
When My Alpha Left Me to Burn
Chapter 3
The tears surprised me.
I had been so certain I wouldn't cry. I had rehearsed the rejection in my head a hundred times over the past five years — not because I planned to use it, but because I needed to know I could. I needed to know the words existed, that I could hold them in my mouth without flinching. And when the moment came, I had said them cleanly. No trembling. No hesitation. Just the words, and then the silence after.
But Joel was barely out the door before the first one fell.
I pressed the back of my hand against my mouth and stared at the ceiling and let it happen, because there was no point fighting it. The place in my chest where the bond had been was hollow and raw and enormous — bigger than I expected, which was the thing that undid me. I had told myself for months that the bond was already broken, already eroded by five years of being looked through and set aside. I had told myself it wouldn't hurt.
I was wrong about that.
It wasn't Joel I was crying for. I understood that clearly, even through the ache. It was the girl who had stood at the edge of Silverfang territory five years ago with her wolf pressed down and her identity folded away and her whole heart pointed at a man who was already looking past her. It was the version of me who had read the Moon Goddess's plan in a struggling pack and a young Alpha's uncertain eyes and thought, yes. This is mine. This is what I'm for.
Sienna didn't say anything. She just kept her hand over mine, warm and steady, and I was grateful for it in a way I couldn't have articulated.
Across the room, Tristan stayed at the window. He had his back to me, which I understood was deliberate — giving me the privacy of not being watched while still being present. The mate bond hummed between us, low and patient, and I was too wrung out to decide what to do with it.
I let myself cry for exactly as long as it took. Then I wiped my face, breathed through the ache in my ribs, and was done.
---
Sienna helped me with the discharge paperwork two hours later. She moved through it with the quiet efficiency of someone who had learned not to ask questions that would make things harder, and I signed where she pointed and didn't look at the line that listed my pack affiliation as none.
I already knew what Joel was doing. I didn't need to see it to know.
He would be with Brielle. He would be reframing it — the bond was a mistake, the Moon Goddess had corrected course, everything was as it should be. He was good at reframing. He had been reframing his own choices for as long as I had known him, building small narratives that kept him at the center and kept the uncomfortable truths at the edges where he didn't have to look at them directly.
Brielle would accept it. She was too smart not to. But she would also be thinking, because Brielle was always thinking, and what she would be thinking was: an Omega who just rejected an Alpha does not simply disappear. An Omega who does that has a reason. And a reason means a threat.
I thought about that while Sienna walked me to the exit. I thought about the way Brielle's eyes moved when she was calculating — that particular stillness, like a wolf deciding whether to circle or charge. I had watched her for months. I knew what she looked like when she was deciding something.
She was deciding something now. I was certain of it.
Let her.
---
The car that met me outside the facility was black and unmarked, which was my father's version of subtle. The driver didn't speak. I didn't ask him to.
We drove north out of the city, away from the Sound, away from Silverfang's territory, away from five years of careful smallness. The Seattle skyline fell behind us and I watched it go and felt — strange. Not relieved. Not free. Just strange, the way you feel when you've been holding a position for so long that releasing it doesn't feel like rest, it just feels like the absence of effort, and you don't know yet what to do with your hands.
The estate was outside the city proper, set back from the road behind a tree line that my father's people maintained with the same quiet thoroughness they applied to everything. I had been here once before, years ago, when I was still being trained and the world still felt like something I was being prepared for rather than something I was already surviving.
It looked the same. Larger than I remembered, or maybe I was just smaller the last time.
I stood in the entryway for a moment after the driver left, and I let myself feel the silence of it. No pack mind-link pressing at the edges of my awareness. No careful monitoring of my own scent, my own posture, my own wolf. No performance.
Just me. Whatever that was now.
My wolf stirred.
She had been stirring since the boat — since the smoke and the beam and the moment the bond cracked and she stopped being quiet. But this was different. This was not the frantic, grief-edged restlessness of the past twenty-four hours. This was something slower and more deliberate, like a tide coming in.
She pressed against the walls I had built around her, and the walls held, but they felt thinner than they used to. Five years of careful suppression, and she was still there — still enormous, still luminous, still entirely herself in a way I had almost forgotten was possible.
Stop hiding, she said. Not in words. In the particular pressure of something that has been patient long enough.
I pressed my hand flat against the wall of the entryway and breathed.
I wasn't ready. I knew I wasn't ready. The rejection was still raw, the second-chance bond was still humming in the background like a question I hadn't answered, and the disorientation of simply being in a space where I didn't have to be less than I was — that was almost worse than the grief. At least grief was familiar. This was something I didn't have a name for yet.
But I was here. I was alive. I was no longer pretending.
That was enough for tonight.
I pushed off the wall and walked deeper into the house, and behind me, the door swung shut on everything I had been.
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