
The Alpha’s Only Cure
Chapter 1
The ceremonial ground of the Silvermoon Pack stretched before me like a stage set for my destruction. Ancient stone pillars carved with moon symbols surrounded the sacred circle where pack bonds were forged and broken. Tonight, under the full moon's merciless gaze, mine would be shattered.
I stood frozen in my ceremonial white dress—the traditional garb of a mate about to be claimed. The fabric felt like a mockery against my skin, each thread a reminder of the future I'd foolishly believed was mine. Around me, hundreds of pack members filled the amphitheater-style seating, their excited chatter creating a buzz of anticipation that made my stomach churn.
Roderick stood at the center of the circle, magnificent in his Alpha regalia. The moonlight caught the silver threading on his ceremonial cloak, making him look every inch the powerful leader he was destined to become. For a moment, my heart fluttered with the same hope that had sustained me through years of whispered insults about my inability to shift. Maybe tonight would be different. Maybe the mate bond would finally make him see me as worthy.
But then I saw Jessica.
She sat in the front row, her golden hair cascading over her shoulders like liquid sunlight. Her emerald dress hugged every perfect curve, and her lips curved in a smile that promised secrets. When our eyes met, she tilted her head with mock sympathy, and I felt ice form in my veins.
"Pack members of Silvermoon," Roderick's voice boomed across the ceremonial ground, commanding absolute attention. "Tonight, we gather under the sacred moon to witness a moment of truth."
My legs trembled as I forced myself to walk toward him. Each step felt like walking through quicksand, my body instinctively knowing what my mind refused to accept. The pack's collective gaze burned into me, and I caught fragments of whispered conversations.
"Poor thing, she actually thinks—"
"—never could shift, what did she expect—"
"—embarrassing for the Blackwood line—"
Roderick's dark eyes found mine as I reached the circle's edge. For just a heartbeat, I saw something flicker across his face—guilt? Regret? But it vanished so quickly I might have imagined it.
"I, Roderick Blackwood, future Alpha of the Silvermoon Pack," his voice carried across the silent amphitheater, each word a hammer blow to my chest, "reject you, Ivy Thorne, as my mate."
The words hit me like a physical blow. The mate bond, already strained by months of his coldness, snapped with such violence that I gasped aloud. Pain lanced through my chest, radiating outward like liquid fire through my veins. My knees buckled, and I collapsed onto the cold stone, my hands clawing at my chest as if I could somehow hold the pieces of my heart together.
The pack erupted in shocked murmurs, but Roderick wasn't finished with his performance.
"Furthermore," he continued, his voice growing stronger, more confident, "I claim Jessica Vance as my chosen mate and future Luna of the Silvermoon Pack."
Jessica rose from her seat with fluid grace, her smile triumphant as she glided toward Roderick. The pack's murmurs turned to approving cheers as she reached him. Without hesitation, Roderick pulled her into his arms and claimed her lips in a passionate kiss that left no doubt about his choice.
I watched through a haze of agony as the man I'd loved since childhood, the man I'd believed was my destiny, kissed another woman where I should have stood. The ceremonial ground spun around me, the torchlight blurring into streaks of orange and gold.
"How pathetic," someone whispered nearby. "She actually thought she had a chance."
"A shifter-less Omega thinking she could be Luna," another voice added with cruel laughter. "The Moon Goddess must have been drunk when she made that pairing."
Their words cut deeper than any physical wound. I tried to stand, to salvage some shred of dignity, but my body betrayed me. The rejection had left me weak, shaking, barely able to draw breath.
Then I heard the footsteps.
My father, Marcus Thorne, approached with measured steps, his face a mask of cold disappointment. Behind him, my mother wrung her hands, tears streaming down her cheeks, but she made no move to comfort me.
"Get up," Marcus hissed, his voice low enough that only I could hear. "You've embarrassed this family enough."
I struggled to my knees, my white dress now stained with dirt and tears. "Father, please—"
"No." His voice cut through my plea like a blade. He turned to address the pack, his voice carrying the authority of a man desperate to save his reputation. "I, Marcus Thorne, hereby disown Ivy Thorne. She is no daughter of mine, no member of this family, and no longer welcome in Silvermoon territory."
The words hit me harder than Roderick's rejection. My own father, casting me out to save face. My mother's sob echoed across the ceremonial ground, but she didn't speak up. She didn't defend me.
"You have until dawn to leave our lands," Marcus continued, his eyes never meeting mine. "Any attempt to return will be met with force."
The pack's reaction was swift and merciless. Some laughed outright, others shook their heads in disgust, and a few looked away uncomfortably. But none spoke in my defense. Not one voice rose to question the cruelty of casting out a broken, rejected wolf.
Somehow, I found the strength to stand. My legs shook, my vision blurred, but I forced myself upright. I wouldn't give them the satisfaction of seeing me crawl away.
As I turned to leave, Roderick's voice followed me one last time. "This is what happens when someone reaches beyond their station," he announced to the pack. "Let this be a lesson to all."
I walked through the crowd of pack members, their faces a blur of judgment and disdain. Some stepped back as if my failure might be contagious. Others whispered behind their hands, already turning my humiliation into gossip that would spread through the pack like wildfire.
The ceremonial ground's exit seemed impossibly far away, each step an eternity. But finally, I reached the edge of pack territory, where the manicured grounds gave way to wild forest. I didn't look back. I couldn't bear to see Roderick and Jessica's celebration, couldn't stomach another moment of my family's shame.
As I stumbled into the darkness beyond Silvermoon lands, one thought echoed in my shattered mind: I had nowhere to go, no one to turn to, and nothing left to lose.
The forest path led me away from everything I'd ever known, toward an uncertain future that terrified me more than the pain currently tearing through my chest. But at least in the darkness, no one could see me fall apart completely.
And fall apart I did.
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