
Rejected Mate’s Final Winter
Chapter 1
The snowstorm howled outside as I stumbled into the packhouse, my body numb from the cold. Celia had locked me in the car, leaving me to freeze while she celebrated Ivan Black’s birthday. I almost didn’t make it home, but here I was, half-dead and shivering. The hallway was a mess—clothes scattered everywhere, on the sofa, on the floor, in every corner. Even the bedroom had been claimed by them. I stood outside the door, listening to Celia’s fervent whispers:
"Ivan, I wish I could be your mate. I love you so much."
A bitter laugh escaped me. In the past, I would’ve barged in, using my Alpha tone to command them to stop. But now, I simply turned to the kitchen to bake some spiced honey cake. Six years of loving Celia had drained me of any fight.
The aroma of the cake filled the air, but its warmth couldn’t touch the chill in my heart. I curled up on the sofa, my fingers nearly frozen, unable to draw warmth from the dessert. The sound of the bedroom door opening shattered the silence. Celia and Ivan emerged, their faces smug and satisfied. Ivan, a Delta from the Crimson Fang Pack, wore nothing but boxers, flaunting his physique without a care. As for Celia, my mate and the former healer of the Silver Moon Pack, she hadn’t bothered to dress.
Ivan raised an eyebrow when he saw me, a smirk on his lips. Celia nonchalantly nudged him, "Go wait for me inside; I'll handle this." Ivan chuckled softly and obeyed, retreating to the bedroom.
Celia turned to face me, her expression devoid of guilt. She glanced at me carelessly, her tone flat, "You’re home?"
I set down the dessert, my gaze lingering on her bare body for a moment, then turned to the window, where the city lay buried under the snowstorm. My heart felt as cold and lifeless as the landscape outside.
She gracefully seated herself by the sofa and lit a cigarette. "I told you it was Ivan’s birthday. Why did you have to come and spoil it for everyone?" She puffed out a cloud of smoke, her tone edged with annoyance.
I watched her, feeling utterly drained. The first time I caught them together, Celia had been frantic, tears brimming in her eyes. "You know, Ivan has been my unfulfilled dream since my youth. I won’t be with him; I just need to have him. If you disagree, we can sever the mate bond." Her eyes were cold and stubborn, and Ivan was her unattainable love, much like she was mine.
Her family had fallen from grace, losing hope of being with Ivan. Yet, it gave me hope of being with her. We’d spent three years in this twisted bond, each time convincing myself she’d eventually let him go. She had promised not to bring Ivan to the packhouse, and yet here we were.
I couldn’t help but ask, "Did you ever consider I might have died in that car?"
She flicked her cigarette ash casually, barely glancing at me, "But you didn’t. If there’s no problem, you should stay at a hotel tonight. It’s Ivan’s birthday; I don’t want him upset."
Her indifference pierced my heart like a needle. All she cared about was Ivan, while I found myself locked out of my own home. If I hadn’t managed to break free and smash the car window, I might have died there. Perhaps, to her, even my breathing was an inconvenience.
Seeing my silence, she continued, "Don’t make a scene. The bedroom will be cleaned up, and there won’t be a next time."
"There won’t be a next time?" I echoed with sarcasm. "So, as long as I’m not home, you two can do whatever you want in my house?"
She tensed momentarily but quickly composed herself, "Think whatever you want. Bottom line, you need to leave tonight."
"Both of you get out, or I’ll call the pack enforcers." She hesitated, her eyes cold, "You wouldn’t dare!"
Calmly, I took out my phone and dialed the Gamma. She lunged forward, grabbed the phone, and smashed it into the corner, breaking the screen instantly.
"Fine, I’ll go! Is this all you can do?" She sneered, "If you weren’t playing a useless communication liaison, would I have to cling to Ivan?"
I once had a respected position as the pack strategist. Three years ago, during a fire at the packhouse, I inhaled so much smoke rescuing her that my vocal cords were damaged. I had to step back, settling for a liaison job, which she despised. Now, I barely had any dignity left.
They dressed and put on their shoes in the hallway. Ivan wrapped an arm around her shoulder, teasingly, "We can continue at the hotel later. Kneel and serve me." Celia playfully glared at him, her tone full of affection, "Making me lick your toes again, you’re so bad."
They flirted openly, as if I were invisible. Their words sickened me to the core.
As they opened the door, Ivan paused, glancing back at me, "Alpha Alec, you’re the most willing cuckold I’ve ever seen. Why not just watch us by the bedside?"
Celia laughed, nudged him lightly, and shut the door. Silence at last, punctuated only by my increasingly labored breaths. Blood trickled from my nose, a reminder of my dwindling life.
I had intended to tell Celia today about my late-stage nasal cancer, the healer’s grim prognosis giving me maybe six months. But now, I saw no point. What difference would it make? She already views me as an obstacle, disturbing her dreams with Ivan.
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