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Rejected by the Alpha, Claimed by the King Novel Cover

Rejected by the Alpha, Claimed by the King

I tapped out a message to my mate: "What are you up to right now?" Patrick, the Alpha heir of the Silverfang Pack, replied immediately: "I'm at home, tidying up." He sent a photo of a familiar room, gleaming and immaculate. I hadn’t mentioned that I had already checked the security cameras. He wasn’t lying; he was indeed at home, keeping himself busy. My wolf stirred uneasily in the back of my mind, a low growl of suspicion that I tried to ignore. So, here’s the conundrum. Standing right in front of me was another Patrick. But who could this impersonator be? As a Gamma of the Moonlight Pack, I knew better than to ignore such a glaring inconsistency. My instincts were on high alert, my wolf’s senses sharpening as I studied the figure ahead. --- I noticed the other Patrick as I left the pack’s headquarters, a sleek modern building that doubled as our central hub.
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Chapter 5

The Harvest Moon celebration was supposed to be our pack's crowning achievement—a night to showcase Silvermoon's prosperity and strength to visiting dignitaries from five neighboring territories. I'd spent weeks coordinating every detail: security rotations, catering arrangements, entertainment schedules, and diplomatic seating charts that would honor our guests while maintaining pack hierarchy.

But as the evening unfolded, everything I'd carefully planned began to crumble like a house of cards.

The first sign of trouble came when the security team reported to the wrong positions. Warriors who should have been stationed at the main entrance were clustered near the back gates, leaving our most important guests unprotected as they arrived. Alpha Morrison from Moonridge looked distinctly uncomfortable as he passed through what should have been a ceremonial honor guard but was instead an empty pathway.

"Where's the security detail?" I demanded through the mind-link to Derek, our head of security.

"Following the updated positions Sierra provided this morning," came his confused response. "She said you'd changed the arrangements due to new intelligence about rogue activity."

My blood ran cold. I'd given Sierra no such authority, made no such changes. But before I could correct the situation, the catering disaster struck.

The ceremonial feast—carefully planned to showcase our pack's hunting prowess and territorial abundance—arrived as a series of wrong orders. Instead of the prime venison and locally sourced delicacies I'd arranged, servers brought out processed foods that looked like they'd come from a human grocery store. The visiting Alphas exchanged bewildered glances as plastic-wrapped sandwiches were placed before them.

"Luna," the catering manager approached with obvious distress, "we received a call this morning changing the entire order. The caller said it was from you, that you wanted something more... casual."

Sierra appeared at my elbow like a concerned angel, her face painted with worry. "Oh no, Makenna. This is terrible. Here, let me see what I can do."

She moved through the crowd with practiced efficiency, somehow producing elegant hors d'oeuvres from nowhere, charming the confused guests with apologies about "miscommunications" and "last-minute changes." Within minutes, she'd transformed the disaster into a salvage operation, positioning herself as the competent problem-solver while I stood frozen in shock.

Then the sound system failed during the ceremonial speeches, leaving Alpha Morrison's important address about territorial cooperation to echo weakly through a single working speaker. Pack members strained to hear, their faces showing embarrassment and confusion.

But Sierra was ready for that too. She stepped forward with a portable microphone that appeared from her purse, her voice ringing clear and confident as she invited Alpha Morrison to continue his remarks. The grateful relief on his face was visible to everyone present.

"Crisis averted," she announced with a modest smile, as if she hadn't orchestrated the entire series of failures.

By the time two pack members were injured when the decorative lighting collapsed—another "unexpected malfunction" that Sierra quickly contained by directing the cleanup—I was drowning in humiliation. Every failure painted me as incompetent while every solution showcased Sierra's quick thinking and leadership skills.

The visiting dignitaries' expressions had shifted from respect to polite concern, then to barely concealed doubt about Silvermoon Pack's stability under my leadership.

I found Collin after the guests had departed, their hasty goodbyes still echoing in my ears. He stood in his study with Sierra, both reviewing what looked like damage control strategies.

"We need to talk," I said, my voice tight with barely controlled rage. "Now."

Sierra started to leave, but I held up a hand. "No. Stay. This concerns you directly."

Collin's jaw tightened. "Makenna, if this is about tonight's difficulties—"

"Difficulties?" I laughed bitterly. "Collin, she sabotaged everything. The security changes, the catering switch, the equipment failures—none of that was coincidence."

Sierra's eyes widened with hurt innocence. "Makenna, I would never—"

"Stop lying!" The words exploded from me. "I have documentation of every arrangement I made. Phone records of the fake calls. Witness statements about your 'helpful suggestions' that undermined every security protocol."

I pulled out the folder I'd compiled—evidence of Sierra's systematic sabotage gathered over weeks of careful investigation. "Choose, Collin. Right now. Your step-sister or your mate. Because I won't tolerate this anymore."

Collin's face darkened as he glanced through the papers. But instead of the anger I expected directed at Sierra, his fury turned on me.

"You compiled evidence against a pack member?" His voice dropped to that dangerous Alpha tone. "You investigated Sierra like she's some kind of enemy?"

"She is an enemy! She's been systematically destroying my authority, endangering our pack's reputation—"

"She's been helping!" Collin roared. "While you've been paranoid and jealous, Sierra's been the one actually solving problems. Tonight proved that."

The betrayal hit like a physical blow. "Tonight proved she can clean up the messes she creates. Collin, look at the evidence—"

"Evidence you fabricated out of jealousy." His eyes flashed with contempt. "Sierra warned me you might try something like this. Said your behavior's been getting more erratic, more desperate."

Sierra's hand touched his arm in a gesture of support, and something inside me snapped.

"Fine," I said, my voice deadly calm. "If you won't listen to reason, I'll take this to the pack council. Let them decide whether your precious step-sister—"

"You will do no such thing." Collin's Alpha command slammed into me like a physical force, dropping me to my knees on the hardwood floor. The submission was involuntary, humiliating, absolute.

"Your insubordination ends now," he continued, his voice echoing with Alpha authority. "Your threats against pack members require punishment to maintain order."

I knelt there, forced into submission by my own mate's power, while Sierra watched with satisfaction gleaming in her eyes. The woman who'd destroyed my life stood beside the man who'd just broken my spirit, and I realized with crystal clarity that I had lost everything that mattered.

Everything except my son.

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