
Rejected by My Alpha Husband
Chapter 4
The tray in my hands trembled slightly, the crystal glasses clinking against each other like wind chimes in a storm. My knuckles were white as I gripped the silver handles, forcing myself to breathe. In, out. In, out.
I was just a scholarship student fulfilling her work hours. I was invisible.
"He looks terrible," a familiar voice whispered near my ear.
I nearly dropped the tray. I turned to see Salma leaning against a marble pillar, looking every bit the fierce Gamma female she was. Her dark hair was pulled back in a severe braid, but her eyes were warm with worry. She had slipped into the Academy under the guise of attending a combat seminar, but we both knew why she was really here.
"Don't look at him, Nellie," she murmured, pretending to inspect a potted fern. "Just listen. Silver Moon is rotting from the inside out."
I kept my eyes on the polished floor, but my heart hammered against my ribs. "Is it true? About the borders?"
"Worse than that," Salma hissed. "The warriors are drunk on duty. Jessica is terrorizing the Omegas—she had old Mrs. Gable whipped yesterday for burning a roast. And Silas..." She paused, her voice dropping lower. "He's a ghost. He barely sleeps. He just paces his office, growling at shadows. The pack link feels like static electricity. It hurts to be connected to him."
"He did that," I said, my voice hollow. "He chose this."
"He chose wrong," Salma said firmly. "I'm documenting everything. Every missed patrol, every abuse of power. When you're ready to go to the Council, Nellie, I'll have the evidence to bury him."
Before I could thank her, the double doors at the end of the hall swung open. A hush fell over the corridor as the visiting Alphas arrived for the diplomatic summit.
My scent blockers were strong—Dr. Reeves had made sure of that—but panic still clawed at my throat. I tried to shrink back into the shadows, adjusting my uniform, praying to the Moon Goddess that I wouldn't be seen.
Then he walked in.
Silas looked like a man who had been fighting a war in his own head. His usually immaculate suit was wrinkled, his tie loosened. Dark circles bruised the skin under his eyes, and his jaw was covered in stubble. He didn't walk with his usual arrogant swagger; he stalked, his eyes darting around the room with manic intensity.
Clinging to his arm like a parasite was Jessica. She was wearing a dress that was far too bright and far too tight for a diplomatic meeting—a garish red that screamed for attention. She beamed at the other Alphas, clearly reveling in her role as the pretend Luna, but no one was looking at her. They were looking at Silas, sensing the instability radiating off him in waves.
I turned to flee, to duck into the kitchen, but the movement caught his eye.
Silas froze. His head snapped toward me with terrifying speed. His nostrils flared, inhaling deeply.
For a second, confusion clouded his face. I knew what he smelled—faint traces of antiseptic, old books, and... something else. Something woodsy and spicy that had clung to my skin since my training session this morning.
*Cinnamon and Pine.*
His eyes went black.
"Nellie," he growled. It wasn't a greeting. It was an accusation.
Jessica followed his gaze, her smile vanishing instantly. "What is *she* doing here? I thought she was dead in a ditch somewhere."
Silas didn't even hear her. He shoved Jessica's arm away, stumbling toward me. The other Alphas in the hallway stopped their conversations, sensing the sudden spike in aggression.
"You," Silas snarled, closing the distance between us in three long strides. "You smell like him."
I backed up until my spine hit the cold wall. "Stay away from me, Silas."
"Like *him*!" he roared, his voice cracking. "You have another male's scent on you! Who is he? Did you let him touch you? Did you let him mark what is mine?"
"I am not yours!" I shouted back, the tray slipping from my hands and crashing to the floor. Glass shattered, shards skittering across the marble. "I rejected you!"
"You can't reject me! I am your Alpha!"
The air around him shimmered with heat. He was losing control. His hands curled into claws, and his canines extended, sharp and glistening. He didn't look like a leader; he looked like a rabid animal cornered in a trap.
He took a deep breath, his chest swelling, and I knew what was coming. The Alpha Command.
"**Submit!**" he bellowed, his voice layered with a supernatural weight that usually forced wolves to their knees. "**Return to the pack, Nellie! I command you!**"
The power hit me like a physical blow. My knees buckled, my instincts screaming at me to obey, to bare my neck, to crawl back to the monster who had broken me. I squeezed my eyes shut, tears leaking out.
But then, a warmth bloomed in my chest. It was the same warmth I had felt in the gym. My inner wolf, small and fragile, lifted her head and let out a defiant yip.
*No.*
I didn't fall. I didn't kneel. I stood there, trembling violently, but I was standing.
Silas stared at me, horror dawning on his face. "How...?"
He reached for me then, his hand aiming for my throat, intending to drag me out by force. "You are coming home if I have to drag you by your hair—"
"That will be enough."
The voice was quiet. Calm. Yet it cut through Silas's rage like a scalpel.
August stepped out from the shadows of the alcove behind me. He was wearing his simple instructor's gear—a black t-shirt and cargo pants—but he looked more regal than any Alpha in the room. He didn't shout. He didn't shift. He simply looked at Silas.
And then he released it.
It wasn't just an aura; it was gravity. The air in the hallway instantly became heavy, dense with a power so ancient and terrifying that the windows rattled in their frames. It tasted of ozone and deep, dark forests.
Silas gasped, his eyes bulging. He clutched at his chest as if he were having a heart attack. The command died on his lips. His legs gave out, and he crashed to his knees among the broken glass, head bowed, forced into submission by a presence he couldn't even comprehend.
Jessica shrieked and fell to the floor beside him, whining like a kicked puppy.
I stood in the center of the storm, untouched. The crushing weight that flattened Silas flowed around me like water, protective and gentle. August moved to stand in front of me, placing himself between me and my past.
He looked down at the kneeling Alpha, his golden eyes burning with a cold, lethal fire.
"Touch her again," August whispered, the sound vibrating in the floorboards, "and you will not leave this academy alive."
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