
Rejecting the Alpha
Chapter 3
The safehouse sat on the edge of my inherited territory, a small cabin my grandfather had built decades ago when he still patrolled these hunting grounds himself. No one in the Morrison family knew about it—he'd made sure of that, teaching me the path through the thick pine forest when I was fourteen, pressing the key into my palm like a secret.
Now I stood in its dusty interior, the morning light struggling through grimy windows, and pulled the lockbox from beneath the floorboards where he'd hidden it.
Inside: his old Council liaison credentials, still active. A laptop with access codes scrawled on yellowing paper. And a note in his careful handwriting: *For when you need the truth they won't give you.*
My hands shook as I booted up the system. The Council database loaded slowly, its outdated interface a relic from when my grandfather had served as territorial arbitrator. But the records were all there—death reports, rogue activity logs, pack travel notifications spanning decades.
I started with Serena's death. Moonveil Pack border. Two weeks ago. Logged as rogue ambush.
Then I pulled Killian's travel itinerary—future Alphas had to register inter-pack visits with the Council for security purposes. He'd been at a border summit with Silverfang leadership. Twenty miles from where Serena died.
Close, but not damning.
I kept searching.
Three months prior: unmated she-wolf from the Riverbend Pack. Rogue attack. Killian had been visiting their territory for alliance negotiations.
Six months before that: two she-wolves from the Pinewood Pack, found torn apart near their northern border. Killian had attended their Alpha's son's coming-of-age ceremony.
My wolf snarled, her presence suddenly sharp and focused. She'd been trying to warn me. All those years of silence, and now she was screaming.
I went back further. Cross-referenced every rogue attack involving unmated she-wolves in the past three years with Killian's documented travel.
Twelve deaths. Twelve.
Every single one within five miles of wherever Killian Ellis had been.
The pattern was undeniable. Methodical. A hunting ground that followed him from pack to pack, disguised as random rogue violence.
I sat back, staring at the screen until my vision blurred. This wasn't just murder. This was sport.
Serena's wooden charm pressed against my leg through my pocket. *Witness*, the letter had said. She'd seen something. And they'd killed her for it.
I needed proof. Real proof—something that couldn't be dismissed as coincidence or conspiracy theory.
I pulled out my phone and dialed a number I'd sworn never to use.
"Silas speaking." The voice was cautious, rough from years of keeping his head down.
Silas had been my grandfather's tech specialist, an Omega who'd been cast out of his birth pack for refusing an Alpha's advances. My grandfather had given him work, protection. After the old man died, Silas had disappeared into the underground network of rogues and displaced wolves.
"It's Amelia Morrison," I said quietly. "I need your help."
A pause. "The Gamma's daughter. Heard you found your mate. Congratulations."
The word made my stomach turn. "My mate killed my best friend. And I think he's killed eleven others. I need you to recover footage from the Silverfang border sensors."
Another pause, longer this time. "That's dangerous territory, Miss Morrison. If you're right about what's on those files—"
"Then I need to see it." My voice didn't shake. It couldn't. "My grandfather trusted you. I'm asking you to trust me."
"When?"
"Tonight. The sensors backup to a local server every forty-eight hours before uploading to Council archives. If we wait, the footage gets compressed, corrupted. We need the original files."
He sighed. "Send me the coordinates. And Miss Morrison? If this goes sideways, we were never in contact."
"Understood."
---
The border server station was little more than a concrete bunker hidden in thick underbrush, its surveillance equipment monitoring the neutral zone between Silverfang and Moonveil territories. Silas worked in silence, his fingers flying across the keyboard while I kept watch at the door.
"Got something," he said finally. "Footage from the night your friend died. It's corrupted—looks like someone tried to wipe it—but I can recover most of it."
My heart hammered. "Show me."
The screen flickered. Grainy night-vision footage resolved into shapes: the forest clearing where Serena's body had been found. The timestamp read 23:47—less than an hour before the 'rogue attack' was reported.
Serena appeared on screen, her silver healer pendant catching the moonlight. She was walking quickly, nervously, glancing over her shoulder.
Then a massive black wolf emerged from the treeline.
Not rogues. One wolf. Enormous, its coat gleaming even in the poor-quality footage. I'd seen that wolf before—at the territory summit, when Killian had shifted to demonstrate his Alpha strength to the assembled packs.
Serena turned to run.
The wolf was faster.
I watched him bring her down. Watched her struggle, her mouth open in a scream I couldn't hear. Watched him tear her throat out with brutal efficiency.
And then—another figure stepped into frame.
Human-form. Female. Moving with casual ease to where Serena's body lay twitching.
Juliet.
She knelt beside Serena's corpse, said something to the black wolf, then reached down and yanked the silver pendant from Serena's neck. Even in the grainy footage, I could see her laughing.
The wolf shifted. Killian's human form materialized, naked and blood-splattered. He pulled Juliet to her feet, kissed her with savage possession.
Then they dragged Serena's body toward the border marker, staging the scene to look like she'd been caught by rogues.
"Goddess," Silas breathed. "Miss Morrison, this is—"
"Copy everything," I said. My voice sounded distant, detached. "Multiple backups. Encrypted. And Silas? You were never here."
He nodded, fingers already moving. "What are you going to do?"
I touched Serena's wooden charm in my pocket. "Whatever it takes."
---
The message to Killian was simple: *Need to discuss territory transfer details. Private meeting? Tomorrow, 3pm, my grandfather's cabin.*
His response came within minutes: *Finally ready to be reasonable. Don't waste my time.*
I spent the night preparing. The micro-recorder Silas had given me was smaller than my thumbnail, hidden in a false seam in my sleeve. I practiced my broken, submissive posture in the mirror until it looked natural. Rehearsed my trembling voice.
By the time Killian's black Mercedes pulled up to the cabin, I was ready.
He walked in like he owned the place, his Alpha aura preceding him like a physical force. In any other circumstance, I might have dropped my eyes, submitted to that overwhelming presence. Today, I let my wolf rise to meet it—she was snarling, ready to tear his throat out.
But I kept my head bowed. Played my part.
"You wanted to talk," he said, not bothering with pleasantries.
"The territory deed," I whispered. "I'll sign it. I just—I need to understand. The medical report. Was it really that bad? Was I really so... defective?"
His laugh was cruel. "You want the truth, Amelia? Fine. Juliet is twice the wolf you'll ever be. She did what was necessary to keep my pack clean. The report was easy to fake once she switched the files—your blood was perfectly healthy, but who's going to believe an Omega?"
My nails dug into my palms. "And the ceremony? Why agree to it if you never wanted me?"
"Your territory is worth the inconvenience." He stepped closer, and I fought not to recoil. "Besides, breaking you publicly will send a message. Future Alphas need to know how to handle disappointing mates."
"Serena," I breathed. Let my voice crack. "She was asking about you. Before she... before the rogues—"
"Your little healer friend shouldn't have been wandering where Alphas hunt." His smile was sharp, predatory. "She saw Juliet and me near your pack border. Started asking questions about the other she-wolves who'd disappeared. Couldn't let that continue."
The recorder captured every word.
"You killed her," I whispered.
"I protected what's mine." He grabbed my chin, forcing me to meet his eyes. "And soon, you'll sign over what's yours. Then you'll spend the rest of your pathetic life remembering that you were never good enough for an Alpha like me."
I smiled.
It must have surprised him—his grip loosened slightly.
"Thank you," I said softly. "That's all I needed to hear."
Confusion flickered across his face. Then rage. "What—"
But I was already moving toward the door, the recorder safely tucked away, evidence secured.
"See you at the ceremony, Killian. I promise it'll be unforgettable."
You may also like





