
Rejected by My Alpha Mate, Embraced by the King
Chapter 1
I felt it the moment she arrived—a chill that crept up my spine despite the warm spring morning. Standing on the balcony of our pack house, I watched the unfamiliar car wind its way up the long driveway, gravel crunching under its tires like bones breaking. My fingers instinctively reached for the silver locket at my throat, the one containing a single lock of fur—all I had left of the pup we'd lost years ago.
"Who could that be?" I murmured, more to myself than to Lyra, my wolf, who stirred restlessly within me.
*Danger*, Lyra growled, her hackles rising. *She brings danger.*
I shushed her gently. After ten years as Luna of the Moonstone Pack, I'd learned to trust my wolf's instincts, but I'd also learned diplomacy. Unexpected visitors weren't uncommon for a pack as prosperous as ours had become.
The car door opened, and she stepped out—slender, with honey-blonde hair that caught the morning light. Even from this distance, I could see she moved with practiced grace, each step deliberate as she approached our pack house. Something about her made my skin prickle with unease.
I smoothed down my dress and headed downstairs to greet our visitor, as was my duty as Luna. Before I reached the main entrance, I heard Ethan's voice—my mate, my Alpha, the man I'd built everything with from nothing.
"Claire," he called, his voice tight with an emotion I couldn't quite place. "Come meet Olivia Reed."
When I entered the foyer, Ethan stood too close to the stranger, his posture rigid, eyes wide with something between shock and reverence. The blonde woman turned toward me, her delicate features arranged in a perfect mask of vulnerability.
"Luna Claire," she said, her voice soft and breathy. "I've heard so much about you."
Ethan cleared his throat. "Olivia is... she's Amelia's niece."
The name hit me like a physical blow. Amelia—Ethan's first love. His supposed true fated mate who had rejected him before we'd ever met. The woman whose ghost had hovered at the edges of our relationship for a decade.
"I didn't know Amelia had a niece," I said carefully, extending my hand. Up close, Olivia's scent was cloying—too sweet, like overripe fruit masking something rotten beneath.
"She never spoke of me?" Olivia's eyes widened in practiced hurt. "We were so close before she... before she sacrificed everything for Ethan."
My mate flinched visibly at her words. I knew the story—how Amelia had supposedly given up her future with Ethan to protect him from her powerful family. It was a wound he'd never fully healed from, even after all our years together.
"Olivia needs a place to stay," Ethan said, not meeting my eyes. "Her pack was... there was a territory dispute. She has nowhere else to go."
"Of course," I replied automatically, the perfect Luna. "We have guest quarters in the east wing that would be suitable."
"Actually," Ethan interrupted, "I thought she could take the room adjoining our quarters. For safety."
I felt Lyra bristle within me. That room was meant for our future pups—a space I'd lovingly prepared despite years of disappointment. I kept my expression neutral, though my heart hammered against my ribs.
"Whatever you think is best, Alpha," I said, the formal title slipping out before I could stop it.
Ethan didn't notice my discomfort. He was already guiding Olivia toward the stairs, his hand hovering near the small of her back. "I'll show you around myself," he told her. "Claire has pack business to attend to anyway."
I stood frozen in the foyer, watching them ascend the stairs together. Olivia glanced back once, and for a split second, her mask slipped. The smile she gave me wasn't sweet or vulnerable—it was calculating, triumphant.
Lyra howled in warning.
*She's here to take what's ours.*
Three weeks later, I stood in the ruins of my ceremonial chamber, staring in disbelief at the shattered remains of my silver chest. Scattered among the splinters of wood and twisted metal lay the fragments of my most precious possessions—ceremonial herbs from our mating ritual, the first treaty I'd negotiated as Luna, and worst of all, my silver locket. The delicate chain was snapped, the locket itself crushed, and the tiny lock of silver-gray fur—the only physical reminder of our lost pup—gone.
"I'm so sorry," Olivia said from the doorway, her voice dripping with false remorse. "I was just trying to help clean, and I knocked it over. I didn't realize it was so... important."
