
Rejected by the Alpha, Claimed by the King
Chapter 3
The pack's monthly social gathering buzzed with familiar warmth—wolves mingling over coffee and pastries, children darting between adult legs, the comfortable chatter of a community that had known each other for generations. I stood near the windows, nursing a cup of tea I couldn't taste, my eyes scanning the crowd for golden hair and a laugh like music.
I'd spent three days tracking Serenity's movements through the pack territory, learning her routines with the methodical precision of a hunter. She favored the coffee station during social events, always arriving precisely twenty minutes after the gathering began. Tobias, meanwhile, had developed a habit of checking the refreshment table whenever his Alpha duties allowed—a pattern I'd memorized through years of watching him navigate pack politics.
Today, I would orchestrate their reunion.
My wolf whimpered deep in my chest, a sound of pure anguish that I ruthlessly suppressed. Through our deliberately muted mate bond, I could feel Tobias's confusion and hurt from across the room where he spoke with Elder Morrison about boundary disputes. He kept glancing my way, his dark eyes searching for some sign of the woman who used to be his anchor.
But I couldn't be that woman anymore. Not when I knew the truth.
Serenity appeared in the doorway exactly on schedule, and my breath caught despite my preparation. She was everything I remembered and more—tall and graceful, with honey-blonde hair that caught the afternoon light and skin that seemed to glow from within. Her laugh carried across the room as she greeted pack members, that musical sound I'd heard echoing in Tobias's dreams.
I moved with calculated casualness toward the coffee station, timing my approach so I'd arrive just as she did. My hands trembled as I reached for a fresh cup, and I had to grip the handle tight to keep from dropping it.
"Skyler!" Serenity's voice was warm, genuinely pleased. "It's so wonderful to see you again. Congratulations on becoming Luna—I heard the ceremony was beautiful."
The words hit like physical blows. She was kind. Of course she was kind. It would have been easier if I could hate her, but looking into her bright blue eyes, I saw only sincere happiness for my supposed good fortune.
"Thank you," I managed, my voice steady despite the chaos in my chest. "How are you settling back in? I imagine Europe was quite an adventure."
As she launched into stories of her graduate studies, I positioned myself strategically, angling so that when Tobias inevitably approached the refreshment table, he'd have a clear view of her profile. I counted heartbeats, tracking his movement through our bond despite its muted state.
Fifty-three seconds later, I felt him approaching before I saw him. The mate bond, even dampened, couldn't hide the way his pulse quickened or the subtle shift in his scent that spoke of recognition and something deeper.
"Serenity." His voice carried a warmth I hadn't heard in weeks—not since I'd started pushing him away. "Welcome home."
I stepped back slightly, creating space for them while maintaining the perfect vantage point to witness my own heartbreak. Serenity turned, and her face lit up with genuine joy at seeing him.
"Tobias! Look at you—Alpha suits you perfectly." She reached out without hesitation, her hand touching his arm in a gesture of easy familiarity. "I always knew you'd be extraordinary."
Through our bond, I felt his response—a flutter of old affection, the ghost of feelings he'd buried when duty demanded he accept our mate connection. His smile, when it came, was radiant and unguarded in a way that made my chest cave in.
This was the smile I remembered from our childhood, before pack responsibilities and mate bonds and terminal illnesses complicated everything. This was Tobias as he was meant to be—happy, free, choosing love instead of having it chosen for him.
"Tell me everything," he said, leaning closer as other pack members naturally gave the Alpha space for his conversation. "Your research, your travels—I want to hear it all."
Serenity laughed, that musical sound that had haunted our marriage bed, and launched into animated descriptions of ancient libraries and European wolf packs. Tobias hung on every word, his attention completely focused on her in a way that felt like watching the sun rise after months of darkness.
My wolf howled silently in my chest, a sound of such profound loss that I had to grip the edge of the table to stay upright. This was what I'd given up—this easy joy, this natural connection that flowed between them like water finding its course.
I forced myself to watch every moment, to memorize the way his eyes crinkled when she made him laugh, the unconscious way he mirrored her gestures, the comfortable silence that fell between them when words weren't needed. This was how it should have been from the beginning.
When I finally slipped away, neither of them noticed my departure.
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