
Rejected Mate of the Devil Alpha
Chapter 3
I did not trust the woman who stood before me.
Trust had always been a luxury I could not afford, and tonight had proven just how fragile safety truly was. Still, as I stared up at Selene—at the calm certainty in her glowing eyes—I knew one undeniable truth.
If I stayed here alone, I would die.
Again.
My body trembled as I pushed myself upright, every muscle screaming in protest. The forest felt different now—quieter, as though it were listening. The faint warmth lingering in my chest pulsed slowly, no longer the violent agony of rejection, but something deeper. Heavier. Alive.
Selene noticed.
Her gaze flicked briefly to my chest, then back to my face. “You feel it already,” she murmured.
“I feel a lot of things,” I said hoarsely. “None of them make sense.”
She gave a small, knowing nod. “They won’t. Not yet.”
The rogue wolves still lay unconscious a short distance away, their bodies sprawled unnaturally against broken bark and cracked earth. I glanced at them, dread curling in my stomach.
“Did I… do that?” I asked quietly.
Selene followed my gaze. “Yes.”
Fear surged through me. “I didn’t mean to.”
“You didn’t control it,” she corrected. “There’s a difference.”
She rose to her feet smoothly and extended a hand toward me. I hesitated, staring at her pale fingers. They did not tremble. They did not reach with pity.
They reached with certainty.
“If you stay,” she said calmly, “the pain will return. Rejection wounds don’t heal in one night—especially not when fate is involved.”
The word fate twisted sharply in my chest.
“And if I go with you?” I asked.
Her eyes darkened. “Then nothing about your life will ever be simple again.”
I laughed weakly. “It already isn’t.”
That earned the faintest curve of her lips.
I took her hand.
The moment our skin touched, a jolt of energy passed between us—subtle, but unmistakable. Selene’s brows lifted slightly, her grip tightening just a fraction.
“Oh,” she whispered. “Yes. There’s no doubt now.”
“About what?” I demanded, panic flaring.
She helped me to my feet, steadying me when my legs nearly buckled. “About why the packs erased your bloodline.”
We moved quickly through the forest, Selene guiding me along paths I hadn’t noticed before. The deeper we went, the thicker the air grew, humming faintly as if charged with unseen power. My senses sharpened despite my exhaustion. I could hear distant owls, feel the pulse of the earth beneath my feet.
My wolf stirred again, no longer whimpering.
She was… watching.
“Where are you taking me?” I asked after several minutes.
“Somewhere old,” Selene replied. “Somewhere the Alphas pretend doesn’t exist anymore.”
At last, the trees parted, revealing a narrow stone staircase carved directly into the side of a hill. Moss clung to the ancient steps, glowing faintly under moonlight.
My breath caught. “What is this place?”
“A sanctuary,” Selene said. “Built long before packs were ruled by fear and power games.”
We descended.
The air grew warmer with each step, the hum in my chest growing stronger until it felt like my heartbeat had synced with something vast and unseen. At the bottom of the stairs lay a wide cavern lit by soft, silver flames that burned without smoke.
The walls were etched with symbols—wolves crowned in fire and shadow, moons split into light and dark, a single female figure standing above kneeling Alphas.
My knees weakened.
“I’ve seen this,” I whispered. “In my head.”
Selene turned sharply. “You saw the memory.”
“What memory?”
She faced me fully now, her expression grave. “Yours.”
Before I could respond, the warmth in my chest surged violently. I cried out, dropping to my knees as visions flooded my mind.
A throne of stone and flame.
Wolves bowing—not in fear, but in reverence.
A woman standing alone, her presence bending the world around her.
Her eyes burned silver and black.
My eyes.
I gasped, clutching my chest as the vision faded.
“No,” I whispered desperately. “That’s not possible.”
Selene knelt before me, placing a steadying hand on my shoulder. “Your bloodline was known as the Umbra Luna—wolves born of balance. Light and shadow. Creation and destruction.”
I shook my head, tears spilling freely. “If that were true, someone would have known. Someone would have told me.”
“They did know,” Selene said softly. “That’s why they buried it.”
She rose and gestured to the carvings on the wall. “The Umbra Luna were never meant to kneel. You were rulers by nature—not through dominance, but through bond. Through truth.”
My heart pounded painfully. “Then why was I weak?”
“You weren’t weak,” she replied. “You were sealed.”
The words hit me like a blow.
“Sealed?” I echoed.
“For generations, your bloodline was hunted,” Selene continued. “Because the Umbra Luna could not be controlled. No Alpha could dominate them—not even through the mate bond.”
My breath hitched.
Kael.
The Devil Alpha.
A chill ran down my spine as understanding crept in.
“The mate bond didn’t submit me to him,” I whispered.
“No,” Selene said. “It frightened him.”
Silence filled the cavern, heavy and suffocating.
Far away, across pack borders and stone walls, Kael Draven staggered.
The sensation hit him without warning.
Pain—sharp and unfamiliar—lanced through his chest, stealing the breath from his lungs. He gripped the edge of his desk, teeth gritted as a dark pulse rippled through his body.
“What is this?” he snarled.
The bond.
The bond he had shattered.
For the first time since the rejection, it didn’t feel empty.
It felt… awake.
Back in the cavern, I pressed my palm to my chest as a strange echo reverberated through me. My wolf lifted her head inside my mind, eyes glowing fiercely.
He feels it, she whispered.
Fear and something dangerously close to satisfaction twisted together inside me.
“I don’t want him,” I said quickly, as if Selene—or fate—might misunderstand. “I never want to see him again.”
Selene studied me for a long moment. “Fate rarely cares what we want.”
She moved toward a stone basin at the center of the cavern, filled with liquid that shimmered like moonlight. “This will help stabilize your power. It won’t awaken everything—but it will keep you alive.”
Alive sounded good.
I approached slowly, staring into the basin. My reflection stared back at me—but my eyes flickered silver and black beneath the surface.
“Once I do this,” I asked quietly, “there’s no going back, is there?”
Selene met my gaze steadily. “There never was.”
I took a breath and plunged my hands into the liquid.
Power surged instantly, racing up my arms and straight into my heart. I screamed as the cavern shook, ancient symbols blazing to life along the walls.
My wolf howled—not in pain, but in strength.
When the light finally faded, I collapsed forward, gasping.
Selene caught me before I hit the ground.
“It’s begun,” she said softly.
I closed my eyes, exhaustion dragging me under.
The last thing I felt before darkness claimed me was the echo of a bond I thought was broken—
and the distant, furious roar of a Devil Alpha who had just realized his mistake.
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