
Rejected Mate's Awakening
Rejected Mate's Awakening Chapter 1
The moon hung full and merciless above the ceremonial clearing as I stood in the center of the sacred circle, surrounded by the expectant faces of the Crescent Valley Pack. Twenty-one years old today. The age when every werewolf's inner wolf was supposed to emerge, when childhood ended and true pack life began.
But as the hours crawled by, my body remained stubbornly human.
"Come on, Evangeline," whispered my mother, Margaret, from the edge of the circle. Her voice carried a desperate edge that made my stomach clench. "Feel for your wolf. She's there, she has to be there."
I closed my eyes and reached deep inside myself, searching for any spark of the beast that should define my very existence. The pack's energy pressed against me—dozens of wolves in human form, their own inner beasts restless and eager to witness another's awakening. But within me, there was only silence.
Empty, echoing silence.
"Perhaps she needs more time," Elder Morrison suggested, though his tone suggested he already knew the truth. "Some wolves are late bloomers—"
"She's twenty-one," someone called from the crowd. "If her wolf hasn't emerged by now..." The voice trailed off, but the implication hung in the air like smoke.
I opened my eyes to find Alpha Harrison watching me with barely concealed disappointment. His weathered face, usually kind when he looked at me, now held the cold assessment of a leader forced to acknowledge failure within his pack.
"Evangeline Kelly," he said, his Alpha voice carrying across the clearing. "Do you feel your wolf stirring?"
The formal question demanded an honest answer. In werewolf society, lying to your Alpha during a ceremony was unthinkable. My throat felt like sandpaper as I forced out the words that would seal my fate.
"No, Alpha. I feel... nothing."
A collective gasp rippled through the assembled pack. Someone's sharp intake of breath cut through the night air like a blade. I caught sight of Jessica Morrison—the Alpha's daughter and my former best friend—taking an instinctive step away from me, her face a mask of horror and embarrassment.
"Wolfless," the word escaped as a whisper from somewhere in the crowd, but it might as well have been shouted. "She's wolfless."
The shame hit me like a physical blow. In a world where your wolf defined your worth, your place, your very identity, I was nothing. Less than nothing. I was defective.
Alpha Harrison's expression hardened into the cold mask he wore when making difficult pack decisions. "Evangeline Kelly, by the laws of our people and the will of the Moon Goddess, you are hereby designated Omega of the Crescent Valley Pack. You will serve at the pleasure of your betters and accept the guidance of those blessed with their wolves."
Omega. The lowest rank. Reserved for the weak, the broken, the useless.
My father, Daniel, stepped forward from where he'd been standing with the other former Betas. His face was ashen, and I could see the weight of fresh shame settling on his shoulders. First his own fall from grace, and now his daughter's public humiliation. We were becoming a family of failures.
"Alpha," he said carefully, "perhaps with time—"
"The ceremony is concluded," Alpha Harrison cut him off. "The pack has witnessed. The Moon Goddess has spoken."
As the crowd began to disperse, I caught fragments of whispered conversations that felt like daggers to my heart.
"Poor Daniel. First he loses his Beta position, now this."
"I heard wolfless wolves sometimes go insane. Should she even be allowed to stay in the pack?"
"My mother always said the Kelly bloodline was weak."
Jessica approached me as I stood frozen in the center of the now-empty ceremonial circle. For a moment, hope fluttered in my chest—maybe my oldest friend would stand by me, offer some comfort in this nightmare.
Instead, she looked at me with a mixture of pity and disgust that made me want to disappear into the earth.
"I'm sorry, Evangeline," she said, but her voice was cold, distant. "But I can't... I mean, my father says I shouldn't associate with... with wolves who might be defective. It could affect my own standing when I'm ready to find my mate."
She turned and walked away without another word, leaving me alone under the merciless moon.
The next few days blurred together in a haze of humiliation and isolation. Pack members who had once greeted me with casual friendliness now either ignored me completely or went out of their way to remind me of my new place.
Young wolves barely out of their own ceremonies would spit at my feet as I passed, calling me "defective" and "pack shame." The children I used to help with their homework now threw stones and chanted cruel rhymes about the wolfless girl who brought bad luck.
But it was the dreams that truly began to torment me.
Every night since the failed ceremony, I found myself experiencing visions that felt more real than my waking hours. I would see through eyes that weren't mine—silver eyes that reflected moonlight like mirrors. I ran through forests I'd never seen, felt the exhilaration of the hunt, the wild freedom of four legs carrying me across impossible distances.
And always, always, there was the scent. Pine and storm, wild and untamed, calling to something deep inside me that shouldn't exist. In these dreams, I wasn't alone. There was a presence, a consciousness that felt ancient and powerful, touched by something dark and dangerous.
A massive black wolf whose loneliness echoed my own.
I would wake gasping, my body aching as if I'd actually been running, my skin burning with phantom sensations of fur and fangs that would never be mine. The scent would linger for moments after I opened my eyes, so real I could almost taste it on my tongue.
Wolfless wolves weren't supposed to dream of running. We weren't supposed to feel phantom pack bonds or scent wolves we'd never met.
But as the blood moon approached, the dreams grew stronger, and the call of that pine and storm scent became impossible to ignore.
Rejected Mate's Awakening of Contents
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