Follow
Chapters
Share
When My Mate Chose Her Over Our Ceremony Novel Cover

When My Mate Chose Her Over Our Ceremony

My mother picked the dress. White, fitted through the waist, with a row of tiny pearl buttons running up the back that took her twenty minutes to fasten. She stood behind me in the mirror and smiled like she'd won something. Maybe she had. "You look beautiful, Autumn," she said. I didn't answer. I was thinking about the blood oath document folded in the inside pocket of my jacket — the jacket I'd already packed in a bag in the basement, three floors below us. The Shadowridge pack house was the kind of place designed to make you feel small. High ceilings, stone floors, chandeliers that threw gold light across everything. The ceremonial hall held maybe two hundred wolves, all of them dressed up, all of them watching the doors.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 4

The first message came three days after I crossed the border.

I was in the middle of a footwork drill when it hit — my mother's voice sliding through the mind-link like water under a door, soft and insistent and impossible to fully block without severing the connection entirely. *Autumn. Baby. Please just come home. We can fix this. Your father and I, we only wanted what was best for you. You know that.*

I kept moving. Left foot, pivot, weight transfer. Russ threw a jab and I slipped it.

The message kept going. It always kept going.

*After everything we've done for you. The sacrifices we made to get you that position, that future. Do you have any idea what this is doing to us? To our standing here? People are asking questions, Autumn. People are talking.*

People were always talking. That was the part they never seemed to notice — that the talking had never once been about me.

I endured it the way I endured the drills. Quietly, without flinching, counting the cost and filing it somewhere I didn't have to look at directly. The messages came at all hours. Morning, when I was lacing my boots in the dark. Late at night, when Scout was pressed warm against my side and I was almost asleep. My father's voice sometimes, shorter and harder than my mother's, stripped of the softness she used as camouflage. *You made a commitment. A blood oath is not a suggestion. You are embarrassing this family.*

Three weeks of it.

I kept training. I kept showing up at five AM for Nora's private sessions, kept eating in the Delta mess hall, kept running the eastern fence line at dusk with Scout at my heel. I built a life out of routine the way you build a wall — one block at a time, no mortar except repetition.

But the messages were a slow leak. Small knives, like I'd thought. Each one individually manageable. Collectively, they were wearing something down.

The Tuesday it ended was unremarkable. Gray morning, frost on the training field, Nora running me through a new ground-defense sequence that had already put me on my back twice. Between the second and third repetition, my mother's voice came through again — longer than usual, more elaborate in its guilt, a full inventory of everything they had given up and everything I owed them and everything this was costing them, and I was lying on my back in the frost looking up at a white sky and I thought, with a clarity that felt almost physical: *I am done.*

I sat up.

Nora looked at me. She didn't say anything.

I closed my eyes and found the mind-link — the family thread, the one that had been open my entire life, the one I had never once chosen to open myself. I found the place where it connected and I severed it. Clean. The way you cut a zip tie.

The silence was immediate and total and so loud it almost knocked me sideways.

Nora said, quietly, "Again."

I got up. I ran the sequence. I did not think about the silence.

That night, alone in my bunk with Scout's weight against my legs and the barracks dark around me, I let myself feel it. The absence of their voices. The absence of the obligation I had carried so long I had stopped noticing its weight until it was gone. I thought about my mother's face at the wedding boutique, the thin smile, the careful management of my excitement. I thought about my father's signature on the blood oath document — the one I still carried in my jacket pocket, worn white at the creases.

I cried. Not for long. Scout pressed closer, and I put my hand on his scarred head, and after a while the crying stopped and what was left was something quieter and harder and, underneath it, almost clean.

I did not reach for the mind-link again.

---

Holly moved faster than I'd expected.

I heard about it secondhand, the way you hear about weather moving in — through the Delta cohort, through Nora's clipped morning briefings, through the particular quality of silence that falls when someone walks into a room and the conversation shifts. Within forty-eight hours of my defection reaching Shadowridge's pack channels, the story was already traveling.

*Disloyal. Bond-breaking. Abandoned her Alpha.* The words varied slightly depending on the source, but the shape was always the same. Unstable. Ungrateful. Probably wolfless, or defective, or both — why else would she run? A real she-wolf, a worthy Luna, would have honored the bond. Would have been grateful for the position. The fact that she'd fled said everything you needed to know about what she was.

I was a nobody in Ironvale's ranks. A new Delta recruit with no platform, no allies outside this pack, and a reputation that was being constructed without my participation in packs I had never set foot in. Holly's network was efficient. I had to give her that.

I kept training.

It was the only answer I had right now, and I knew it. Every hour I spent on the training field was an hour I was building something real — something that couldn't be seeded through a mind-link whisper or a carefully placed rumor. Rank was verifiable. Combat record was verifiable. The ten million I needed was a number, and numbers didn't care what Holly Spencer said about me to her network of allied Lunas over their morning coffee.

But I listened. I catalogued every version of the story that reached me, every new detail Holly added, every pack it had traveled to. I was building a map of her network the same way I'd built a map of the Shadowridge border — methodically, without urgency, because I was going to need it later.

Nora found me in the strategy room one evening, three weeks in, cross-referencing gossip channel reports against a list of allied pack Lunas. She looked at the papers spread across the table and said nothing for a moment.

"She's thorough," I said.

"She's scared," Nora said. She pulled out a chair and sat down across from me, which was unusual enough that I looked up. "Scared people are thorough. They're also sloppy, eventually. They overreach." She looked at my notes. "Keep the map. You'll want it."

She left before I could ask what she meant. I went back to the map.

---

The combat trial announcement came on a Friday.