I could smell the lie on her. This was no accident.
"Where is it?" I demanded, my voice shaking. "The fur that was in the locket. Where is it?"
Olivia's eyes widened in practiced innocence. "I... I don't know. Maybe it fell somewhere? Or maybe it just... disintegrated? It was so old, after all."
Before I could respond, Ethan appeared behind her, drawn by the commotion. "What's happening?" he asked, his gaze moving from my face to the destruction on the floor.
"She destroyed my ceremonial chest," I said, struggling to keep my voice steady. "The locket with our pup's fur is gone."
I expected sympathy, outrage on my behalf. Instead, Ethan's expression hardened.
"It was an accident, Claire," he said coldly. "Olivia was trying to help."
"That locket contained all I had left of our child," I whispered, disbelief making my voice crack.
"It was just a trinket," Ethan replied, his voice dropping to that low, authoritative Alpha tone that brooked no argument. "Don't be so petty. Material things can be replaced."
The words struck me like physical blows. Just a trinket? Our pup's memory reduced to a replaceable object?
"You don't mean that," I said, taking a step toward him.
Ethan's eyes flashed gold, his Alpha aura flaring around him. "Enough, Claire. Olivia feels bad enough without you making her feel worse. Let it go."
With that command hanging in the air between us, he turned and guided a sniffling Olivia away, his arm protectively around her shoulders.
I sank to my knees among the ruins of my treasures, a terrible clarity washing over me. For the first time in ten years, my mate had used his Alpha tone to silence me—not to protect me, but to protect her.
Lyra whimpered inside me, her grief mingling with mine.
*He's slipping away from us.*
Later that afternoon, I found myself in the healing den, ostensibly to collect herbs for the upcoming full moon ceremony. In reality, I needed space to think, to breathe, away from Olivia's cloying presence and Ethan's increasingly cold demeanor.
"Your aura is troubled, Luna," came Elara's raspy voice from the shadows. Our elderly healer moved forward, her gnarled hands clutching a bundle of dried herbs. "And not without reason."
"You've noticed her too," I said. It wasn't a question.
Elara nodded, her ancient eyes sharp with wisdom. "That girl's scent is wrong. Layered with falsehood. She is not who she claims to be."
"Ethan doesn't see it," I whispered, the admission painful on my tongue.
"Men see what they wish to see," Elara replied, pressing the herb bundle into my hands. "Especially when guilt clouds their vision. These are for you, Luna. Burn them in your quarters when you need to mask your aura... or your scent."
I stared at her, understanding the implication. "You think I'll need to hide?"
"I think," she said carefully, "that a wise wolf prepares for winter even in summer's heat."
As night fell, I stood alone on the ceremonial grounds, watching the full moon rise above the trees. The pack should have been gathering for our monthly run—a tradition as old as werewolf kind itself. Instead, I waited in solitude, the ceremonial fire burning low.
Finally, Marcus, our Beta, approached with an apologetic expression. "Luna Claire, the Alpha sends his regrets. He won't be joining the run tonight."
"Is he unwell?" I asked, though I already knew the answer.
Marcus shifted uncomfortably. "He's taking Olivia on a private tour of our territory borders. He felt it would be... safer than having her join the full pack run her first month here."
I nodded stiffly, dismissing him with as much dignity as I could muster. When the clearing was empty again, I let my composure crack. Tilting my head back, I released a long, mournful howl that echoed through the trees—a sound of frustration, of betrayal, of a Luna abandoned on the night when she should be running alongside her Alpha.
No answering howl came from my mate. Only silence greeted me, broken eventually by the sympathetic cries of a few loyal pack members in the distance.
As my howl faded into the night, I made a decision. Whatever game Olivia was playing, whatever spell she had cast over Ethan, I would not be a passive victim. I was Claire Bennett, Luna of the Moonstone Pack. I had clawed my way up from nothing once before.
And if necessary, I would do it again.
You may also like





