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Rejected by the Alpha, Claimed by the King Novel Cover

Rejected by the Alpha, Claimed by the King

The darkness before dawn enveloped our bedroom as I awoke, my eyes adjusting to find the empty space beside me. Ryan's scent lingered on his pillow, but the sheets were cold—he hadn't returned last night. Again. I touched the five-year-old mating mark on my neck, tracing its familiar ridges with trembling fingers. Today marked five years since Alpha Ryan Sterling had claimed me as his Luna, five years since I'd left everything behind for the promise of forever with my fated mate. A sharp pain radiated through my chest as I sat up, my body protesting even this simple movement. The wolf sickness was getting worse. Dr. Elias had warned me last month that without treatment, I might not see another winter. But how could I tell Ryan when he could barely stand to look at me?
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Chapter 3

Three months before our anniversary, I found myself in Ryan's office—a space that had once welcomed me but now felt like forbidden territory. He was attending an Alpha council meeting in the neighboring territory, and I had seized the opportunity to organize the scattered papers on his desk, desperate for any small way to please him.

The afternoon sun slanted through the windows as I sorted documents into neat piles. My fingers trembled slightly—a symptom I'd grown accustomed to hiding. Dr. Elias's herbs helped, but the wolf sickness was progressing faster than either of us had anticipated.

"Just get through today," I whispered to myself, a mantra that had become as familiar as breathing.

As I moved a stack of financial reports, a folded letter slipped from between the pages, landing softly on the hardwood floor. I shouldn't have opened it. Some part of me knew that whatever secrets Ryan kept locked in his office were best left undisturbed. But the handwriting wasn't his—it was delicate, feminine, with flourishes that spoke of confidence.

My dearest Ryan,

The days until I can return to you grow fewer. Our patience will soon be rewarded. I've never doubted that we are true mates, regardless of what the Moon Goddess tried to force upon you. The she-wolf who warms your bed is merely an obstacle, not a destiny.

I remain eternally yours,

Natalie

The letter slipped from my fingers as if it had burned me. I stumbled backward, my hip catching painfully on the corner of Ryan's desk. With shaking hands, I pulled open the bottom drawer—the one he always kept locked, the one I'd found the key to hidden behind a loose baseboard months ago but had never dared to open.

Inside lay dozens of letters, all in the same flowing script. All addressed to my mate. All from Natalie Hayes.

I read them all, each word a dagger to my already weakening heart. Their history, their plans, their love that had apparently never wavered despite our sacred mate bond. The earliest letters dated back to before our mating—Ryan had never been mine, not truly. Not even at the beginning.

One passage burned itself into my mind: 'Remember our plan, my love. Use her to hurt him, then discard her when I return. The daughter of the man who destroyed your father deserves nothing less.'

My father? I pressed a hand to my mouth, stifling a sob as the pieces clicked into place. The revenge plot I'd never suspected, the calculated cruelty I'd mistaken for growing indifference—it had all been deliberate from the start.

I gathered the letters with numb fingers, my chest constricting with each breath. The mate mark on my neck throbbed with a phantom pain as I carried the evidence of my shattered life to the fireplace in his office.

One by one, I fed the letters to the flames, watching as Natalie's flowing script blackened and curled. Each one that disappeared sent a wave of despair through me, but I couldn't stop. I wouldn't leave them for Ryan to find, to know I had discovered his secret.

"I still love you," I whispered to the fire, watching the last letter burn. "Even now. How pathetic is that?"

That night, unable to face our empty bed, I slipped out of the pack house and into the forest. My body protested each step, but I pushed forward, drawn to the one place that still held a shred of the happiness we'd once shared.

The ceremonial clearing looked magical under the full moon, silver light bathing the ancient stones where werewolves had performed sacred rituals for generations. It was here, five years ago, that Ryan had comforted me after my first failed attempt to shift.

I sank to my knees in the center of the clearing, exactly where I'd collapsed in tears when my wolf hadn't emerged.

"Don't cry, my love," Ryan had whispered that night, cradling me against his chest. "Some wolves are late bloomers, that's all. And late bloomers make the most beautiful wolves."

He'd kissed away my tears, promised me forever, sworn that my wolflessness changed nothing about our bond.

All lies. Carefully crafted, cruelly delivered lies.

I looked up at the moon, its light offering no comfort now. "Why?" I asked the silent goddess. "Why bind me to someone who would use your sacred gift as a weapon?"

No answer came, only the soft rustling of leaves in the night breeze and the distant howl of a wolf—a sound I would never make.

Two months later, I knelt alone in our bathroom, hand pressed to my mouth as another coughing fit seized me. When I pulled my palm away, it was slick with blood—brighter than before, and more of it.

"No," I whispered, quickly running water over my hand. "Not yet. Not today."

I fumbled for the pouch of herbs Elias had given me yesterday, swallowing twice the recommended amount. The bitter taste made me gag, but I forced them down. I couldn't collapse today—Ryan had actually acknowledged my presence at breakfast, a rare occurrence that had sent a pathetic flutter of hope through my heart.

As I waited for the herbs to take effect, I caught my reflection in the mirror. My skin had taken on an almost translucent quality, the blue veins visible beneath. My once-vibrant eyes looked hollow, shadowed by dark circles no amount of concealer could hide.

I touched the mate mark on my neck—the symbol of a bond that was killing me as surely as the wolf sickness. Perhaps they were working together, the illness and the broken bond, each accelerating the other's deadly work.

"Just a little longer," I promised my reflection. "Just until our anniversary. Then I'll tell him everything."

But as I wiped away the last traces of blood and practiced my smile in the mirror, I couldn't silence the voice in my head that whispered a terrible truth: Ryan Sterling would not mourn me when I was gone. He would be free.

And perhaps that was the only gift I had left to give him.

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