
Rejected to Claimed
Chapter 3
The crowd eventually dispersed, leaving me alone with my thoughts. I slipped away from the ballroom, seeking refuge on a secluded balcony that overlooked the moonlit gardens. The cool night air caressed my flushed skin as I gripped the stone railing, trying to process everything that had just happened.
My fingers found my moonstone pendant again, squeezing it for comfort. "Heir to the Ancient Moonstone Pack," I whispered to myself. How could Sterling know that? We'd kept our bloodline hidden for generations.
The soft click of the balcony door made me turn. Sterling stood in the doorway, his imposing frame silhouetted against the warm light from inside. Without the audience, his aura seemed more contained, though no less powerful.
"May I join you?" he asked, his deep voice gentler than before.
I nodded, stepping aside to give him space. He moved to the railing beside me, close enough that I could feel the heat radiating from his body, but not touching me.
"You're far from home," he said after a moment of silence.
"Yes," I replied simply, unsure what else to say to the Lycan King.
"Different from what you expected?"
I glanced at him, surprised by the question. "Very different."
Sterling turned to face me fully, his storm-gray eyes reflecting the moonlight. "I've wanted to speak with you properly for years, Destiny."
My heart stuttered. "Years?"
He nodded, a strange vulnerability crossing his features. "Since your coming-of-age ceremony."
I blinked in confusion. "We've never met before tonight."
"No, we haven't." His gaze dropped to my pendant, then back to my eyes. "But I knew the moment I caught your scent that day. You were my true mate."
The world seemed to tilt beneath my feet. "That's... that's not possible."
"It is," he said softly. "I felt the pull of our bond immediately. But you were already with Grant Reynolds. I respected that."
I took a step back, my mind reeling. "No, I can't... I'm not..."
"Not what?" Sterling's voice remained gentle, without pressure. "Not worthy? Not good enough?"
Tears pricked at my eyes. "I'm an Omega who was rejected by her Alpha. I'm not meant for someone like you."
Sterling didn't move closer, didn't try to touch me. "The Moon Goddess doesn't make mistakes, Destiny. She matched us for a reason."
"I can't do this," I whispered, wrapping my arms around myself. "I can't risk being rejected again."
Instead of pushing, Sterling simply nodded. "I understand."
He reached into his pocket and pulled out a small token—a silver pendant with the Royal Lycan crest. "This doesn't mean anything official," he explained. "Just a promise that you're under my protection. No strings attached."
I hesitated before taking it, our fingers brushing briefly.
"There's a private dining room in the east wing," he continued. "Would you join me for dinner? Just to talk, away from all this." He gestured toward the ballroom. "No pressure about our bond."
The respect in his voice—so different from Grant's commands—made me pause. "Just dinner?"
"Just dinner," he confirmed.
The private dining room was intimate, with soft lighting and a small table set for two. Sterling pulled out my chair before taking his own seat across from me.
"I imagine you have questions," he said as servers brought out the first course.
"Why did you wait?" I asked. "All these years?"
Sterling's expression grew somber. "Because you weren't free. And because I wanted you to choose me, not feel obligated."
As dinner progressed, Sterling shared stories of his life as Lycan King—the responsibilities, the loneliness of his position. Unlike Grant, who had always spoken of his Alpha status as a burden he bore for the pack, Sterling spoke of his role with quiet dignity.
"And what about you?" he asked after I'd finished a particularly funny anecdote about his royal guard. "What have these years been like for you?"
I hesitated, my fork hovering over my plate. "Hard," I admitted finally. "After Grant rejected me..."
I told him about the whispers, the sideways glances, the way other wolves had treated me after the scandal. Sterling listened without interruption, his eyes never leaving my face.
"I thought I was doing the right thing," I said softly. "Telling the truth about that chalice."
"You were," Sterling confirmed. "Truth always matters."
Something about his simple statement broke through a wall I'd built around myself. A small laugh escaped me—the first genuine one in years.
Sterling's eyes crinkled at the corners as he smiled back, and for a moment, I forgot about pack politics and mate bonds and just enjoyed the feeling of being truly seen.
But as our conversation flowed easier with each passing minute, I couldn't help wondering: if Sterling was my true mate, why had the Moon Goddess waited so long to bring us together? And what would happen when Grant realized what he'd truly lost?
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