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Rejected by My Fated Mate Novel Cover

Rejected by My Fated Mate

As the Gamma of the Empire Moon Pack, my life was defined by duty, schedules, and the relentless protection of our borders. I didn't have the luxury of being soft. They called me the "Iron Wolf" for a reason. But even iron can rust if you leave it out in the rain too long, and for five years, I had been standing in a storm. The Winter Ball was tonight. The pack house was buzzing with excitement, streamers of silver and gold hanging from the banisters. I wasn't interested in the party. I just needed Graham's signature on the perimeter security revisions. As the Beta, he had to sign off before I could double the guard rotation. I knocked on his office door.
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Chapter 3

My room in the Gamma quarters was already sparse. I lived like a soldier, always ready for a deployment that never came. But tonight, stripping the space of my presence felt different. It wasn't preparation; it was an erasure.

I threw my tactical gear into a duffel bag—knives, whetstones, a spare uniform. I didn't touch the silk dresses or the heels I had bought for pack functions where I stood in the corner, invisible. I wouldn't need them where I was going.

Under the bed, my fingers brushed against a dusty shoebox. I pulled it out, my chest tightening. Inside lay a collection of dried wildflowers. Bluebells, mountain laurels, wild daisies. For five years, I had picked them on my border patrols. In the beginning, I used to leave them on Graham’s desk. He never acknowledged them. Eventually, I just started keeping them, a pathetic archive of a love that was withering on the vine.

They were brittle now, brown and lifeless. I carried the box to the small fireplace in the corner. I struck a match, watching the flame eat the dry petals. They caught instantly, curling into ash with a soft hiss. There was no smoke, only the clean, final scent of burning dead things. I watched until the last stem turned to gray dust. I wasn't burning flowers. I was cremating the girl who waited for him.

I slung the duffel bag over my shoulder and walked out. I didn't say goodbye to the walls that had heard my weeping for five years.

The night air was crisp, biting at my exposed skin. I took the path through the Memorial Gardens to reach the main gate. It was the long way, but I needed to see him one last time. My father. The hero whose blood ran in my veins, whose legacy I had supposedly shamed tonight.

The smell hit me before I saw them. Acrid, chemical fumes. Spray paint.

I rounded the hedge and froze. Three wolves—young, stupid, and reeking of cheap beer—were gathered around the stone statue of my father. They were laughing, passing a can of bright red paint between them. A crude, jagged line had been sprayed across my father’s stone eyes, blinding him.

"That's for the Beta's girl!" one of them jeered, a lanky boy named Tyler who had been sucking up to Adelina all week. "Iron Wolf? More like Rusty Bitch."

Something inside me didn't just break; it detonated. The control I had practiced for a decade evaporated. I didn't think. I didn't breathe. I just let the monster out.

The shift was violent, a tearing of skin and bone that I welcomed. My vision shifted to sharp monochrome, and I was no longer Rory. I was the Iron Wolf. I was massive, silver-gray fur bristling like needles, lips pulled back over teeth that could snap steel.

I launched myself at them. A silver blur of rage.

Tyler didn't even have time to scream. I slammed into him, my paws pinning him to the frozen earth. The other two scrambled back, dropping the paint cans, terror soaking their scents. I didn't care about them. I snarled into Tyler's face, the vibration rattling his skull. He raised an arm to protect his throat.

*Crack.*

I bit down. His forearm snapped like a dry twig. His scream pierced the night, high and pathetic.

"**ENOUGH!**"

The Alpha command slammed into my flank, but I was too far gone to submit instantly. I whirled around, snarling, blood dripping from my muzzle. Graham stood there, flanked by four enforcers. He looked furious, his chest heaving.

I shifted back, naked and shivering in the cold, but I didn't cover myself. I stood tall, wiping Tyler’s blood from my mouth.

"They desecrated a hero," I spat, my voice raw.

"They are pack!" Graham roared, stepping closer. "You attack pack members over stone? You are out of control, Rory. Enforcers, take her. She can cool off in the dungeons until she learns her place."

"My place is gone," I said. I grabbed my duffel bag from the grass where I’d dropped it. "And you aren't putting me in a cage."

I turned and sprinted. Not toward the pack house, but toward the treeline. The border was only a mile away.

"Stop her!" Graham yelled.

But the enforcers hesitated. They knew who I was. They knew I had trained them. That second of hesitation was all I needed. I vanished into the woods.

I didn't stop running until I saw the marker stones. The territory line. Beyond it lay the rogue lands, the wild, lawless dark. It looked like paradise.

"Rory, stop!"

Graham crashed through the underbrush behind me. He hadn't shifted; he was too arrogant to think he needed his wolf to handle me. He grabbed my arm, spinning me around just feet from the border.

"Are you insane?" he hissed, his grip bruising. "You can't cross. That's a death sentence."

"Better death than being your placeholder," I yanked my arm free.

"Stop being dramatic," Graham scoffed, running a hand through his hair. He looked tired, almost pleading. "Look, we can fix this. I can smooth it over with the Council. Just... come back. Apologize to Adelina publicly. Show the pack you accept her position. If you do that, we can try to repair the bond. I can learn to... tolerate it."

*Tolerate.*

The word hung in the air, freezing the last drop of love in my heart.

"You think the bond is a leash," I whispered. "You think you can yank it and I'll heel."

"It is a leash, Rory! It's nature! You can't fight it!"

I looked him in the eye. His green eye, his gold eye. I felt the tug in my chest, the ancient, biological scream telling me to submit to my mate. I grabbed that screaming instinct and strangled it.

"Watch me."

I straightened my spine, channeling every ounce of my Alpha bloodline.

"I, Rory Marshall," I began, my voice echoing with power I didn't know I had.

Graham's eyes widened. "Rory, don't—"

"Reject you, Graham Ford, as my mate."

"No! Stop!"

"I sever the tie that binds us. I deny your claim. I break the chain."

Thunder cracked overhead, though the sky was clear. A shockwave of pure, agonizing force blasted outward from my chest. It felt like a rib snapping, like a hook being ripped out of my heart.

Graham screamed. He doubled over, clutching his chest, falling to his knees in the dirt. He gasped, his face draining of color as the connection withered and died.

I staggered back, breathless, a hollow ache throbbing where the bond used to be. But beneath the pain, there was silence. Beautiful, empty silence.

Graham looked up at me, tears streaming down his face, shock written in every line of his body. "What... what have you done?"

"I set myself free," I said.

I turned my back on him. I stepped over the stone marker. The moment my boot hit the rogue earth, the pack link in my mind went dead. I was alone. I was rogue.

And I didn't look back.

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