
Rejecting the Alpha Who Ruined Me
Chapter 3
The silence in the recovery ward was heavy, broken only by the rhythmic beep of Leo's heart monitor. Kori lay crumpled on the floor where I had lowered her, a heap of designer silk and malice. Julian stood in the doorway, his chest heaving, his eyes fixed on his unconscious wife.
I braced myself for his rage. I expected him to shift, to tear the room apart, to punish the Omega who dared to lay hands on his Luna. My muscles coiled, ready to fight or flee.
But Julian didn't move toward her. He didn't check for a pulse. Instead, his lip curled, revealing a flash of white fang. A low, vibrating growl started deep in his chest, rattling the instrument trays.
"Unworthy," he snarled at her prone form. The word was heavy with eight years of resentment. It was the sound of a wolf finally rejecting a bond that had been nothing but a lie.
Slowly, he turned his gaze to me. The disgust vanished, replaced by a terrifying softness that made my skin crawl. His aura reached out, seeking, pleading.
"Mate."
The word hit me like a physical blow to the gut. It wasn't a warm embrace; it was a wave of nausea. I gagged, taking a sharp step back until my hips hit the metal counter.
"Don't," I choked out, my voice trembling not with fear, but with revulsion. "Do not use that word."
"I was blind, Anna," Julian whispered, taking a step forward. "I see it now. The Moon Goddess... she never made a mistake. It was always you."
"The mistake was yours, Julian," I said, my voice turning to ice. "'Mate' died in a rogue cell eight years ago while you were playing house with her. It died when my father bled out in the dirt because he had no Alpha to protect him."
He flinched as if I had struck him.
"Take your son," I ordered, pointing a shaking finger at the door. "When he wakes up, you take him and that woman, and you get out of my territory. If I see you again, I will not be a Healer. I will be a Rogue."
Julian opened his mouth to argue, but the look in my eyes must have stopped him. He saw the wall I had built, stone by stone, over eight years of hell. He nodded once, a broken, defeated motion, and turned back to his son.
***
I didn't go home. Home wasn't safe anymore. Julian knew where I was, and an Alpha filled with regret was a dangerous thing. He wouldn't stop at money next time. He would try to use the laws, the treaties, anything to drag me back to Silver Lake.
I marched straight to Director Vance's office. He was still at his desk, nursing a cup of coffee.
"I'm resigning," I said, slamming my ID badge onto his desk.
Vance blinked, straightening his glasses. "Anna, you're tired. The surgery was—"
"I need a transfer," I interrupted, my hands busy packing the few personal items I kept in my locker—a spare stethoscope, a dried bundle of sage, and my father's worn leather journal. "The relief squad in the Stone Ridge Mountains. I know they've been asking for a trauma specialist."
Vance stood up, his face pale. "Stone Ridge? Anna, that's not a hospital. It's a war zone of mudslides and feral attacks. It's the most rugged territory on the continent. They don't even have a proper clinic."
"Perfect," I said, zipping my bag. "It's the last place anyone from the city packs would look for me."
"You're running," Vance said softly.
"I'm surviving," I corrected. I clutched my father's journal to my chest, feeling the worn leather against my scrub top. "Please, Vance. Sign the papers."
He looked at me for a long moment, then sighed and pulled a form from his drawer. "Be careful, Anna. The mountains change people."
***
Six hours later, the paved roads had turned to gravel, and the gravel had turned to mud. The air here was different—thinner, sharper. It smelled of wet earth, pine resin, and snow.
The jeep bounced violently over a rut, knocking my shoulder against the door.
"End of the line, Doc," the driver grunted.
Elias Thorne, the Beta of the Stone Ridge Pack, was waiting for me. He was a mountain of a man with a beard that looked like a bird's nest and eyes that missed nothing. He didn't offer to carry my bag.
"You're smaller than I expected," Elias rumbled, looking me up and down. "City wolves usually don't last the first winter."
"I'm not a city wolf," I said, hoisting my duffel bag over my shoulder. "I'm a Healer. Point me to the Alpha."
Elias grunted, a sound that might have been approval, and led me up a narrow path. We weren't heading to a grand Pack House. There were no marble floors or chandeliers here. We walked toward a simple log cabin, smoke curling lazily from its chimney.
In the clearing, a man was chopping wood.
He was shirtless despite the biting cold. His back was to us, the muscles rippling under scarred, tanned skin as he swung a heavy axe in a rhythmic, meditative arc. *Thwack. Crack.*
He didn't have the posturing arrogance of Julian. He didn't radiate that suffocating Alpha command that demanded everyone kneel. He just felt... solid. Like the mountain itself.
"Alpha Silas," Elias called out.
The man stopped mid-swing. He drove the axe into the stump and turned. His eyes were the color of warm amber, calm and steady. He wiped his hands on a rag tucked into his belt and walked toward us.
"You must be Healer Bell," he said. His voice was a low rumble, like distant thunder. "Elias says you patched up a Gamma with a thread and a prayer."
"I do what I can," I said, extending my hand professionally. "Thank you for taking me in on such short notice."
Silas reached out. His hand was large, rough with calluses, swallowing mine.
The moment our skin touched, the world vanished.
*Zap.*
A jolt of static electricity, sharp and undeniable, snapped between our palms. It wasn't the painful burn I felt with Julian. It was a spark—warm, golden, and terrifyingly alive. My wolf, who had been cowering in the dark for eight years, suddenly lifted her head and howled.
*Mate.*
I gasped and yanked my hand back as if I'd been scalded. I stumbled, my heart hammering a frantic rhythm against my ribs. Panic, cold and familiar, washed over me.
*No. Not again. I can't do this again.*
I looked up at him, eyes wide with terror, waiting for him to grab me, to claim me, to use that Alpha tone.
Silas didn't move. He didn't lunge. He stood perfectly still, his hand still suspended in the air where mine had been. He looked at his own palm, then back at me. There was no greed in his amber eyes, only a quiet, dawning recognition.
He lowered his hand slowly to his side.
"I felt that too," he said softly, his voice calm, offering me an anchor in the sudden storm of my emotions. "Breathe, Anna. You're safe here."
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