
Rejected Mate's Revenge
Chapter 3
The morning mist clung to the headstones like ghostly fingers as I made my way through the pack cemetery, drawn by an invisible thread I couldn't explain. My mother's grave lay at the far end, beneath the ancient oak where she used to read to me as a child. The familiar path felt different today—tainted somehow, though I couldn't yet understand why.
Then I heard Weston's deep laughter echoing through the sacred silence.
I froze behind a weathered marble headstone, my heart hammering against my ribs as voices drifted through the morning air. Peering around the cold stone, I felt the world tilt beneath my feet. There, on the hallowed ground where my mother rested, Weston had spread a pristine white blanket. Crystal glasses caught the filtered sunlight, filled with what looked like champagne, while an elaborate picnic basket sat open between them.
Cielo reclined against him like a contented cat, her golden hair spilling across his chest as she traced lazy patterns on his shirt. They looked perfect together—the powerful Alpha and his chosen mate, celebrating their future on the bones of my past.
"This place is so peaceful," Cielo murmured, her voice carrying that honeyed sweetness that made my skin crawl. "I can see why you wanted to bring me here."
Weston's hand stroked her hair with a tenderness that carved fresh wounds in my chest. "I wanted you to understand," he said, his voice warm with an affection I'd never heard directed at me. "This is where I come to think, to make important decisions. And I've made one about us."
My fingers dug into the rough stone as I pressed closer, desperate to hear despite the agony each word inflicted.
"Cielo," Weston continued, shifting to face her fully. "I need you to know that after our ceremony, you'll never have to worry about... that burden again. I'm done pretending the mate bond means anything when I have real love right here."
The champagne glass slipped from Cielo's fingers, but she caught it with a delighted gasp. "Weston, do you mean...?"
"I mean that Lilliana's presence in our lives ends after tomorrow," he declared, his voice carrying the finality of an Alpha's decree. "She can find somewhere else to exist. Our pack house, our territory, our future—none of it includes her anymore."
Cielo's squeal of joy pierced the morning air like a blade. She threw her arms around his neck, pressing kisses to his jaw while I crouched behind my mother's neighboring headstone, watching my fated mate promise my exile on the very ground where my mother's body lay cold.
"Oh, Weston, you've made me the happiest woman alive," Cielo breathed against his lips. "I was so worried she'd always be between us, with that ridiculous mate bond hanging over everything."
"The Moon Goddess made a mistake," Weston said firmly, his words hitting me like physical blows. "What we have is real love, chosen love. That's worth more than any cosmic accident."
They kissed then, deep and passionate, while I pressed my hand over my mouth to muffle the sob that threatened to escape. The mate bond twisted in my chest like a living thing in agony, each display of their affection sending fresh waves of pain through my soul.
I wanted to run, to flee this desecration of my mother's resting place, but my legs wouldn't obey. Instead, I remained frozen, watching them celebrate my destruction on sacred ground while my mother's headstone bore silent witness to my humiliation.
"I love you, Cielo Wells," Weston whispered against her hair. "Tomorrow, you'll officially be my Luna, and we can finally start our real life together."
"And I love you, Alpha Weston Moreno," she replied, her voice thick with triumph. "More than that burden ever could."
As they settled back into their intimate picnic, feeding each other strawberries and whispering promises about their future, I finally found the strength to move. Each step away from my mother's grave felt like a betrayal, but staying would have shattered what remained of my sanity.
Walking back through the cemetery, past generations of Silver Moon Pack wolves who had found peace in death, I realized that my mother's grave would forever be tainted by this moment. Even in death, she couldn't protect me from the cruelty that had consumed my life.
But perhaps that was fitting. After all, tomorrow would mark the death of any hope I'd foolishly clung to. The death of dreams I should have buried long ago.
The death of the naive girl who still believed her mate might someday choose love over convenience.
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