
Rejected Mate's New Beginning
Chapter 1
I wiped down the glass display case, admiring how the morning light caught the sugar crystals on my freshly baked pastries. The familiar scent of vanilla and cinnamon wrapped around me like a comforting blanket—a stark contrast to the constant vigilance that had defined my life as a rogue she-wolf for the past five years.
"Mommy, can I have the coffee to Mr. Jenkins now?" Danny bounced on his toes beside me, his small hands carefully gripping the paper cup I'd just filled.
"Careful, sweetie. It's hot," I reminded him, smoothing his unruly dark hair—hair that matched his father's perfectly, though Danny had no idea. "Walk slowly, okay?"
My son nodded with exaggerated seriousness, his tongue peeking out in concentration as he turned toward our regular customer in the corner. I smiled, watching his careful steps, pride swelling in my chest. He was all I had, this precious secret I'd carried away from the Silvermoon Pack territory five years ago.
The bell above the door chimed, and I turned automatically with my practiced smile. "Welcome to—"
The words died in my throat.
Time seemed to freeze as a tall figure stepped into my carefully constructed world. The scent hit me first—pine and mountain air and something primal that made my wolf, Luna, suddenly whimper and retreat to the darkest corner of my mind. I didn't need to see his face to know who had just walked into my bakery.
Ethan. Alpha of the Silvermoon Pack. My fated mate. The father of my child.
My heart hammered against my ribs as his eyes swept the room, not yet noticing me behind the counter. He looked exactly the same, yet somehow more powerful—his broad shoulders filling out his tailored charcoal suit, his jaw sharper, his presence commanding every molecule of air in the room.
I clutched the edge of the counter, my knuckles white. Five years of carefully avoiding pack territories, five years of building walls around my heart, shattered in an instant.
"Mommy, I—"
Danny's voice snapped me back to reality, but it was already too late. My son, distracted by something, had turned too quickly and collided directly with Ethan's legs. Coffee splashed upward, soaking the front of Ethan's pristine suit.
"I'm sorry!" Danny gasped, his eyes wide with horror.
The entire bakery fell silent. I could feel the ripple of Ethan's Alpha aura filling the space, commanding respect, demanding submission. The human customers might not understand why they suddenly felt the urge to lower their eyes, but I knew. My wolf knew.
Ethan looked down at my son, his expression unreadable, then slowly raised his head. Our eyes locked across the room, and the world tilted on its axis.
Recognition flared in his gaze. His wolf, Ares—I remembered his name with painful clarity—let out a possessive growl that I felt rather than heard. The mate bond that I'd tried so desperately to sever pulsed between us, raw and electric.
Luna whimpered again, curling into herself, the pain of our separation still fresh despite the years.
"I—I'm so sorry," I stammered, forcing my legs to move as I grabbed a handful of napkins and hurried toward them. Every step felt like walking through quicksand, my body simultaneously drawn to and terrified of the man before me.
Ethan's jaw tightened as I approached. "It's fine," he said, his voice clipped but deep, sending unwelcome shivers down my spine.
I knelt beside Danny, putting myself between him and Ethan instinctively. "Go get the towel from behind the counter, sweetie," I whispered, and Danny scurried away, confused but obedient.
As I dabbed at the coffee stain on Ethan's suit, I could feel his eyes burning into me, studying my face, my hair, the curve of my neck where his mark should have been. The customers around us averted their gazes, instinctively sensing the tension crackling in the air.
"Sophia," he said, so quietly only I could hear it.
My name on his lips after five years nearly broke me. I kept my eyes fixed on the stain, refusing to look up, refusing to acknowledge what we both knew—that the Moon Goddess had tied our souls together, and no amount of running could change that.
What I didn't know was how much he knew. About why I left. About the child who had just crashed into him. About the lies that had torn us apart.
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