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Rejecting the Alpha Who Ruined Me Novel Cover

Rejecting the Alpha Who Ruined Me

The vocal cords of a Gamma wolf are delicate things, like spiderwebs made of gristle and magic. One slip of my hand, and this warrior would never howl at the moon again. "Suction," I ordered, my voice flat and steady. My hands moved with a precision that had taken me eight years to master. A faint, golden glow seeped from my fingertips—my aura, warm and stabilizing—knitting the shredded tissue back together. The Gamma on the table, a victim of a border skirmish, let out a soft, unconscious whine as the pain receded. I didn't look at his face. I never looked at their faces if I could help it. Faces were personal. Faces reminded me of what I had lost.
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Chapter 4

The clinic in Stone Ridge wasn't a clinic. It was a converted supply shed with drafty windows and a wood stove that smelled of cedar smoke. There were no heart monitors, no sterile white tiles, and definitely no observation decks for Alphas to watch me work.

And the patients were different. They didn't whine.

"Hold still," I murmured, threading a needle with hands that were steady despite the cold.

The warrior on the table, a Delta named Kael, gritted his teeth. His leg was a mess of torn muscle from a hunting accident, festering at the edges. But when I reached for the antiseptic, he yanked his leg back.

"I don't let rogues touch me," he spat, his eyes narrowing. "I don't care what Elias says. You smell like city trash."

The insult stung, familiar and sharp. My wolf bristled, ready to bare her throat in submission, but I stiffened my spine. Before I could retort, the cabin door opened.

Silas walked in. He didn't slam the door. He didn't unleash a wave of Alpha dominance to crush the room into silence. He just leaned against the doorframe, his arms crossed over his chest.

"Kael," Silas said. His voice was conversational, low and rumbling. "In Stone Ridge, we don't look at pedigree. We look at utility. If you want to keep that leg, I suggest you let the Healer work. Rank is earned here, not inherited. Right now, she's earning hers. Are you earning yours by bleeding on my floor?"

The warrior’s face flushed. The shame of disappointing Silas seemed to hurt more than the wound. He slumped back onto the table, averting his eyes. "Sorry, Alpha."

Silas nodded once, then looked at me. He didn't command me to continue. He just waited.

I exhaled, my hands glowing with that familiar golden light as I knit the flesh back together. The heat of my aura sealed the wound in seconds. When I finished, I looked up, expecting scrutiny.

Silas wasn't scrutinizing. He was smiling. It was a small, genuine thing that crinkled the corners of his amber eyes. It wasn't a predator's grin; it was just... warmth. It unnerved me more than a growl ever could. I quickly looked away, my heart doing a traitorous flutter.

***

Three days later, the sky turned the color of a bruised plum. The storm didn't roll in; it crashed down on us like a falling mountain.

Rain lashed against the clinic roof, sounding like gunfire. I was organizing bandages when the mind-link screamed with panic. *Mudslide in the North Ravine. Mara is trapped. She’s in labor.*

I grabbed my kit and ran.

By the time Silas and I reached the ravine, the world was a slurry of brown water and broken trees. Mara, a young she-wolf, was pinned waist-deep in the mud, screaming as a contraction ripped through her.

Thunder cracked overhead—a deafening, bone-shaking boom.

I froze.

Suddenly, I wasn't in the mountains. I was back in the neutral territory holding cell, listening to the storm outside, knowing my father was out there alone. I could see him in my mind, slipping in the mud, the rogues closing in, the rain washing away his scent so no one could find him.

My chest seized. I couldn't breathe. The air was too wet, too heavy. I dropped my medical bag, my hands clawing at my throat as hyperventilation set in. *He’s dying. Everyone I love dies in the rain.*

"Anna."

A hand touched my shoulder. Not grabbing. Not shaking. Just resting there, heavy and solid.

I looked up into amber eyes. Silas was soaked, his hair plastered to his forehead, but his aura was a fortress. He projected a calm so profound it felt like stepping out of the wind and into a warm house. He smelled of wet pine and deep, immovable earth.

"Look at me," he whispered, ducking his head to catch my gaze. "You are not in the past. You are here. I am here. Breathe with me."

He took a slow, exaggerated breath. My lungs, desperate for an anchor, mimicked him. In, out. The smell of pine filled my head, chasing away the scent of old death.

"She needs you," Silas said softly. "And I've got you. I won't let you fall."

The paralysis shattered. I nodded, grabbing my bag. We slid down the embankment together. While Silas used his massive strength to hold back a shifting log threatening to crush Mara, I knelt in the mud.

"The pup is breech," I yelled over the wind. "I have to cut!"

My golden aura flared, bright and defiant against the grey storm. I worked by instinct and touch, the mud slick under my fingers. When the tiny, wet cry of a newborn pup cut through the thunder, I finally let myself cry too.

***

The storm broke by evening, leaving the air scrubbed clean. The pack gathered around a massive bonfire to celebrate the new life. Laughter and the smell of roasting meat filled the clearing, but I sat on a log at the very edge of the light, wrapping my arms around myself.

I wasn't part of this. I was a temporary fix. A tool.

Leaves crunched softly nearby. Silas appeared, holding a plate of food. He didn't loom over me. He stopped a few feet away.

"May I sit here?" he asked.

I stared at him. Julian never asked. Julian took.

"It's your territory," I said defensively.

"It's your space," he corrected. He sat down only after I gave a stiff nod, leaving a respectful distance between us on the log. He handed me the plate.

We ate in silence for a while, watching the sparks drift up toward the stars. Then, Silas pulled a small block of wood and a knife from his pocket. He began to carve, long, patient curls of wood falling to his feet.

"I felt it too, Anna," he said quietly, not looking up from his work. "The spark when we touched."

I tensed, ready to bolt. "I can't... I can't be what you want, Silas. I'm broken. My wolf is barely speaking to me."

"I didn't ask you to be anything," he said. His knife moved with steady, rhythmic grace. "I know you're my mate. My wolf knows it. But I also know you're terrified."

He paused, turning to look at me. The firelight danced in his eyes, warm and patient. "I am not Julian. I don't need to own you to love you. I have waited a lifetime for you; I can wait a little longer for you to feel safe."

He went back to carving, the sound of the knife against the wood a soothing, repetitive rasp. He wasn't demanding a answer. He was just... existing beside me.

Deep in my chest, buried under layers of scar tissue and fear, my wolf stirred. She didn't whimper. She didn't cower. For the first time in eight years, she let out a soft, vibrating purr.

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