
Rejected Healer: Fleeing the Alpha's Grip
Chapter 3
The grandfather clock in the hallway chimed midnight, its hollow sound echoing through the empty pack house corridors. I sat at my kitchen table, surrounded by scattered papers and the soft glow of my laptop screen, crafting words that could change everything.
The Moonlight Council's application portal had been surprisingly easy to find. Years ago, when I'd first dreamed of joining their prestigious international healing center, the application process had seemed impossibly complex. Now, with years of experience behind me, the requirements felt like a natural extension of everything I'd already accomplished.
"Extensive experience in silver poisoning treatment," I typed, my fingers moving with steady precision. "Innovative neutralization techniques resulting in 97% patient survival rate." The statistics were real, earned through countless nights spent perfecting my methods while Neil slept peacefully upstairs, unaware of the lives I'd saved in the darkness.
I attached my research on accelerated silver extraction—work I'd done in my spare time, hoping to eventually publish it with Neil's support. Support that had never come. The irony wasn't lost on me that this research, dismissed by my own mate, might now become my ticket to freedom.
The application asked for a personal statement about my commitment to advancing werewolf healing arts. I stared at the blank text box for a long moment, then began typing:
"My dedication to healing stems from a fundamental belief that every life has value, regardless of pack status or past mistakes. I have spent years developing treatments for the most challenging cases, often working with patients others had written off as lost causes. I believe the Moonlight Council's mission aligns perfectly with my own—to push the boundaries of what's possible in werewolf medicine, and to ensure that politics never interfere with the sacred duty to heal."
The words felt like a confession, a declaration of everything Neil had tried to suppress in me. I attached my credentials, my research, and letters of recommendation I'd quietly gathered over the years from grateful patients and their families. Then, before I could second-guess myself, I hit submit.
The confirmation email arrived within minutes, professional and encouraging. "Thank you for your application to the Moonlight Council International Healing Center. Due to your exceptional qualifications, we will expedite your review process. Expect a response within 72 hours."
Seventy-two hours. Three days to wait and see if my future lay beyond Silverstone Pack territory.
I closed the laptop and was about to head upstairs when footsteps on the gravel outside made me freeze. Heavy, deliberate steps circling the house. My blood turned to ice as I recognized the irregular gait—Rocky Henderson, the dead rogue's brother.
I moved to the window and peered through the curtains. A massive figure stood at the edge of the tree line, watching the house with predatory stillness. Even in the moonlight, I could see the rage radiating from his posture, the way his hands clenched and unclenched at his sides.
The next morning brought no relief. Rocky's harassment escalated from midnight stalking to broad daylight confrontation. I was leaving the healing center after treating a warrior's training injury when he stepped out from behind the building, blocking my path to the pack house.
"Going somewhere, murderer?" His voice was a gravelly rasp, thick with barely contained violence.
I forced myself to remain calm, though my heart hammered against my ribs. "Rocky, I understand you're grieving, but—"
"Grieving?" He laughed, a sound like breaking glass. "My brother is dead because of your incompetence, and you think I'm just grieving?"
He stepped closer, and I caught the scent of unwashed rage and sleepless nights clinging to him like a shroud. "He trusted you people. Came here bleeding and broken, begging for help, and you let him die like a dog."
"I tried to help him," I said, the words tasting like ash. "I wanted to treat him myself, but—"
"But what?" Rocky's hand shot out, gripping my arm with bruising force. "But you were too busy? Too important? Too good to waste your precious time on a rogue?"
His fingers dug deeper, and I gasped at the pain. "You're going to suffer like he did. You're going to know what it feels like to die slowly, helplessly, while someone who could save you chooses not to."
"Let go of me." I tried to pull away, but his grip tightened.
"I'm going to make you pay for every moment of pain he endured. Every breath he struggled for. Every—"
"Is there a problem here?"
Beta Marcus Thompson appeared around the corner, his commanding presence immediately shifting the dynamic. Rocky released my arm and stepped back, but his eyes never left my face.
"No problem," Rocky said, his voice deceptively calm. "Just having a conversation with the good healer here. About responsibility. About consequences."
He melted back into the shadows between buildings, but his parting words followed me like a curse: "This isn't over, Blakely Ward. Not by a long shot."
Marcus frowned, watching Rocky's retreat. "You should report this to the Alpha."
I almost laughed at the suggestion. Neil was probably comforting Amelie through another bout of manufactured trauma. "I'll handle it," I said, rubbing the bruises already forming on my arm.
That evening, I locked myself in my study and pulled out every pack law book I'd collected over the years. If Neil wouldn't protect me, I'd protect myself. And if I was going to leave this pack, I needed to do it properly.
The mate bond laws were complex, buried in centuries of tradition and legal precedent. But there, in a dusty volume on pack dissolution procedures, I found what I was looking for. Rejection clauses could be embedded in standard pack documents if presented correctly—property agreements, liability waivers, territorial contracts.
I began drafting, my pen moving with surgical precision across the legal documents. To anyone glancing at them, they would appear to be routine pack business—standard forms addressing liability for healing center incidents and property division protocols. But woven through the dense legal language were the words that would sever our mate bond forever.
The rejection clause was buried in subsection C of the liability waiver, disguised as a standard indemnification agreement. Neil would see what he expected to see—boring legal paperwork to protect the pack from future lawsuits. He wouldn't read the fine print that would set me free.
As I worked, Rocky's threats echoed in my mind, mixing with the memory of Neil's dismissive voice: "Handle it yourself."
Fine. I would handle everything myself. And when I was done, Neil Oliver would finally understand the true cost of his betrayal.
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