
Rejected While Carrying His Heir
Chapter 3
The drums beat against the hollow cavity of my chest, mocking the heart that still dared to beat within it. From the edge of the forest, hidden by the thick trunk of an ancient oak, I watched the bonfire roar toward the sky. Sparks danced upward like fireflies, illuminating the faces of the people I had once called family.
Tonight was the Pup Blessing Ceremony.
It was a sacred rite in the Ironclaw Pack, a night of feasting and prayer to the Moon Goddess to ensure a healthy delivery for the Alpha’s heir. A ceremony that should have been mine.
My fingers dug into the rough bark of the tree, chipping my nails. I shouldn't be here. I was an Omega now, banished to the damp squalor of the basement, forbidden from attending pack gatherings. But a masochistic urge, a twisted need to witness the erasure of my own existence, had dragged me from my cot.
On the raised dais, draped in silks that shimmered in the firelight, stood Helena. She looked radiant, her head thrown back in laughter as she accepted a goblet of nectar from an Elder. And beside her, looking like a god of war and shadows, was Waylen.
My breath hitched. Even after everything—the betrayal, the rejection, the cold cruelty—my soul still recognized him. The phantom pain of our severed bond throbbed in my neck, a dull ache that never truly faded.
I watched as Waylen placed his large hand possessively over Helena’s flat stomach. The crowd erupted in cheers, raising their cups. The sound was a physical blow. They were cheering for the child replacing mine. They were cheering for the woman who had orchestrated the death of their true Alpha heir.
"I bless this union!" the Elder shouted, his voice carrying over the crackling fire. "May the Moon Goddess grant us a strong heir to lead Ironclaw into a new age!"
I bit my lip so hard I tasted copper. Tears, hot and humiliating, blurred my vision. I turned to leave, unable to stomach another second of their joy built on my grave.
"Well, look what we have here."
A rough hand clamped down on my shoulder. I gasped, spinning around, but it was too late. Two of Helena’s personal guards, warriors I had once trained with, smirked down at me.
"The rat came out of the cellar," the taller one sneered. "Thinking of cursing the unborn pup, are you?"
"No," I whispered, shrinking back. "I was just leaving."
"I don't think so. The Alpha should know we have a spy."
Before I could scream, they grabbed my arms. I struggled, digging my heels into the dirt, but without my wolf, I was pathetically weak. They dragged me out of the shadows and into the harsh, flickering light of the bonfire.
The music died instantly. The laughter choked off. Hundreds of eyes turned toward us, their expressions shifting from joy to confusion, and then to disgust.
"Alpha!" the guard shouted, throwing me forward. I stumbled, my knees crashing against the hard earth at the foot of the dais. Dust coated my tongue. "We found this filth lurking in the trees, watching the Luna."
Silence descended, heavy and suffocating. I kept my head down, my hair falling like a curtain around my face, praying the ground would open up and swallow me whole.
"Arabella."
Waylen’s voice was a low rumble, devoid of any warmth. I looked up. He stood at the edge of the platform, looking down at me not with anger, but with cold irritation. Like I was a stain on his expensive carpet.
Helena stepped up beside him, clutching his arm, her eyes wide with feigned fear. "Waylen, why is she here? Is she trying to hurt the baby? She’s jealous... she wants me to lose mine like she lost hers."
A murmur of outrage rippled through the pack. *Baby killer. Jealous hag. Barren.* I heard the whispers, each one a poisoned dart.
"I wasn't doing anything," I said, my voice trembling but audible. "I just..."
"You were disobeying orders," Waylen cut in, his Alpha tone slamming into me, forcing my chest toward the ground. "I told you to stay out of sight. Your presence is a blight on this celebration."
He descended the steps, stopping just inches from my face. The scent of him—rain and cedar—was overwhelming, making my empty womb ache.
"Look at you," he sneered, his voice dripping with disdain. "Covered in filth, lurking in the dark. You are a bad omen, Arabella. A barren wolf bringing death to a celebration of life. Do you want to curse my heir with your failure?"
*My failure.*
Something inside me snapped. Not a bone, but the last tether of hope I hadn't realized I was still holding onto. He didn't just reject me; he despised me. He blamed me for the tragedy he caused.
"Get her out of here," Waylen commanded, turning his back on me to comfort a smirking Helena. "Throw her back in the hole where she belongs. If she shows her face before the sun rises, lock her in the cells."
The guards hauled me up, their grip bruising. As they dragged me away, the music started up again, louder than before, as if to wash away the stain of my presence.
They threw me into my room, the door slamming shut with a finality that echoed in the darkness. I lay on the cold concrete floor, shivering, but no tears came. I was done crying.
I sat up, the damp air of the basement filling my lungs. This wasn't my home anymore. It was a graveyard. If I stayed here, I would die—either by Helena’s schemes or by the slow rot of my own broken heart.
I moved with sudden, frantic energy. I grabbed a worn canvas bag from under the cot. I didn't have much. A spare change of clothes, a bottle of water, and a small dagger I had managed to hide from the guards. I looked at the locket on the small table—a picture of Waylen and me from two years ago.
I left it there.
The window in the laundry room down the hall was small, high up, and usually locked. But the latch had rusted years ago—a defect I had noted on an inspection when I was still Luna. I had meant to fix it. Thank the Goddess I hadn't.
I squeezed through the opening, scraping my skin against the rough brick, and tumbled out into the cool night air. The sounds of the celebration were distant now, a dull roar on the other side of the compound.
I didn't look back at the pack house. I didn't look back at the dais where my mate held another woman. I turned toward the dense forest that marked the territory line, and I ran. I ran into the darkness, a rogue in the making, leaving the shattered remains of my life behind.
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