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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 7

The silver had burned through more than just my skin—it had seared away every illusion I'd clung to about my marriage, my pack, my life. Hours passed in that underground hell, each breath a struggle against the poison coursing through my veins. My wolf was barely a whisper now, retreating so deep inside me that I wondered if she'd ever surface again.

But in the suffocating darkness, clarity came like a blade of light cutting through fog.

Collin wasn't my mate anymore. He was my enemy. The man who'd vowed to protect me had chained me in silver and left me to suffer for the crime of defending myself against his manipulative step-sister. The Moon Goddess had chosen wrong, or perhaps this was her way of showing me that some bonds were meant to be broken.

I thought of Ryan, probably lying awake in his bed, wondering why Mama hadn't come to say goodnight. Wondering why his father's angry voice had echoed through the packhouse, why the adults were whispering in corners with worried faces. My little boy, already traumatized by Sierra's abandonment during that pack run, now had to endure his parents' destruction too.

No. I wouldn't let this continue. I wouldn't let Sierra win.

Drawing on reserves of strength I didn't know I possessed, I lifted my head and spoke the words that would change everything. My voice was hoarse from screaming, but it carried the authority of a Luna—perhaps for the last time.

"I, Makenna Brooks, Luna of the Silvermoon Pack," I began, each word deliberate and final, "reject you, Collin, as my mate and Alpha."

The effect was instantaneous and devastating. The mate bond, that invisible thread that had connected us for years, snapped like a severed rope. Pain exploded through my chest—not the burning agony of silver, but something deeper, more fundamental. It felt like my soul was being torn in half, like every cell in my body was screaming in protest against this unnatural severance.

But above me, through the stone ceiling and floors of the packhouse, I heard Collin's answering scream of anguish. The bond breaking hit him like a physical blow, and through our rapidly dissolving connection, I felt him collapse. His Alpha strength, so confident and commanding moments ago, crumbled under the spiritual trauma of forced rejection.

The silver chains around my wrists loosened slightly as my desperation gave me strength I shouldn't have had. The mate bond's destruction had created chaos in the pack's spiritual hierarchy, and I could feel the ripples of confusion and panic spreading through the packhouse above. Voices shouted, feet ran across floors, and somewhere in the distance, Sierra's voice rose in what sounded like frantic commands.

I pulled against the chains with everything I had left. The silver tore fresh wounds in my burned flesh, but pain had become meaningless compared to my need to escape, to reach Ryan before Sierra could use the chaos to her advantage. The metal links, weakened by the spiritual upheaval of the broken mate bond, finally gave way.

I collapsed to the stone floor, my legs barely able to support me after hours of hanging in chains. Every step up those stairs was agony, but I forced myself to move. My wolf stirred slightly, sensing freedom, lending me just enough strength to keep climbing.

The packhouse above was in complete disarray. Pack members ran through hallways, some heading toward Collin's study where his collapsed form must be causing panic, others searching rooms under what I could only assume were Sierra's increasingly desperate orders. The mate bond severance had shaken the very foundation of pack hierarchy, leaving everyone confused and frightened.

I slipped through the chaos like a ghost, my Luna knowledge of every corridor and hidden passage serving me well. The silver burns made each movement torture, but maternal instinct drove me forward. Nothing mattered except reaching Ryan.

His bedroom door was slightly ajar, and I could see his small form huddled under blankets, his eyes wide with fear at the commotion outside. When he saw me, his face crumpled with relief and terror.

"Mama!" he whispered, launching himself into my arms despite my obvious injuries. "What happened? Why is everyone shouting? Where's Daddy?"

"We have to leave, baby," I said, my voice urgent but gentle. "Right now. Can you be very brave for Mama and help me pack some things?"

Ryan's young face showed confusion, but he'd inherited my intuitive understanding of danger. He nodded solemnly, already moving toward his dresser. "Are we going on a trip?"

"Something like that." I grabbed his small backpack, stuffing it with clothes while he gathered his favorite stuffed wolf and the picture book I'd been reading to him. "We're going to find somewhere safe, just you and me."

Footsteps pounded in the hallway outside, and Sierra's voice cut through the noise like a knife. "Find her! She can't have gone far in her condition. Check every room!"

Ryan's hand slipped into mine, his small fingers surprisingly steady. "I trust you, Mama," he whispered. "Let's go."

Together, we slipped out through the servants' entrance, leaving behind everything I'd ever known for an uncertain future that had to be better than the hell we were escaping.

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