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Rejected by the Alpha, Claimed by the King Novel Cover

Rejected by the Alpha, Claimed by the King

The blood moon hung heavy above our territory, casting everything in crimson shadows that seemed to pulse with my laboring heartbeat. Each contraction tore through me like claws, and I gripped the silk sheets until my knuckles went white. My wolf, Luna, whimpered deep within me, sensing something was terribly wrong beyond just the pain of birth. "Christopher," I gasped between waves of agony, reaching toward the door where I could hear his restless pacing. The floorboards creaked under his weight as he moved back and forth, back and forth, like a caged animal. Through our mate bond, I felt his anxiety crackling like lightning, but there was something else—something cold and distant that made my chest tighten with dread. Another contraction seized me, and I bit back a scream. The midwife, an elderly woman named Sarah, pressed a cool cloth to my forehead. "Almost there, Luna," she whispered, but her eyes kept darting toward the door nervously. That's when Miracle glided into the room like a shadow given form.
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Chapter 3

The weeks that followed blurred together in a haze of training, planning, and the slow, methodical process of rebuilding myself from the ashes of who I used to be. The hidden compound became my sanctuary and my war room, its sterile walls witness to my transformation from broken Luna to something harder, colder, infinitely more dangerous.

Victor never left my side during those early days when grief threatened to swallow me whole. He would sit with me through the nightmares, his steady presence the only thing anchoring me to sanity when I woke screaming my son's name. But he never tried to comfort me with empty words or false hope. Instead, he helped me channel that raw, bleeding pain into something useful.

"Your father always said that rage without purpose is just destruction," he told me one evening as we studied the maps spread across the compound's main table. "But rage with direction? That's revolution."

I traced the red pins marking pack territories across the Eastern Alliance, each one representing potential allies or enemies. "Tell me about the network you've been building."

Victor's expression grew serious. "I started reaching out the moment I realized what Miracle was doing to the pack dynamics. There are more wolves than you'd think who've grown tired of the old ways—Betas passed over for promotion because of bloodline politics, Omegas treated like slaves, smaller packs bullied into submission by larger ones."

He pulled out a leather portfolio filled with detailed notes. Names, pack affiliations, grievances, potential leverage points. The scope of his preparation took my breath away.

"You've been planning this for years," I whispered.

"Your father and I both saw the cracks in the system. We just hoped we'd have more time to address them peacefully." His jaw tightened. "Miracle forced our hand."

Over the following days, Victor introduced me to his network through encrypted communications. There was Marcus from the Riverside Pack, a Beta whose Alpha had died in suspicious circumstances, leaving the territory in chaos. Sarah from the Mountain Wolves, whose pack had been systematically starved out by neighboring Alphas who wanted their territory. Dozens of others, all carrying their own wounds from a system that valued tradition over justice.

But it was when I finally accessed my father's military codes that the true scope of his vision became clear.

The data chip contained more than just communication protocols. It held detailed intelligence on every major pack in the Eastern Alliance—their strengths, weaknesses, financial situations, internal conflicts. My father hadn't just been building alliances; he'd been preparing for war.

"The Crescent Moon Pack is drowning in debt from failed territorial expansions," I read from one of the files. "The Silver Ridge Pack lost half their warriors in the border disputes last year. And the Ironwood Pack—" I looked up at Victor in amazement. "They've been secretly funding rogue settlements?"

"Your father believed that rogues weren't the enemy," Victor explained. "They were symptoms of a broken system. Wolves cast out for refusing to submit to corrupt Alphas, families torn apart by political games. He wanted to unite them, give them purpose."

I felt something cold and calculating settle in my chest. "Then that's exactly what we're going to do."

The first contact I made was with a rogue leader named Kane, whose pack had been living in the abandoned industrial district two territories over. Through Victor's secure channels, I arranged a meeting in neutral ground—an old warehouse that had once processed lumber for the region.

Kane was exactly what I'd expected from a rogue Alpha—scarred, suspicious, with eyes that had seen too much betrayal. But when I showed him my father's ring and explained my proposal, something shifted in his expression.

"You're offering us legitimacy," he said slowly. "Territory rights, representation in pack councils."

"I'm offering you justice," I corrected. "A chance to build something better than what we've inherited."

Word spread quickly through the rogue networks. Within two weeks, I had commitments from seven different groups, representing nearly three hundred wolves who'd been cast aside by the traditional system. But numbers alone wouldn't be enough to challenge the established order.

That's when I began the psychological campaign against Christopher and Miracle.

"We start with whispers," I told Elena as we planned our next moves. "Plant seeds of doubt about Miracle's healing methods. Let Christopher's own paranoia do the rest."

The first rumors were subtle—questions about why the Alpha's health had been declining since Miracle became the primary healer, observations about the strange herbs she used that no one could identify. My network of allies began spreading these concerns through their own territories, creating a web of suspicion that would eventually reach Christopher's ears.

But the masterstroke came when one of Victor's contacts in the medical community analyzed samples of the healing potions Miracle had been giving Christopher. The results confirmed what I'd suspected—a cocktail of mild toxins designed to create dependency while slowly eroding his mental faculties.

"She's been poisoning him for months," Victor said, his voice tight with disgust as he read the report. "Making him paranoid, aggressive, dependent on her for relief from symptoms she's causing."

I stared at the chemical analysis, feeling a grim satisfaction settle in my bones. "Then it's time Christopher learned the truth about his precious healer."

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