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Rejected Mate Finds Love Novel Cover

Rejected Mate Finds Love

The acrid smell of smoke and blood still clung to my nostrils when consciousness finally dragged me back from the darkness. My body felt like it had been torn apart and hastily stitched back together, every muscle screaming in protest as I tried to shift on what felt like a clinic bed. "Luna Robin?" Dr. Helena Stone's voice came from somewhere to my left, soft but strained. "Thank the Moon Goddess, you're awake." I tried to speak, but only a rasp emerged. Helena was beside me instantly, pressing a cup of water to my lips. The cool liquid soothed my parched throat, but nothing could ease the hollow ache that seemed to radiate from deep within my core. "How long?" I managed to whisper. "Three days," Helena replied, her usually steady hands trembling as she set the cup aside. "Robin, I...
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Chapter 2

The absence hit me before I even opened my eyes fully. My fingers fumbled across the clinic bedside table, searching for the familiar weight of my blessed moonstone charm—the one sacred thing that had remained mine through five years of humiliation and heartbreak.

Gone.

Panic clawed at my throat as I sat up too quickly, ignoring the sharp protest from my healing ribs. The charm had been there when I'd fallen asleep, its cool surface a comfort against my palm as I'd whispered prayers to the Moon Goddess for guidance. Now the table held only the water cup Helena had left and the remnants of Mrs. Marshall's buyout papers.

"Looking for something, Luna?" The voice carried a mocking sweetness that made my wolf bristle.

I turned toward the window that overlooked the pack house gardens. There, beneath the old oak tree where Leon used to shift for our evening runs, sat young Parker Carr with my moonstone charm dangling from his small fingers like a toy. The blessed silver chain caught the afternoon sunlight as he swung it back and forth, completely oblivious to its sacred meaning.

Esperanza lounged on a nearby bench, watching her son's desecration with what could only be described as approval. Her dark hair fell in perfect waves over her shoulders, and she wore one of those flowing dresses that made her look ethereal and untouchable—everything I apparently wasn't.

"Parker," I called through the open window, my voice hoarse but firm. "That doesn't belong to you."

The boy looked up with Leon's same green eyes, though they held none of my mate's former warmth. "Finders keepers," he announced with the cruel certainty that only children possessed. "Besides, Mama says sacred things belong to people who deserve them."

Esperanza's smile was razor-sharp. "Oh, Parker, you shouldn't repeat everything Mama says." But her tone held no real reproach, only the satisfaction of a predator who'd finally cornered her prey.

I struggled out of bed, my bare feet hitting the cold clinic floor. The hospital gown hung loose around my frame—I'd lost weight during my unconscious days, my body consuming itself in grief. But I forced myself to walk to the window, gripping the sill for support.

"That charm was blessed by the Moon Goddess herself," I said, my voice carrying across the garden with more strength than I felt. "It's not a plaything."

"Sacred items belong to those worthy of the Moon Goddess's protection," Esperanza replied, rising from her bench with fluid grace. She moved to stand behind her son, her hands resting possessively on his shoulders. "Perhaps you should ask yourself why She allowed it to be... misplaced."

The implication hit like a physical blow. According to Esperanza's twisted logic, losing my charm—and by extension, my pup—meant the Moon Goddess had abandoned me. That I was unworthy of protection, unworthy of the sacred bond I'd treasured above all else.

Parker giggled and held the charm higher, making it dance in the sunlight. "It's so pretty when it spins. Can I keep it, Mama?"

"We'll see, darling." Esperanza's eyes never left mine. "Some people don't appreciate the gifts they're given."

Rage—pure, white-hot fury—surged through me for the first time since the warehouse attack. This woman had systematically destroyed my marriage, manipulated my mate, and now she was letting her child desecrate the one thing that connected me to my faith. Enough.

I turned away from the window and grabbed my robe, tying it with shaking hands. My wolf paced restlessly beneath my skin, demanding action, demanding we reclaim what was ours. For once, I didn't fight her.

The walk to Leon's office felt endless. Each step sent jolts of pain through my healing body, but I pushed forward, driven by something deeper than physical discomfort. The pack house buzzed with afternoon activity—wolves coming and going, children playing in the corridors, the normal rhythm of pack life continuing as if my world hadn't shattered three days ago.

I didn't knock. The heavy oak door swung open under my palm, revealing Leon hunched over his desk, dark hair falling across his forehead as he studied what looked like patrol reports. He looked up sharply at my entrance, and for a moment—just a heartbeat—I saw something that might have been relief flash across his features.

"Robin." My name sounded strange on his lips, formal and distant. "You should be resting."

"Your nephew stole my moonstone charm." I didn't bother with pleasantries or pack protocol. "Esperanza is letting him treat it like a toy."

Leon's jaw tightened almost imperceptibly. "I'm sure it's just a misunderstanding. Parker's young—"

"He called it 'finders keepers,'" I interrupted, my voice rising despite my efforts to stay calm. "And Esperanza told him sacred items belong to those worthy of the Moon Goddess's protection."

Silence stretched between us, heavy with five years of unspoken resentments and growing distance. Leon set down his pen with deliberate care, his Alpha mask sliding into place—the same expression he wore during pack meetings when dealing with difficult wolves.

"Family harmony is more important than petty grievances, Robin," he said finally, and those words—those casual, dismissive words—shattered something fundamental inside me.

My wolf threw back her head and howled, a sound of such pure anguish that it echoed through our severed mate bond like a funeral dirge. Even blocked from his mind, I felt Leon flinch at the sound, his own wolf responding with an answering whimper of distress.

But he didn't take it back. He didn't apologize. He just sat there, my fated mate, and looked at me like I was the problem.

"Petty grievances," I repeated softly, tasting the words like poison. "Is that what our bond has become to you?"

Leon's hands clenched into fists on his desk, but his voice remained steady. "I won't have discord in this pack over a piece of jewelry."

A piece of jewelry. Five years of marriage, a lost pup, and a sacred charm blessed by our goddess—all reduced to a piece of jewelry that wasn't worth disrupting his precious family harmony.

I turned and walked out without another word, my wolf's howls echoing in the silence behind me. In the hallway, I passed several pack members who quickly averted their eyes, pretending they hadn't heard their Luna's heart breaking in real time.

Mrs. Marshall was waiting in my clinic room when I returned, the buyout papers spread across my bedside table like an invitation to freedom.

"I see you've made your decision," she said, noting something in my expression.

I picked up the pen with steady hands. "When do I leave?"

"Tonight, if you're strong enough. I've arranged new identity documents—Rebecca Stone. Alpha Marcus Thompson of the Silver Ridge Pack owes me a considerable favor and has agreed to provide you sanctuary, no questions asked." She slid a sealed envelope across the table. "Your letter of recommendation. He'll find you a position suited to your... limited abilities."

I signed my name—Robin Washington—for the last time, each letter a small death. When I finished, Mrs. Marshall gathered the papers with brisk efficiency.

"A car will arrive at midnight," she said, already moving toward the door. "Pack light. Rebecca Stone has no history with this pack, and it needs to stay that way."

After she left, I sat in the gathering darkness and touched the empty space where my moonstone charm should have been. Somewhere in this pack house, a child played with the last physical reminder of my faith, while his mother smiled and my mate chose family harmony over his Luna's heart.

But maybe Mrs. Marshall was right about one thing—Rebecca Stone would have no history with this pack. She would be free of their cruelty, their dismissal, their casual destruction of sacred things.

She would be free of him.

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