
Two Mates, One Choice
Chapter 3
The healers rushed past me as I descended the platform steps, their urgent voices cutting through the stunned silence that had fallen over the ceremony. I didn't turn around. I couldn't. If I looked back now, if I saw Alden lying broken on the sacred stones, I might lose my resolve.
"Jocelyn!" Elder Morrison's voice called after me. "Where are you going?"
I kept walking, my feet carrying me through the crowd that parted like water before me. Faces blurred past—some shocked, others disapproving, a few showing what might have been respect. The whispers started as soon as I passed.
"Did she really just—"
"Ten years, and she throws it away like that?"
"The bond rejection... I've never seen anything like it."
"Poor Alden, he looked like he was dying."
I reached the edge of the ceremonial clearing and finally allowed myself to breathe. The autumn air filled my lungs, crisp and clean, carrying none of the suffocating weight I'd grown accustomed to. For the first time in a decade, my mind felt... quiet. The constant background hum of the mate bond, that thin thread of connection I'd learned to ignore, was gone.
I was truly alone. And it felt like freedom.
Behind me, I heard Dr. Helena's authoritative voice cutting through the chaos. "Everyone back! Give him space! Marcus, help me get him to the medical wing."
I didn't look back.
The next three hours passed in a strange, dreamlike state. I walked the familiar paths of pack territory, but everything felt different. The weight of obligation that had pressed down on my shoulders for so long was gone, leaving me feeling almost weightless. I found myself at the old oak grove where I used to play as a child, before the rogue attack changed everything.
Sitting on the moss-covered ground, I touched the thin scar on my temple where the bottle had cut me two nights ago. It was barely visible now, just another mark in a collection I'd accumulated over the years. But this one would be the last. No more bottles thrown in drunken rage. No more public humiliation. No more—
A howl split the night air.
It was raw, agonized, filled with a pain so profound it made my chest tighten. Even from a distance, I recognized the voice. Alden. He was awake.
The howl continued, rising and falling in waves of pure anguish. Other voices joined in—pack members responding to the distress call, but their howls were confused, uncertain. They didn't understand what they were hearing.
I did. I'd heard that sound once before, ten years ago, when a sixteen-year-old boy had forced his first transformation to save my life.
Another howl, closer now. Then the sound of running feet, voices shouting orders. The entire pack was mobilizing, responding to their packmate's distress. But I remained where I was, hidden among the ancient oaks, listening to the chaos unfold in the distance.
Eventually, the howling stopped. The voices faded. Silence returned to the forest, broken only by the whisper of wind through autumn leaves.
I made my way back toward the pack housing complex as dawn approached, exhaustion finally catching up with me. The ceremonial grounds were empty now, the sacred stones dark and silent. Someone had cleaned up the scattered ceremonial cups and banners, erasing all evidence of the night's drama.
As I passed the medical wing, I saw Dr. Helena emerging from the building, her usually pristine white coat stained with what looked like blood. She spotted me and hurried over, her expression grave.
"Jocelyn," she said, her voice carefully neutral. "I need to speak with you."
I stopped, suddenly wary. "Is he... is Alden alright?"
"He's stable now." She glanced back at the medical wing, then fixed me with her sharp green eyes. "But something extraordinary happened when you rejected the bond. The psychic trauma... it seems to have reversed his memory loss."
The words hit me like a physical blow. "What?"
"His memories from before the rogue attack—they've returned. All of them." Dr. Helena's expression was troubled. "He remembers saving you. He remembers... everything that came before."
I felt the blood drain from my face. "That's impossible."
"I thought so too. But when he woke up, the first thing he said was your name. Not the way he usually says it, but... tenderly. Like he used to when you were children." She paused, studying my reaction. "He's been asking for you. He wants to explain—"
"No." The word came out sharper than I intended. "I don't want to see him."
"Jocelyn, you need to understand—the emotional instability he's experiencing right now is dangerous. His wolf is in turmoil. If he doesn't find some kind of closure, some way to process what he's remembered..."
"That's not my responsibility anymore." I took a step back. "I paid my debt. I'm done."
Dr. Helena's expression softened. "I'm not asking you to take care of him. I'm warning you to be careful. A werewolf in his condition, with his memories restored but his mate bond severed... he's unpredictable. Potentially dangerous."
I nodded, though my hands were trembling. "I understand."
"There's something else," she continued. "When the memories returned, he broke down completely. He kept saying 'I promised to protect her' over and over. He remembers making that vow to you when you were children. He remembers loving you."
The words twisted something deep in my chest. "It doesn't matter what he remembers. It doesn't change what he did."
"No," Dr. Helena agreed quietly. "It doesn't. But it might explain why he did it."
I left her standing there and walked quickly toward my small apartment on the edge of pack territory. My mind was reeling, trying to process what she'd told me. Alden remembered. After ten years of treating me like a burden, like something less than human, he finally remembered why I'd stayed.
But it was too late. The debt was paid, the bond was severed, and I was free. Whatever guilt or regret he felt now couldn't undo a decade of cruelty.
As I reached my door, I made a decision. I would avoid him completely. No more crossing paths, no more opportunities for him to try to explain or apologize. I'd find excuses to stay away from the pack center, maybe request a transfer to border patrol duties. Whatever it took to keep my distance.
Because I knew, with a certainty that chilled me to the bone, that if Alden Thornhart came to me now with the memory of his sixteen-year-old love shining in his eyes, if he begged for forgiveness with the voice I remembered from our childhood...
I might be weak enough to listen.
And I couldn't afford to go back, just like I knew for certain that he’d never give up searching for me until he got me back.
When would this cycle of chase and being chased between us come to an end?
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