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Rejecting My Alpha Mate Novel Cover

Rejecting My Alpha Mate

The morning light filtered through our chamber windows, casting golden patterns across the ceremonial Luna dress I'd laid out on our bed. My fingers traced the intricate silver embroidery along the neckline—traditional symbols of the mate bond, painstakingly stitched by Shadowridge Pack's elder she-wolves over the past month. Today was supposed to be perfect. Today, Pierce would formally announce our mating ceremony to the seven allied pack Alphas gathered in our territory. *Today we finally become recognized,* Kira, my wolf, practically vibrated with excitement in my mind. *No more whispers. No more questions about our place.* I wanted to share her enthusiasm. I really did. But as I arranged the ceremonial items—the blessed candles, the silver cuffs that would bind our wrists during the announcement, the ancient texts detailing Luna traditions—a knot tightened in my stomach. Three times in the past month alone, Khalani had found reasons to summon Pierce away.
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Chapter 1

The morning light filtered through our chamber windows, casting golden patterns across the ceremonial Luna dress I'd laid out on our bed. My fingers traced the intricate silver embroidery along the neckline—traditional symbols of the mate bond, painstakingly stitched by Shadowridge Pack's elder she-wolves over the past month. Today was supposed to be perfect. Today, Pierce would formally announce our mating ceremony to the seven allied pack Alphas gathered in our territory.

*Today we finally become recognized,* Kira, my wolf, practically vibrated with excitement in my mind. *No more whispers. No more questions about our place.*

I wanted to share her enthusiasm. I really did. But as I arranged the ceremonial items—the blessed candles, the silver cuffs that would bind our wrists during the announcement, the ancient texts detailing Luna traditions—a knot tightened in my stomach. Three times in the past month alone, Khalani had found reasons to summon Pierce away. Three times, he'd dropped everything and run to her side.

"You're overthinking," I whispered to my reflection, adjusting the Luna circlet in my hair. The woman staring back looked the part—poised, elegant, worthy of standing beside an Alpha. But her eyes betrayed her uncertainty.

I found Pierce in his study, reviewing his speech one final time. He looked magnificent in his formal Alpha attire, the deep charcoal bringing out the intensity of his eyes. When he glanced up and saw me in the doorway, his expression softened with something that might have been love.

"You look beautiful," he said, crossing the room to pull me close. His scent—pine and earth—should have calmed me, but today it only reminded me how easily he could walk away. "Ready for this?"

I nodded against his chest, not trusting my voice. *Please let today be different,* I prayed silently to the Moon Goddess. *Please let nothing go wrong.*

The grand ceremony hall buzzed with the presence of seven powerful Alphas and their entourages. I stood to the side of the raised platform, exactly where tradition dictated the future Luna should wait during formal announcements. The massive space, with its vaulted ceilings and ancient pack banners, suddenly felt suffocating. Every eye tracked Pierce as he ascended to the podium, his Alpha presence commanding immediate silence.

"Distinguished Alphas, honored guests," Pierce began, his voice resonating with authority. "Thank you for joining Shadowridge Pack on this momentous occasion. As you know, the strength of our pack lies not just in our warriors or our territory, but in the sacred bonds the Moon Goddess blesses us with—"

He stopped mid-sentence. The color drained from his face so abruptly that several Alphas leaned forward in concern. I watched Pierce's jaw clench, his eyes going distant in that way I'd learned to dread—someone was mind-linking him with terrible urgency.

*No. Not now. Please, not now.*

Kira whimpered in my mind, sensing what was coming even before I fully processed it. Pierce's gaze found mine across the hall, and in that instant, I saw his decision. The apology flickering in his eyes didn't soften the blow of what he was about to do.

"There's been an attack," Pierce announced, his voice rough with barely controlled alarm. "Rogues have breached Beta Jenkins' territory. Multiple casualties reported." He descended from the platform without completing his speech, without even glancing at the ceremonial items we'd prepared, without acknowledging me standing there in my Luna dress before seven confused and murmuring pack leaders.

I couldn't move. Couldn't breathe. The humiliation crashed over me in waves as the visiting Alphas exchanged significant looks, their expressions ranging from pity to barely concealed disdain. Alpha Marcus from the Northern Ridge Pack cleared his throat diplomatically.

"Luna Renata," he addressed me directly, the title feeling like mockery in this moment. "Perhaps you could explain the nature of this emergency?"

But I had no explanation. I had nothing except the familiar, hollow ache of being abandoned while wearing a dress meant to celebrate our eternal bond. The silver embroidery that had seemed so beautiful this morning now felt like chains.

"Pack alliance emergency," I heard myself say, the words tasting like ash. "Alpha Pierce will return shortly to complete the announcement."

The lie hung in the air between us, and we all knew that's exactly what it was.

Hours later, I sat alone in our darkened chambers, still wearing the ceremonial dress because removing it felt like admitting defeat. The candles had burned down to stubs. The silver cuffs lay abandoned on the table, catching the last rays of sunset and throwing fractured light across the walls.

When Pierce finally returned, he moved quietly, as if approaching a wounded animal. The scent that reached me carried no blood, no smoke—none of the markers of a real battle.

"It was a training exercise," he said without preamble, his voice heavy with what might have been guilt. "They activated the wrong alarm sequence. No actual rogues. No real threat."

I didn't turn to look at him. "You abandoned our mating ceremony announcement for a training exercise."

"I didn't know that when I left—"

"You didn't even try to verify before you ran." My voice remained eerily calm, though Kira howled with fury inside my mind. "Seven allied Alphas, Pierce. Seven. All gathered to witness our bond, and you left me standing there like I meant nothing."

"That's not fair." He moved closer, and I finally saw his phone in his hand, screen illuminated with a text notification. Even from this distance, I recognized Khalani's name and the attached photo—her face smudged with dirt, her expression the picture of traumatized relief. "She was terrified. The Jenkins pack needed support—"

"The Jenkins pack needed you to finish announcing your mate," I interrupted, something inside me finally cracking. "But I guess that's the problem, isn't it? I'm your mate in private, but Khalani owns you in public."

His phone buzzed again with another message from her, and the sound reverberated through the chamber like a death knell for everything we'd tried to build.

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