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Two Mates, One Choice Novel Cover

Two Mates, One Choice

"This," Alden announced loudly enough for nearby party-goers to hear, "is Jocelyn. She's more loyal than any dog I've ever seen. Follows me around, does whatever I tell her to do. Isn't that right, Jocelyn?" Heads turned. Conversations paused. I felt the weight of their stares, some amused, others pitying. My cheeks burned. "She's been following me around for ten years. Ten fucking years of devotion to a man who will never mark her. Do you know why, Lyra?" "Why?" Lyra asked, her voice breathy with anticipation. "Because I would never mark a dog," Alden declared, his words cutting through me like silver blades. "But here's the beautiful part—even knowing that, even knowing I'll never want her the way she wants me, she'd still spread her legs and bond with me tonight if I asked. Because she loves me that much." The crowd that had gathered erupted in laughter. "Pathetic," someone called out from the crowd. I felt their mockery wash over me, but underneath it was something else—a countdown that had been ticking in my head for months. Two days. Just two more days until the ten-year mark, until my debt was paid.
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Chapter 2

The morning of the full moon ceremony arrived with the kind of crisp autumn air that made every breath feel sharp in my lungs. I'd barely slept, the countdown in my head too loud to ignore. Today. Today was the day I'd been waiting for—ten years to the hour since Alden had saved my life.

I was arranging the ceremonial banners in the great hall when his voice cut through the morning quiet.

"Jocelyn!"

I turned to find Alden striding toward me, his hair still disheveled from sleep, wearing nothing but a pair of sweatpants. The cut on my temple from two nights ago had healed to a thin pink line, barely visible unless you knew where to look.

"Where's my ceremonial outfit? The blue one with the silver threading. And I want breakfast—scrambled eggs, not those runny ones you made last week. And coffee. Strong."

Other pack members were already arriving for the ceremony preparations, their conversations dying as they watched our familiar dance. I saw Maya, one of the younger Betas, shake her head with a mixture of pity and disgust. Elder Thorne's mate whispered something to her companion, both of them looking at me like I was an interesting specimen in a zoo.

"The ceremonial clothes are in your closet," I said quietly. "I pressed them yesterday. And I'll get your breakfast."

"Good. And make sure the eggs aren't cold this time. You know how I hate cold food."

He didn't say please. He never said please.

I spent the next hour running between his apartment and the kitchen, fetching his breakfast, adjusting the temperature of his coffee twice, and laying out his ceremonial attire with the precision of a royal valet. When I brought him his food, he barely glanced up from his phone.

"The eggs are overcooked," he said after one bite.

"I can make new ones—"

"Forget it. I don't have time." He shoved the plate away. "Just make sure my cloak is properly arranged when we get to the ceremony grounds. I don't want to look sloppy in front of the other packs."

By the time we reached the ceremonial clearing, the full moon was already visible in the darkening sky, a perfect silver disc that seemed to pulse with ancient power. The entire pack had gathered—nearly three hundred werewolves arranged in concentric circles around the sacred stone platform where our Alpha would conduct the traditional blessings.

The air thrummed with energy, that electric feeling that always accompanied pack gatherings under the full moon. Conversations buzzed with excitement, children ran between their parents' legs, and the elders took their places of honor near the platform.

Alden immediately began treating me like his personal attendant.

"My cloak is crooked," he announced loudly enough for nearby pack members to hear. "Fix it."

I stepped behind him, adjusting the heavy blue fabric so it hung properly across his shoulders. My fingers brushed the silver threading that marked him as a Beta of standing, the same threading I'd spent hours polishing the night before.

"Get me some of that spiced wine," he ordered next. "And not the watered-down stuff they're serving the youngsters. I want the good bottle."

I wove through the crowd, ignoring the stares and whispered comments that followed me. When I returned with his wine, he took it without acknowledgment and immediately sent me away again.

"I'm cold. Get my heavier cloak from the car."

Then: "This wine tastes off. Get me a different cup."

And: "Stand behind me and to the left. You're blocking Elder Morrison's view."

Each command was delivered with the casual cruelty of someone who'd never questioned their right to give orders. Some pack members watched with amusement, others with discomfort, but no one intervened. This was our dynamic, as familiar and accepted as the phases of the moon.

"Ten years of this," I heard someone murmur. "How does she stand it?"

"Maybe she likes being treated like a servant," came the reply, followed by quiet laughter.

Alden heard it too, and his chest puffed with pride. He caught my eye and smirked, like their mockery was a compliment to his dominance.

The Alpha's voice rang out across the clearing, calling for the ceremony to begin. "Tonight, we gather under the full moon to honor our bonds, our pack, and the ancient laws that guide us."

My heart began to race, but not from the ceremonial energy. The countdown in my head had reached zero. Ten years. To the hour. To the minute.

The Alpha continued his traditional opening, speaking of loyalty and duty and the sacred bonds that held the pack together. Around me, werewolves bowed their heads in reverence, but I barely heard the words. My entire focus was on the stone platform ahead, on what I was about to do.

"Jocelyn," Alden hissed, grabbing my arm. "You're supposed to bow your head during the blessing."

I looked at him—really looked at him—for what I knew would be the last time as his bonded mate. His face was sharp with irritation, his grip on my arm possessive and demanding. There was no warmth in his eyes, no recognition of me as anything more than a tool for his convenience.

"No," I said quietly.

His eyebrows shot up. "What?"

"I said no."

Before he could respond, I pulled free of his grip and began walking toward the platform. My legs felt unsteady, but my resolve was absolute. Behind me, I heard Alden's sharp intake of breath, heard the confused murmurs starting to ripple through the crowd.

The Alpha paused in his blessing as I approached the sacred stones. "Jocelyn? Is everything alright?"

I climbed the three stone steps that led to the platform's center, my heart hammering against my ribs. Three hundred pairs of eyes fixed on me, confusion and concern radiating from the assembled pack.

"I invoke the right of formal rejection," I announced, my voice carrying clearly across the silent clearing.

Gasps erupted from the crowd. Someone dropped their ceremonial cup, the sound of breaking pottery sharp in the sudden stillness.

"I, Jocelyn Moonsong, formally reject Alden Thornhart as my mate."

The words hung in the air like a physical thing, heavy with power and finality. I felt the mate bond between us—that thin, strained connection that had bound us for ten years—begin to fray.

"What the hell are you doing?" Alden's voice cracked across the clearing as he pushed through the crowd toward the platform.

I turned to face him, my hands steady despite the magnitude of what I was doing. "I bonded with you because I owed you my life. Ten years ago tonight, you saved me from a rogue attack. Tonight, that debt is paid in full."

My voice grew stronger with each word. "I am no longer bound by obligation. I am free to choose my own path, my own life, my own future."

Alden reached the platform's edge, his face a mask of fury and disbelief. "You can't do this! We're bonded! You belong to me!"

"I belonged to a debt," I corrected. "That debt is now settled."

He lunged forward, his hand raised to strike me, but the moment his foot touched the sacred stones, the severing bond hit him like a physical blow. He stumbled, his face contorting in pain as the psychic backlash of a rejected mate bond tore through his mind.

"No!" he screamed, but his voice was already weakening.

He collapsed onto the stone platform, his body convulsing as ten years of forced connection snapped apart. His eyes rolled back, showing only white, and foam appeared at the corners of his mouth.

I stood over him, feeling the last threads of our bond dissolve into nothing. For the first time in ten years, my mind was completely my own.

Without looking back, I walked down from the platform and through the stunned crowd, leaving Alden unconscious on the sacred stones behind me.

I was free.

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