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Rejected Mate's New Start Novel Cover

Rejected Mate's New Start

The stack of freshly folded laundry in my arms felt heavier than usual as I approached Alpha Camden's office. Soleil's tiny dresses and Camden's pressed shirts smelled of the lavender detergent I'd carefully selected—a small touch I hoped would bring comfort to this house that often felt more like a battleground than a home. I raised my hand to knock, then froze. Camden's voice carried through the heavy oak door, speaking in the clipped tone he used for mind-link conversations with his Beta. "She's just the nanny, Marcus," Camden's words hit me like ice water. "A useful omega for Soleil's care, nothing more." My fingers tightened on the laundry basket's handles. The electric sparks I felt whenever our hands accidentally brushed—surely he felt them too? The way his wolf's scent seemed to call to something deep inside me, even without my own wolf to respond? "The pack members are starting to talk," Marcus Reid's voice came through more faintly, but I caught the concern in his tone. "They see how she cares for Soleil, how she anticipates your needs.
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Chapter 1

The stack of freshly folded laundry in my arms felt heavier than usual as I approached Alpha Camden's office. Soleil's tiny dresses and Camden's pressed shirts smelled of the lavender detergent I'd carefully selected—a small touch I hoped would bring comfort to this house that often felt more like a battleground than a home.

I raised my hand to knock, then froze. Camden's voice carried through the heavy oak door, speaking in the clipped tone he used for mind-link conversations with his Beta.

"She's just the nanny, Marcus," Camden's words hit me like ice water. "A useful omega for Soleil's care, nothing more."

My fingers tightened on the laundry basket's handles. The electric sparks I felt whenever our hands accidentally brushed—surely he felt them too? The way his wolf's scent seemed to call to something deep inside me, even without my own wolf to respond?

"The pack members are starting to talk," Marcus Reid's voice came through more faintly, but I caught the concern in his tone. "They see how she cares for Soleil, how she anticipates your needs. Some are wondering if—"

"If what?" Camden's laugh was harsh, cutting. "If I'd consider marking a wolfless mute? She serves her purpose well enough, but let's not confuse utility with anything more significant."

The laundry basket slipped from my numb fingers, hitting the marble floor with a soft thud. A few of Soleil's socks scattered across the hallway, bright yellow against the dark stone. I pressed my hand to my throat, feeling the pulse that hammered there—the voice I'd kept locked away for so long threatening to break free in a scream of anguish.

Months of silent devotion. Months of believing that maybe, just maybe, he saw something in me worth cherishing. Every gentle touch when he helped me reach high shelves, every soft smile when he found me reading to Soleil—all of it reduced to "utility."

I knelt to gather the scattered clothes, my hands shaking as I tried to fold them properly. The conversation continued behind the door, but the words blurred together as my world tilted on its axis. When I finally stood, my legs felt unsteady, as if the ground beneath me had shifted permanently.

That night, I sat at the small desk in my room, staring at a blank piece of paper. My pen hovered over the page for what felt like hours before I finally began to write.

*Alpha Camden,*

*I've been wondering about marking ceremonies lately. Could you tell me what they mean to you? What makes a Luna worthy of such an honor?*

*- Riley*

I folded the note carefully and slipped it under his office door before dawn, my heart hammering with desperate hope.

Two days passed before I found his response on my dresser.

*Riley,*

*Such matters require careful consideration. Too busy with pack business to discuss right now.*

*- C.M.*

I tried again the following week.

*Alpha Camden,*

*I notice other packs have Luna ceremonies in spring. Do you think Moonveil Pack will have one this year?*

*- Riley*

This time, he avoided my eyes completely when he handed me Soleil's breakfast tray. His response came three days later.

*Timing isn't right. Pack stability comes first.*

*- C.M.*

Each deflection cut deeper than the last. I began to understand that my silence wasn't protection—it was permission. Permission for him to treat me as furniture, useful but unworthy of real consideration.

Then Elisabeth returned.

I was helping Soleil with her art project in the sunroom when the front door slammed with enough force to rattle the windows. Elisabeth Webb swept into the pack house like a storm system, her designer heels clicking against marble with sharp, staccato precision.

"Where is everyone?" Her voice carried the authority of a Luna, but underneath I heard something else—territorial rage.

Soleil's crayon froze mid-stroke. The four-year-old's shoulders tensed, and she glanced at me with wide, fearful eyes. I placed my hand gently on her back, offering what comfort I could without words.

Elisabeth appeared in the sunroom doorway, her perfectly styled blonde hair and camera-ready makeup making her look like she'd stepped off a magazine cover. Her gaze swept over the art supplies scattered across the table, then landed on me with undisguised disdain.

"I see the help has been making herself comfortable," Elisabeth said, her smile sharp as broken glass. "Soleil, darling, what is this mess?"

"Riley and I are making pictures for Daddy," Soleil whispered, her voice small.

"Riley." Elisabeth tested my name like it left a bad taste in her mouth. "How... quaint. Well, that's quite enough of that. A future Alpha doesn't finger paint like a common pup."

She moved to the table and began gathering the art supplies with sharp, efficient movements. Soleil's lower lip trembled as her half-finished drawing of our little family—stick figures holding hands under a bright yellow sun—disappeared into Elisabeth's grasp.

"Mommy, please," Soleil reached for her artwork. "We weren't done—"

"You are now." Elisabeth's tone brooked no argument. She turned to me, her Luna aura pressing against my consciousness like a weight. "I assume you can manage to clean this up properly? Or do I need to find someone more... competent?"

I nodded, not trusting myself to maintain my facade if I tried to communicate. Elisabeth's smile widened, predatory and satisfied.

"Excellent. Soleil, come. We need to discuss proper behavior for young ladies."

As they left, I heard Soleil's quiet sobs echoing down the hallway. I stared at the art supplies in my hands, wondering how something so innocent had become another casualty in this house's war zones.

That evening, during dinner, the final blow came. Soleil had been picking at her food, still upset from the afternoon's events. When she started to cry—soft, heartbroken sounds that made my chest ache—I instinctively reached across the table to touch her hand.

Elisabeth's coffee cup "slipped."

The scalding liquid hit my hand with vicious accuracy, and I jerked back with a sharp intake of breath—the first sound I'd made in Camden's presence in months. The coffee soaked into my sleeve, burning through the fabric to my skin beneath.

"Oh, how clumsy of me," Elisabeth said, her voice dripping false concern. "Perhaps the nanny should be more careful about where she puts her hands."

I looked to Camden, waiting for him to say something—anything—to defend me. Instead, his jaw tightened, and his Alpha voice filled the room.

"Riley. Know your place."

Four words that shattered whatever remained of my foolish hopes. I stood slowly, cradling my burned hand against my chest, and walked away from the table with as much dignity as I could muster.

Behind me, I heard Soleil's crying intensify, but I couldn't turn back. Not anymore.

In my room, I stared at my reflection in the mirror above my dresser. The woman looking back at me was a stranger—hollow-eyed, silent, accepting cruelty as if it were kindness.

I touched my throat, feeling the voice that lived there, trapped and aching to break free.

Maybe it was time to stop being useful and start being heard.

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