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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 3

The ceremonial blade felt impossibly heavy in my hands as I stood at the altar, seven allied Alphas watching from their seats of honor. The ancient steel gleamed in the candlelight, its edge sharp enough to draw the ritual blood that would seal our mate bond before witnesses. Pierce stood across from me in his formal ceremonial robes, looking every inch the powerful Alpha—except for the way his eyes kept flickering to his phone tucked inside his jacket.

Elder Rebecca's voice resonated through the packed ceremony hall: "The marking ceremony binds two souls as one. Alpha and Luna, joined before the Moon Goddess and these gathered packs, pledging loyalty unto death."

Pierce's phone buzzed. Once. Twice. Three times in rapid succession.

I felt it through our mate bond before I saw it on his face—that familiar tension, that shift in his attention that meant Khalani needed something. His hand moved toward his pocket.

"Pierce," I said quietly, my grip tightening on the ceremonial blade. "Don't."

He pulled out his phone anyway. The color drained from his face as he read whatever message had come through. "Renata, there's been a break-in at Khalani's apartment. She's sent photos—there's someone in her home with a weapon. She's hiding in the bathroom and—"

"No." The word came out harder than I intended, sharp enough that several pack members shifted uncomfortably. Kira surged forward in my mind, her rage bleeding into my consciousness until I felt my eyes flash with wolf-light. "Not this time."

Pierce's expression twisted between duty and something that might have been guilt. "Renata, she could be in real danger—"

"Then we investigate together." I set the ceremonial blade down with deliberate care, each movement precise and controlled despite Kira's fury howling beneath my skin. "Before you abandon our sacred ceremony in front of seven allied packs, we verify this emergency together. Right now."

The assembled witnesses erupted in whispers. Alpha Marcus leaned forward with interest. Pierce's Beta father looked like he'd swallowed glass. Elder Rebecca's face remained carefully neutral, but her hands trembled slightly as she clutched the sacred texts.

Pierce stared at me, clearly torn between the commanding presence I was projecting and the urgency of Khalani's supposed crisis. "We don't have time—"

"Make time." I stepped closer, close enough that only he could hear my next words. "Choose, Pierce. Right here, right now. Choose between running to her without question, or trusting your mate enough to investigate together. Because if you drop that blade and run, I'm done. No more ceremonies. No more waiting. Done."

The candles flickered as if the Moon Goddess herself was holding her breath. Pierce's jaw clenched, his Alpha instincts warring with whatever hold Khalani had on him. Finally, he nodded once, sharp and terse.

"Fine. We go together."

Khalani's apartment was fifteen minutes away—the longest car ride of my life. Pierce drove with white-knuckled intensity while his phone continued buzzing with increasingly frantic messages. Each notification made him tense further, made him press harder on the accelerator.

"She says he's trying to break through the bathroom door," Pierce muttered, his voice tight. "She's terrified, Renata. What if we're too late?"

I didn't answer. Couldn't answer around the sick certainty growing in my gut.

We found Khalani's apartment door ajar, just like her messages had described. Pierce shifted partially, his wolf rising to the surface as we entered the darkened space. Overturned furniture. Fake blood splattered across the walls in dramatic arcs. A lamp broken on the floor, its cord cut for effect.

And in the bedroom closet, we found him—a young man in his twenties, holding a prop knife that looked threatening in photos but was clearly theatrical up close. His expression shifted from confusion to fear when Pierce's Alpha presence filled the room.

"I was just doing what she paid me for," he blurted out, stumbling over his words as Pierce hauled him out of the closet. "Three hundred dollars to stage a break-in. She gave me detailed instructions—where to put the fake blood, what to say in the threatening texts, everything. I'm an actor, not a criminal!"

The world tilted sideways. Pierce's grip on the man faltered, his face going slack with shock. I pulled out my phone and started recording as the actor showed us the text thread with Khalani—timestamps, payment receipts through an app, her specific directions about how to make the scene look convincing for photos.

"She said it was for a theater project," the man continued nervously. "A practice run for a horror production. I didn't know—"

Khalani emerged from the bathroom then, her face still made up to look terrified, her expression crumbling when she saw us both standing there with her hired actor. For one frozen moment, nobody moved. Then her eyes met mine, and I saw the truth naked on her face—not remorse, but fury at being caught.

"You sabotaged our sacred ceremony," I said, my voice deadly calm despite Kira's roar of vindication inside my mind. "You staged an elaborate fake emergency to pull Pierce away from marking me as his Luna. And this isn't the first time, is it?"

Pierce stood silent, his expression shattered, finally seeing clearly what I'd been trying to tell him for years.

Khalani's mouth opened, closed, then opened again. "Pierce, I can explain—"

"Don't." His Alpha tone cut through the apartment like a blade. "Just... don't."

We left her standing there in her staged crime scene, fake blood still dripping down her walls.

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