plane taxied for takeoff, shoving it into my bag. Closing my eyes, I felt a strange lightness, as if the weight of the mate bond had finally lifted. No more Erik. No more constant reminders of how I’d supposedly ruined his life.

The flight was short, and when I landed, I turned on my phone. A barrage of messages flooded the screen—all from Erik. The latest one was timestamped just minutes ago. “Elena, it’s midnight. Aren’t you coming home? I set the curfew at ten.”

I stared at the message, my wolf bristling with irritation. *Curfew?* After the rejection? The formal words of his rejection still echoed in my mind, sharp and final. “I, Erik Hawkins, Lycan Prince of the Silvermoon Pack, reject you, Elena White, daughter of Alpha Ambrose Bell, as my mate.” The pain of that moment had been excruciating, the bond snapping like a broken thread. Yet here he was, acting as if he still had the right to control me.

I didn’t respond. Instead, I flagged down a taxi driver, a lone werewolf who eyed me curiously but didn’t ask questions. As we drove away from the airport, I caught a glimpse of my reflection in the window. My brown hair was a mess, my green eyes shadowed with exhaustion. But for the first time in years, I felt a flicker of something—hope, maybe? Independence.

My phone buzzed again. This time, it was a message from Erik: “We’re taking the bonding photos with Gracie—no time to waste with the ceremony coming up.” I scoffed, a bitter chuckle escaping my lips. Why was he telling me this? Was he trying to rub it in? To remind me that the five years we’d shared as mates meant nothing now that he was planning a future with Gracie Shaw, his childhood crush?

I typed back quickly, my fingers steady despite the storm of emotions inside me. “Okay, take lots of photos. I won’t be at the ceremony.” He started typing again, but I didn’t wait to see what he had to say. I turned off my phone and leaned back in the seat, my wolf quiet for once. There was no Erik anymore. No one to remind me that I was the reason his life had gone off course. No one to make me feel like I owed him anything.

The taxi driver dropped me off at a small hotel near the coast. As I checked in, I felt a strange sense of relief. This was my chance to start over—to be someone other than Erik Hawkins’ mate. Someone who wasn’t defined by guilt or obligation.

Later that night, as I lay in bed, my phone buzzed once more. I hesitated before looking at the screen. It was Erik again. “Elena, where are you? You can’t just leave like this.”

I stared at the message, my wolf growling softly in frustration. He didn’t get to dictate my life anymore. The rejection was final, the bond severed. I was free. And for the first time in years, I intended to live like it.

