
Rejecting the Alpha's Bond
Rejecting the Alpha's Bond Chapter 1
The dining room fell into an unnatural silence as I set down my fork, the soft clink against the porcelain plate echoing like a gunshot in the suddenly tense atmosphere. Nine years. Nine years of sitting at this very table, watching my mate's eyes drift to the woman seated across from me, watching my son's respect slowly erode under her influence.
"I have something to announce," I said, my voice steady despite the thundering of my heart. The words I'd rehearsed a thousand times in my mind felt foreign on my tongue, but there was no turning back now.
Nolan's dark eyes snapped to mine, his Alpha instincts immediately sensing the shift in the room's energy. Beside him, Ayah Stone paused with her wine glass halfway to her lips, those calculating green eyes of hers gleaming with barely concealed anticipation. Felix, my son—my beautiful, stubborn son—looked up from his phone with the same dismissive expression he'd worn whenever I tried to speak to him lately.
"I intend to reject our mate bond, Nolan." The words dropped into the silence like stones into still water, sending ripples of shock through everyone present.
Ayah's lips curved into the faintest smirk before she quickly schooled her features into a mask of concern. But I caught it—that flash of triumph, of vindication. She'd been waiting for this moment, hadn't she? Working toward it with every subtle manipulation, every poisonous whisper.
Nolan's face transformed, his olive complexion darkening as his Alpha aura began to press against the room. "What did you just say?" His voice carried that dangerous edge that made lesser wolves submit, but I'd been his Luna for nine years. I knew how to stand against his dominance.
"You heard me clearly." I folded my hands in my lap, drawing on every ounce of Luna dignity I possessed. "I will be formally rejecting our mate bond."
"Mom!" Felix's chair scraped against the hardwood floor as he shot to his feet, his young face contorting with fury. "Are you insane? You can't just—"
"I can, and I will." My wolf whimpered at the anger radiating from our pup, but I pushed down the instinct to comfort him. He'd made his choice long ago, and it hadn't been me.
Felix's hands clenched into fists at his sides. "This is ridiculous! You're being dramatic and selfish, as usual." His voice cracked slightly, the way it still did sometimes when his emotions ran high, but there was no mistaking the venom in his tone. "If anyone should be Luna of this pack, it should be Ayah. She actually cares about our family, unlike you."
The words hit me like physical blows, each one carefully aimed at the wounds that had never quite healed. My son—my own flesh and blood—stood there in our family dining room and declared another woman more worthy of the title I'd held with honor for nearly a decade.
"Felix." Ayah's voice was soft, falsely gentle. "Don't say things you might regret later."
But Felix was beyond listening to anyone's counsel now. "No, she needs to hear this." He turned back to me, his young Alpha features—so much like his father's—twisted with disgust. "You were never worthy of being Luna. Everyone knows it. The pack members whisper about how weak you are, how you can't even keep your own mate's attention. Ayah would never abandon her family like this."
My wolf howled in anguish, the sound echoing through my mind as my son's rejection cut deeper than any physical wound could. But I'd learned to hide my pain well over the years. I kept my expression neutral, even as something vital inside me cracked and bled.
"Are you finished?" I asked quietly.
Nolan slammed his fist on the table, making the dishes jump. "Enough!" His Alpha voice boomed through the room, commanding attention. "Emely, I don't know what game you're playing, but I won't accept any rejection. You're my mate, bound by the Moon Goddess herself."
I met his furious gaze without flinching. "The same Moon Goddess you've been ignoring while you shower attention on your chosen mate?"
"This is about the territory rights, isn't it?" Nolan's lip curled in disgust. "One year before you're eligible for five percent, and suddenly you want out? How convenient."
The accusation stung because it was so far from the truth. "You think this is about money? About land?" I stood slowly, my chair sliding back with deliberate control. "This is about dignity, Nolan. Something I haven't had in this house for far too long."
"Dignity?" Felix laughed bitterly. "You're throwing away your family for your pride."
"No," I said, looking at each of them in turn—my mate who'd chosen another woman, my son who preferred that woman as his mother, and the woman herself who sat there with barely concealed satisfaction. "My family threw me away long ago. I'm simply acknowledging what's already happened."
I turned toward the doorway, my decision crystallizing with each step. Behind me, Nolan's voice rose in command and threat, Felix's in anger and disbelief. But I didn't stop. I climbed the stairs to our bedroom—my former bedroom—and began to pack.
Nine years of marriage reduced to two suitcases and a broken heart. But as I folded my clothes with mechanical precision, I felt something I hadn't experienced in years: the first stirring of freedom.
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