
Rejection to a New Mate's Embrace
Chapter 2
I wake to sunlight cutting through the curtains of my childhood bedroom, and for one blessed second, I forget.
Then the hollow ache in my chest reminds me. The mate bond—or what's left of it—throbs like a phantom limb, a constant reminder of what was torn away. My wolf whimpers softly in my mind, exhausted from a night of howling grief I can barely remember.
Downstairs, I hear voices. Papa's deep rumble, tight with anger. Mama's softer tones, worry threading through every word. They're discussing the fallout, the broken alliance, the political nightmare Elliot created when he humiliated me in front of both packs.
I should stay here. Hide in this room like the broken, rejected wolf everyone expects me to be.
Instead, I force myself upright.
My reflection in the mirror looks wrong—eyes too bright, skin too pale, the unmarked skin of my neck burning where a mate's claim should rest. But I'm still standing. Still breathing. And there are things at the Nightshade Pack house that belong to me.
Grandmother's heirlooms. The silver brush set that's been passed down through five generations of Silvercrest Lunas. My personal belongings, already moved there in anticipation of a wedding that will never happen. I won't let them keep what's mine just because Elliot decided I wasn't good enough.
I dress carefully, choosing simple jeans and a sweater—nothing that screams broken bride. When I descend the stairs, Papa looks up from his conversation with the pack's Gamma, his expression shifting immediately to concern.
"Sophia, you should be resting—"
"I'm going to Nightshade territory," I interrupt, my voice steadier than I feel. "To collect my things."
"Absolutely not." Papa's Alpha tone rolls through the room, but I'm an Alpha's daughter—I've been training to resist such commands since childhood. "I'll send warriors to retrieve your belongings. You don't need to face them again."
"Yes, I do." I meet his eyes, letting him see the steel beneath my pain. "If I hide now, I'll be hiding forever. They need to see that I'm not broken."
Mama appears in the doorway, her Luna instincts reading the determination in my stance. She touches Papa's arm gently. "Let her go, Martin. Our daughter needs this."
Papa's jaw tightens, but he nods slowly. "Take your phone. Any trouble at all, you call immediately."
I don't trust my voice, so I just squeeze his hand before walking out.
---
The drive to Nightshade territory feels longer than it should. Every mile closer makes my wolf more restless, confused by the pull to a place that should feel like home but now radiates nothing but rejection. The western border guards recognize me and wave me through without question—apparently, word of yesterday's disaster hasn't reached everyone yet.
The pack house looms ahead, its familiar stone facade now feeling hostile. I park and force my legs to carry me to the entrance, my chin lifted even as my hands shake.
Two guards block the door. I recognize them—Delta wolves who used to greet me with friendly nods. Now their faces are carefully blank.
"I'm here to collect my belongings," I say calmly.
"The Alpha suite is off-limits," the taller guard replies, not meeting my eyes.
Of course it is. Because it's not my suite anymore. It belongs to her.
As if summoned by my thoughts, Lilah appears at the top of the entrance stairs. She's wearing the jewelry—my grandmother's moonstone pendant, the matching earrings that were supposed to be my Luna set. The silver collar still gleams at her throat, but it's the satisfied smirk on her face that makes my wolf snarl.
"Sophia." She descends the steps with deliberate slowness, each movement calculated. "I didn't expect you to show your face here so soon. Don't you have some dignity left to salvage?"
The sweet, helpless act is completely gone. This is the real Lilah—sharp-edged and cruel.
"Those are my belongings," I say, gesturing to the jewelry. "And I'm here for my grandmother's heirlooms that were moved to the Alpha suite."
Lilah laughs, the sound nothing like the tinkling giggle she used around Elliot. "Everything in this house belongs to me now. I'm the mistress here, not you. You're just the pathetic little wolf who couldn't keep her mate."
My hands clench into fists. "Elliot rejected me. That doesn't give you the right to steal my family's property."
"Steal?" Lilah's eyes glitter with malice. She steps closer, her voice dropping to a vicious whisper. "You kept him from his true love for years with your arranged marriage nonsense. Consider this compensation." Her hand shoots out, grabbing my wrist. "In fact, let's start with that bracelet you're wearing. And the car keys. You drove here in a Silvercrest vehicle, didn't you? That's pack property, and Elliot did transfer those territories to my family."
I jerk my arm back. "You're insane if you think I'm giving you anything."
Lilah's smile widens. Then she whistles—sharp, piercing, deliberate.
Movement erupts from the tree line. Five wolves emerge from the shadows of the nearby woods, their fur matted and scarred, their eyes gleaming with the feral hunger of rogues. They spread out in a practiced formation, surrounding me.
My wolf surges forward in alarm. *Rogues. On pack territory.*
"You've been conspiring with pack enemies," I breathe, understanding crashing over me. This was planned. All of it.
Lilah's laugh is bright and terrible. "Did you really think I got this far by playing fair?"
The rogues attack.
I shift mid-stride, my clothes tearing as silver-grey fur erupts across my skin. My wolf form is smaller than the Alpha bloodline males but fast—I dodge the first rogue's lunge, my jaws snapping at his flank. Blood fills my mouth as my teeth find purchase.
But I'm outnumbered. And the rejection trauma has left me weaker than I should be, my movements a fraction too slow. A second rogue barrels into my side, his weight crushing me against the ground. Pain explodes through my ribs.
I twist, claws raking across his muzzle, and break free—only to have another rogue lock his jaws around my back leg. I howl, the sound echoing across the territory, but the Nightshade wolves inside the pack house don't respond. Of course they don't. Lilah must have ordered them to ignore any disturbance.
The rogues drag me down. Teeth tear at my flanks, my shoulder. I fight with everything I have, but it's not enough. They pin me, one rogue's paw heavy across my throat, forcing me to shift back to human form.
I'm gasping, blood streaming from a dozen wounds, when Lilah crouches beside me. Her fingers close around my grandmother's bracelet—the one I'm still wearing—and she rips it from my wrist with such force the clasp breaks.
"Everything you had," she whispers, her face inches from mine, "is mine now."
The rogue's claws press harder against my throat, and darkness edges my vision. Through the haze of pain, I see Lilah stand, slipping my bracelet onto her own wrist.
And I realize that no one is coming to save me.
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