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Rejected by My Alpha Husband Novel Cover

Rejected by My Alpha Husband

The water in the bucket was already gray, swirling with the grime of the dungeon floor. My knees ached against the cold, unforgiving stone, the damp chill seeping into my bones. I was the mate of the Alpha, yet here I was, scrubbing the cells like an Omega, while the real power in the pack wore heels and watched me with a smirk. "You missed a spot, Nellie," Jessica Stevens said, her voice dripping with false sweetness. She stood just outside the iron bars, looking pristine in a white dress that seemed out of place in the gloom of the underground prison. I dipped the brush back into the water, fighting the urge to tremble. "I'll get it, Jessica." "Good girl. Silas hates a dirty house, you know. We all just want him happy." She leaned against the lever that controlled the heavy iron door of the adjacent cell. I froze.
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Chapter 2

The silence in the infirmary was heavier than the stone walls of the dungeon. It pressed against my eardrums, magnifying the erratic thump of my own heart. My hand still hovered over my flat stomach, a graveyard for a life that had flickered out before it ever truly began.

Silas was gone. He hadn’t even looked back. To him, the loss of our child was an inconvenience, a mess I had made that disrupted his evening with Jessica. The realization didn't come with a flood of tears this time. It came with a cold, terrifying clarity. If I stayed here, I would die. Maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, but Jessica would finish what she started, and Silas would let her.

I pushed myself up, gritting my teeth against the sharp pull of stitches in my side. The pain was grounding. It was real. It was a reminder of exactly what my mate thought I was worth.

Nothing.

The moonlight filtered through the blinds, casting long, prison-bar shadows across the sterile floor. I swung my legs over the edge of the bed. My bare feet hit the cold linoleum, sending a shiver up my spine. I didn't look for shoes. I didn't look for a coat. I just needed to get out.

I moved to the small cabinet where they had stored my ruined clothes. My jeans were stiff with dried blood, but I pulled them on anyway. I found a spare scrub top hanging on a hook and shrugged into it. It smelled of antiseptic, masking the scent of my grief.

Standing in the center of the room, I closed my eyes. I could feel the bond in my chest, a thick, golden rope that tethered me to Silas. It pulsed faintly, a one-way street of devotion that he had never returned. For five years, I had polished that bond, fed it with my sacrifices, and hoped it would be enough. But staring at the empty space where my baby should have been, I knew love wasn't enough to survive a monster.

I took a deep breath, the air trembling in my lungs. I spoke to the empty room, my voice barely a whisper, yet it felt like a scream.

"I, Nellie Garcia, reject you, Silas Hawkins, Alpha of Silver Moon, as my mate."

The reaction was instant. A searing pain ripped through my chest, like a hot iron branding my heart. I gasped, dropping to my knees, clutching at my shirt. It felt as if someone had reached inside my ribcage and snapped a vital artery. The golden rope frayed, unraveled, and then—*snap*.

The connection went dead. The constant, low-level hum of Silas's presence in the back of my mind vanished, leaving behind a hollow, aching silence. It was agonizing, but beneath the pain, there was something else. Space. Freedom.

I didn't wait for the tears to stop. I scrambled up, grabbed my bag, and slipped out the window. I knew the patrol routes better than the warriors did; I had cleaned the mud off their boots for years. I skirted the edge of the pack house, moving like a ghost toward the Alpha's office. The window was unlatched—Silas was arrogant, never believing anyone would dare steal from him.

I didn't take jewelry. I didn't take heirlooms. I opened the petty cash box in the bottom drawer—money I had counted and organized myself for years without a single paycheck—and took a handful of bills. It wasn't stealing. It was severance pay.

I was out the back door before the moon hit its peak, my destination set. But first, I had to say goodbye.

The old gardening shed sat near the edge of the woods. It was a rickety structure, but it was the only place that had ever felt like mine. Rusty, a small red fox I had nursed back to health two winters ago, slept there. He was the only living thing in this pack that looked at me with love instead of pity or disdain.

