
The Alpha's Dying Mate
The Alpha's Dying Mate Chapter 1
The ballroom sparkled like a constellation had fallen to earth, crystal chandeliers casting dancing shadows across the polished marble floor. The annual Mating Ball—the most sacred night in our supernatural calendar, when the Moon Goddess herself was said to reveal the threads that bound souls together.
I smoothed my simple blue dress, suddenly conscious of how plain I looked among the elegantly dressed she-wolves. Maya had insisted I come, despite my protests that an Omega like me had no business at such a grand affair.
"You never know," she'd said with that mischievous grin of hers. "The Moon Goddess works in mysterious ways."
Now, standing at the edge of the crowded ballroom, I wondered if I'd made a mistake. Alphas and Betas moved through the space with confident grace, their expensive suits and designer gowns making me feel invisible.
Then it hit me.
A scent so intoxicating it made my knees weak—pine and storm clouds, power and danger rolled into something that called to every cell in my body. My wolf Ember stirred restlessly beneath my skin, her excitement building to a fever pitch.
"What is it, girl?" I whispered internally.
But she was already answering, her voice a joyous howl that echoed through my soul: "MATE!"
My head snapped up, scanning the crowd desperately. The scent grew stronger, pulling me forward like an invisible chain. People blurred past me as I followed that intoxicating trail, my heart hammering against my ribs.
Then I saw him.
Asher Blackthorn stood near the far wall, commanding attention without even trying. The Alpha of the Blackthorn Pack was everything the stories claimed—tall and broad-shouldered, with dark hair that caught the light and a presence that made other wolves instinctively step aside. His sharp jawline and aristocratic features belonged in paintings, not reality.
But it was his eyes that stopped me cold. Golden amber, like liquid fire, and they were looking directly at me.
The world tilted.
Electricity crackled between us, a live wire of connection that made the air itself seem to vibrate. His nostrils flared slightly, and I knew he could smell it too—that unmistakable scent of recognition, of destiny.
Ember was going wild now, practically clawing at my consciousness. "Go to him! Go to our mate!"
My feet moved without conscious thought, carrying me across the ballroom. Conversations faded to white noise. The music became distant. There was only him, only this pull that felt stronger than gravity itself.
His golden eyes tracked my approach, and for a moment—just one perfect, shining moment—I saw something flicker there. Recognition. Want. The same desperate hunger that was tearing through my own chest.
I stopped in front of him, close enough to feel the heat radiating from his body. My hands trembled as I looked up at him, this magnificent Alpha who was somehow, impossibly, mine.
"I'm your mate," I whispered, the words falling from my lips like a prayer.
The change was instant and devastating.
Those beautiful golden eyes turned to ice, cold and dismissive. He stepped back as if I'd struck him, his expression shifting from that brief moment of recognition to something that made my stomach drop.
"No." The single word was a blade through my chest. "I already have someone."
The rejection hit like a physical blow. Ember whimpered, confused and hurt. This wasn't how it was supposed to work. Mates were sacred, blessed by the Moon Goddess herself. They didn't reject each other. They couldn't.
"Asher, who is this... girl?"
The voice was silk and poison, sweet on the surface but with an edge that made my skin crawl. I turned to see a woman approaching—tall, elegant, with platinum blonde hair that fell in perfect waves and eyes like chips of ice. She was beautiful in the way that magazines were beautiful, flawless and untouchable.
She wrapped her arm around Asher's waist with casual possessiveness, her fingers splaying across his chest like she was marking territory. The gesture sent a spike of jealousy through me so sharp it took my breath away.
"No one important," Asher said, his voice flat and dismissive. "Just a mistake of the Moon Goddess."
A mistake.
The words echoed in my head, each repetition like another nail in my coffin. Ember was howling now, a sound of pure anguish that reverberated through my bones. The mate bond pulsed between us, undeniable and true, but he was looking at me like I was nothing. Less than nothing.
"But the bond," I gasped, pressing a hand to my chest where it felt like something was tearing apart. "You feel it too, don't you? You have to feel it!"
For just a second, his mask slipped. I saw the war in his eyes, the way his jaw clenched as he fought against something. His wolf was calling to mine—I could sense it, could feel the answering pull even as he denied it.
But then the blonde woman—Selene, I realized with growing horror—tightened her grip on him, and his expression hardened again.
"I choose Selene," he said, each word deliberate and cutting. "I reject you, Ivy Ashford."
The formal words of rejection hit me like lightning.
Pain exploded through every nerve ending, a agony so complete it drove me to my knees. The partial rejection was like having my soul torn in half—the bond stretched and twisted but not broken, leaving jagged edges that screamed with every heartbeat.
Ember's howl became a death cry, her anguish flooding through me in waves. The ballroom spun around me, faces blurring into a kaleidoscope of shock and pity. Whispers rose like a tide, but I couldn't make out the words over the roaring in my ears.
"Accept it," someone was saying from very far away. "You have to accept the rejection to break the bond."
But I couldn't speak. Couldn't breathe. The pain was everything, consuming every thought, every sensation. Darkness crept in at the edges of my vision as my body convulsed with the supernatural agony of a bond half-severed.
The last thing I saw before consciousness fled was Asher's face, his golden eyes wide with something that might have been regret. But it was too late for regret.
The damage was done.
I collapsed onto the cold marble floor, Ember's dying cries echoing in my mind as the world went black.
The Alpha's Dying Mate of Contents
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