
Rejected by the Alpha, Claimed by the King
Chapter 1
The warehouse reeked of fear and wolfsbane. I moved through the shadows like death itself, my massive black wolf form cutting through the rogues with mechanical precision. Each kill was clean, efficient—the way Alpha Colin Spencer had trained me to be. The way six years of drowning my broken mate bond in violence had perfected.
My wolf's golden eyes gleamed with that familiar feral edge as I tore through the last of the trafficking ring. These bastards had been selling wolfsbane to humans, putting every pack in the region at risk. They deserved worse than the quick deaths I gave them.
Shifting back to human form, I stood naked among the carnage, steam rising from my skin in the bitter Chicago winter air. Snow drifted through broken windows, mixing with the blood pooling around my feet. I pulled on my clothes with practiced efficiency, then reached for the flask of Irish whiskey in my jacket pocket.
The burn down my throat did nothing to ease the constant ache in my chest—the hollow space where my mate bond should be complete. Six years since Johanna Gilbert vanished without explanation, leaving only a cryptic goodbye note that I'd memorized word for word. Six years of my wolf growing more unstable, more feral, feeding on violence because it was the only thing that made me feel anything at all.
I ran my scarred hands through my dark hair, a nervous habit from childhood that I'd never been able to shake. The silver scars on my knuckles caught the dim light—reminders of the weapons training that had made me Shadowcrest Pack's most feared Gamma.
"Clean job, Hayden." My phone buzzed with Alpha Colin's text. "Report back to the pack house."
I downed another shot of whiskey before responding. The alcohol barely touched the edges of my pain anymore, but it was better than feeling the raw emptiness where Johanna's honeysuckle and rain scent should be calling to my wolf.
The drive back through the snowstorm gave me time to lock down my emotions, to become the cold, efficient killer my pack needed. By the time I reached Shadowcrest territory, my face was a mask of controlled indifference.
But something was wrong. I could smell it before I even parked—panic, fear, and something else. Something that made my wolf suddenly alert, pressing against my consciousness with an urgency I hadn't felt in years.
Luna Angie Spencer met me at the pack house entrance, her silver hair disheveled and her usually calm demeanor shattered. "Hayden, thank the Moon Goddess you're back. There's a child—"
"What child?" My voice came out rougher than intended, my wolf's instincts prickling with unease.
"She collapsed at our gates during the storm. She's been asking for you." Angie's Luna aura radiated maternal distress. "Hayden, she has your scent markers. And she's been through hell."
I followed Angie through the pack house corridors, my boots echoing against hardwood floors. Other pack members stepped aside as we passed, their heads bowed in automatic deference to my Gamma rank. But I barely noticed them. My wolf was practically clawing at my ribs, desperate to reach whatever—whoever—was calling to us.
The medical wing smelled of antiseptic and healing herbs, but underneath it all was something that made my blood freeze. Silver. Wolfsbane. And beneath those toxic scents, something achingly familiar.
Dr. Leila Morgan looked up from her examination table, her expression grim. "Hayden, I need you to prepare yourself. This child has been through extensive trauma."
On the table lay a small girl, maybe four years old, unconscious and pale as the snow outside. Dark hair like mine framed a face that was too thin, too haunted for someone so young. Silver burn scars wrapped around her tiny wrists like shackles.
But it was the scent that nearly brought me to my knees. Buried beneath the silver and pain was my bloodline—my scent markers mixed with something else. Something that made my wolf howl in recognition and rage.
"She's mine," I whispered, the words torn from somewhere deep in my chest. "She's my daughter."
Dr. Morgan nodded grimly. "DNA confirms it. But Hayden, there's more. Look at this."
She held up a small coat, pointing to the lining. "She had this sewn inside. It's been stitched with dried blood."
My hands shook as I took the fabric, bringing it to my nose. The scent hit me like a physical blow—honeysuckle and rain, tainted with silver and pain but unmistakably hers. Johanna. My mate. My lost, broken mate bond suddenly blazed to life, confirming what I'd never dared hope.
She was alive.
Hidden in the lining were GPS coordinates, a name—Eric Burns—and words written in Johanna's blood: "I never rejected our bond. Our daughter carries your mark. Save yourself, my Alpha."
My wolf threw back his head and howled, the sound tearing from my throat as six years of suppressed agony finally found its voice.
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