"Rusty?" I whispered, pushing the door open. "Buddy, we have to go."

The door creaked, swinging inward too easily. The latch was broken, the wood splintered around the frame. A cold dread pooled in my stomach.

"Rusty?"

Moonlight spilled onto the dirt floor, illuminating a small heap of red fur. He wasn't curled up sleeping. He was sprawled unnaturally, his limbs askew. I fell to my knees beside him, my hands shaking as I reached out to touch his soft flank. He was cold.

His neck was twisted at an impossible angle. It wasn't an accident. It wasn't a predator. It was a message. Jessica knew this was my sanctuary. She knew he was my only friend.

A sound tore from my throat, raw and animalistic. I didn't cry. I was done crying. I scooped his small, lifeless body into my arms, holding him close to my chest one last time. I carried him to the edge of the forest, where the roots of an ancient oak tree rose from the earth. Using a rusted trowel from the shed, I dug. The dirt was hard, unforgiving, but I didn't stop until my hands were blistered and raw.

I laid him in the earth and covered him, patting the soil down with trembling hands. "I'm sorry," I whispered to the dirt. "I'm so sorry I couldn't protect you."

I stood up, wiping the dirt on my jeans. The grief was still there, heavy and suffocating, but it was hardening into something sharper. Rage. Cold, diamond-hard rage. I looked back at the pack house, glowing warm and inviting in the distance. Silas was probably sleeping soundly. Jessica was probably smiling in her dreams.

*I will come back,* I vowed silently, the promise tasting like iron on my tongue. *And when I do, you will burn for this.*

I turned my back on Silver Moon and ran.

***

Three days later, I stood before the towering iron gates of Moonstone Academy. My clothes were filthy, my shoes were worn through, and I had slept in bus stations for seventy-two hours straight. I looked like a beggar, but I held my head high.

This place was neutral ground. A sanctuary for wolves from all packs to learn, train, and exist without the politics of their home territories. It was also the most prestigious healing institution in the country.

The guard at the gate looked me up and down with skepticism. "Name?"

"Nellie Garcia," I rasped, my throat dry from lack of water. "I'm here to see Dr. Reeves."

"Do you have an appointment?"

I didn't answer. I just pulled a crumpled piece of paper from my pocket. It was five years old, soft and worn at the creases. My acceptance letter to the Healer's Guild—the one I had thrown away for Silas.

The guard frowned but made a call. Twenty minutes later, the gates groaned open.

Dr. Elena Reeves met me in the main administrative hall. She was a tall woman with silver-streaked hair and eyes that seemed to see through your skin, straight to your bones. She didn't look at my dirty clothes or my matted hair. She looked at my eyes.

"Nellie Garcia," she said, her voice calm and measured. "You're late. By about five years."

"I got lost," I said, my voice cracking. "But I'm here now."

She looked down at the crumpled letter in my hand, then back up at me. She saw the hollowness in my cheeks, the way I favored my left side where the stitches pulled, the haunted look of a woman who had walked through hell.

"We don't usually accept students mid-term," she said softly. "Especially not without a pack sponsorship."

"I don't have a pack," I said, lifting my chin. "I have nothing. But I have these hands, and I know how to use them. I know every herb in the forest. I can stitch a wound in the dark. I will scrub your floors, I will organize your archives, I will do anything. Just let me learn."

Dr. Reeves studied me for a long moment. The silence stretched, tense and fragile. Finally, she sighed, a small smile touching her lips.

"We have a probationary program," she said. "It's grueling. Most quit within the first week. You'll start at the bottom."

"I've been at the bottom for a long time," I replied. "I'm not afraid of hard work."

She nodded once, sharp and decisive. "Welcome to Moonstone, Nellie. Go get cleaned up. Orientation starts at 0600."

As I walked down the pristine hallway, the scent of books and medicinal herbs filling my lungs, I didn't look back. The mate bond was severed. My baby was gone. My friend was buried. But for the first time in five years, the road ahead belonged entirely to me.

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