You may also like

20 Years His Luna, Branded a Rogue for a Vanilla Omega Novel Cover
8.0
"Bow to your true Luna, Mother, or I will break your legs myself." The ceremonial hall went dead silent as Jace, the son I carried for nine months and trained to be the future Alpha, placed the ancestral silver diadem onto Lyra's head. My husband of twenty years stood beside them, his hand resting protectively on the young Omega's waist. They pointed at the shattered ritual chalice at my feet, declaring my blood toxic, a curse to the pack's prosperity. Kael's claws extended, ripping the Luna mark from my collarbone in front of the entire assembly. The rogue brand seared into my ruined shoulder. Blood dripped down my fingers, hitting the snow as the massive, shadow-draped gates of the Northern Fortress slowly creaked open.
After My Alpha Betrayed Me, I Became Lycan Queen Novel Cover
8.4
The morning light filtered through the heavy curtains of the Alpha's private suite as I balanced the small wooden box in my hands. Inside lay a traditional pre-ceremony gift—a hand-carved wolf figurine meant to symbolize our union. My fingers traced the intricate details one last time before I knocked on the door. "Enter," came Austin's deep voice from within. I pushed open the door, my heart racing with a mixture of excitement and nervousness. This was supposed to be our moment—the calm before the storm of the Mate Ceremony that would bind us together forever. But the sight that greeted me froze my blood. Jolene Gonzalez stood behind Austin, her fingers deftly adjusting his tie. Her body pressed against his back in a gesture too intimate for mere pack members. The Alpha's suite—his private sanctuary—had been violated by her presence.
Betrayed by My Alpha Mate Novel Cover
9.7
The forest outside Seattle held its breath as I knelt before Seraphina's altar, moonlight filtering through the ancient pines to illuminate my trembling hands. The silver pendant that had once belonged to my mother glinted in my palm—the last connection to my former life as a pack healer, before I'd sacrificed everything for a mate who never truly wanted me. "Are you certain you wish to proceed, little wolf?" Seraphina's voice carried on the night breeze, her silhouette tall and imposing against the backdrop of her woodland altar. The dark witch's eyes reflected the moonlight like a predator's, assessing my determination. "I have nothing left to lose," I whispered, my voice breaking. "Five years I've been bound to an Alpha who looks through me rather than at me. Five years I've been his racing partner, his pack's omega, his marked mate—yet never his Luna in anything but name." Seraphina circled me, her long fingers trailing across my shoulders. "The Moon Goddess blessed your mate bond, wolfless one. Such divine connections are not easily severed, even by my craft." I flinched at the term 'wolfless.' It was a truth that had defined my existence—an omega without her wolf, marked by an Alpha who had only completed the bond out of obligation when my scent revealed our fated connection. Christopher Hayes had never forgiven me for not being what he wanted: a powerful she-wolf worthy of the Shadowridge Alpha.
HOSTILE OATH Novel Cover
8.1
Vivian bears the weight of an ancestral curse, a yoke forged in darkness, which was meant to be broken. A future ravaged by war and chaos loomed, threatening her destiny but Vivian's path was not yet set to answer to her inheritance. Ignorant of her true identity, she couldn't control the powers she possessed, losing loved ones in the process and consumed by self-guilt. Yet, from the ashes of despair, she felt the rage and determination to harness the powers consuming her in her shadow and forge a new path; maybe she could get back all she had lost in all possible ways she could. Prophecy were made, and a formidable force stirred, rising to challenge her claim. When a greater threat arose, Vivian faced a brutal reality: prepare for battle or succumb to the shadows but there was a price to pay. She was left with two options; reclaim her birthright or shatter the chains of destiny!
My Alpha Replaced Me with a Rogue’s Mate Novel Cover
8.7
The storm rattled the windows of the Pack House as I paced the foyer, towels in hand. Leonardo was late returning from border patrol, and worry gnawed at my stomach. Seven years as his Luna had taught me to trust my instincts, and tonight they screamed that something was wrong. The front doors burst open with a bang that made me jump. Leonardo stood there, soaked to the bone, his powerful frame silhouetted against the lightning that split the sky behind him. But it wasn't his unusual lateness or the storm that made my blood run cold—it was what he carried in his arms. A woman. A petite, trembling woman with wide, tear-filled eyes and two small pups clinging to her skirts. "Jayleen!" Leonardo's voice carried an urgency I'd never heard before. "Quickly, get Dr.
Reborn From The Lake: My Stoic Savior Novel Cover
7.4
Bridget, a ruthless twenty-first-century Wall Street analyst, woke up violently coughing up murky lake water in a decaying 1978 slum. She quickly realized she was trapped in the body of a naive, marginalized teenager who had just committed suicide over a boy's cruel rejection. The original girl had been mercilessly bullied by a fake rich kid named Kurtis and his cruel followers. They had publicly read her desperate love letters out loud, mocking her as a toad trying to eat swan meat, and simply watched as she threw herself into the freezing water. Now, her impoverished mother was left weeping by the bed, facing catastrophic debt and total social ruin in their small town. Everyone expected the surviving girl to wake up begging and crying for the boy who humiliated her. Instead, a cold, calculating fury took over Bridget's analytical mind. "I already died in that lake. That stupid girl is never coming back." How could anyone throw their life away for a pathetic, vain clown wearing a mass-produced fifty-dollar watch? To Bridget, those uncollected love letters weren't symbols of teenage heartbreak. They were toxic assets. They were reputation landmines left out in the open that threatened her new family's survival. Locking away the dead girl's weak emotions, Bridget forced her freezing, exhausted body out of the clinic bed. She set a hard three-month deadline to drag this family out of tier-one poverty. But first, she was marching straight to the volunteer camp to liquidate those liabilities and completely destroy the people who drove this body to death.