Regional inter-pack tournament. New warriors from six packs competing for rank and public recognition. Prize structure in certified pack bonds — the kind that counted toward tribute. I read the announcement twice, then went to find Cade.

He was already looking at it when I walked into his office. He glanced up. "I assumed you'd want to enter."

"Under Ironvale's banner," I said. "Yes."

He nodded and reached for the registration form. I signed it before he could change his mind, which he wasn't going to do, but old habits.

The objection came four days later.

I was in the east sparring room with Nora when Cade's Beta knocked on the door and handed me a folded document with the Shadowridge seal on it. I opened it. Read it. Read it again.

Alpha Elias Montgomery of Shadowridge Pack, formally challenging my eligibility to compete. Unresolved mate bond. Jurisdictional dispute. Filed through the regional pack council, which meant it was official, which meant it had to be answered.

Nora was watching me.

I folded the document and set it on the bench beside me. "He filed a jurisdictional challenge," I said.

"I heard." She crossed her arms. "What are you going to do?"

I picked up my hand wraps and started winding them. "Keep training," I said. "Cade will handle the council filing. That's what the alliance agreement is for."

She looked at me for a moment. "He's not going to stop at one filing."

"No," I agreed. "He's not."

I finished wrapping my hands and stepped back onto the mat.

Elias had just made his first move. Which meant he was paying attention. Which meant Autumn Anderson, disloyal bond-breaking Omega, was already more of a problem than he'd planned for.

Good.

I settled into my stance and waited for Nora to begin.

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Open the Official Website

You may also like

After My Alpha Chose the Rogue’s Daughter Over Me Novel Cover
8.2
I stood in the grand hall of the Moonveil Pack house, my heart hammering against my ribs as whispers rippled through the crowd. The air felt thick, pressing against my skin like a physical weight. Every pair of eyes in the room was fixed on me—on us—watching, waiting, hungry for drama. My hands smoothed over my sleeves, a nervous habit I'd developed as a child, one I couldn't shake even now. Finnley stood tall at the center of the hall, his Alpha aura radiating power that made the pack members nearest him instinctively lower their gazes. But I didn't look away. I couldn't. Not when he was about to speak words that would change everything. 'I've called you all here today,' Finnley's voice carried effortlessly across the hall, 'to address a matter that affects the future of our pack.' My throat tightened. I knew what was coming, had felt it building like a storm for weeks, but knowing didn't make it easier to bear.
After My Husband Took My Eyes, I Fled Novel Cover
9.1
Pain. That was all I knew as consciousness crept back into my world of darkness. My head throbbed with a dull ache that seemed to pulse in time with my heartbeat. I reached out instinctively, searching for Jonathan's warmth beside me, but my fingers found only cold sheets. Three days. It had been three days since the rogue attack that had stolen my sight. Three days of drifting in and out of consciousness, of Jonathan's gentle reassurances that everything would be okay, that we would get through this together. I pushed myself up, wincing as pain shot through my body. Something felt wrong. Different.
Ending Eight Years of Hell with the Alpha, My Road to Sweetness Novel Cover
8.6
I'm Ellie, once an unwanted illegitimate daughter. Forced into a loveless bond in the Fairfax pack, I endured eight years of abuse and coldness from Alpha Jace and Mason. Diana's arrival made my life even more miserable. But when the contract ended, I finally escaped. In the Silvermoon pack, I built a new life with Mom Ava and Jason. We ran a guesthouse and took care of orphans. Jace and Mason tried to win me back, but I couldn't forget the past. Eventually, they left, and I found true peace......
My Alpha Called Me Omega Until the Lycan Claimed Me Novel Cover
8.7
The perfume made my skin crawl. I stood outside the Alpha's bedroom door, my fingers trembling as they hovered over the polished wood. Inside, I could hear him—low growls that vibrated through the walls, the crash of something heavy hitting the floor. My wolf should have stirred at the sound of an Alpha in distress. Should have whimpered or pressed against my consciousness, urging me to help. But I had no wolf. Just silence where there should have been another voice. "Miss Bishop." The pack healer, Dr. Ramos, appeared beside me with a crystal bottle. The liquid inside gleamed amber in the hallway's dim light.
My Alpha Chose His Beta Over Me Novel Cover
8.2
The holographic display flickered as I stared at the border maps, the red markers pulsing like a heartbeat. Another territorial dispute with the Eastern Packs. My temples throbbed with the constant pressure. "Alpha, we've reinforced the northern perimeter," Beta Marcus reported, his voice steady but concerned. "But we need your decision on the eastern quadrant." I rubbed my eyes, exhaustion seeping into my bones. Three nights without sleep. The Shadow Creek Pack's expansion had brought wealth but also enemies. "Double the patrols," I ordered. "And contact Alpha Wilson. I want to know why his wolves are crossing our boundaries." The command center hummed with activity—warriors receiving orders, technicians monitoring security feeds.
My Alpha Made Me Bear His Mistress’s Child Novel Cover
8.0
I have been Luna of the Ironveil Pack for ten years. I know how to smile at the right moment, how to place a hand on a visiting Alpha's arm just long enough to soften his pride without threatening his ego, how to read a room full of wolves who would tear each other apart if the seating chart were wrong by one chair. Tonight, at the Winter Solstice Pack Banquet, I do all of it perfectly. The great hall is warm with candlelight and the low roar of conversation. Ironveil's ranked members fill the long tables in their finest clothes, and the visiting Alphas from three neighboring packs sit at the head table with Grayson. I move through the room like water — here to redirect a tension between two Betas before it becomes a scene, there to laugh at exactly the right moment when old Alpha Mercer makes his tired joke about the northern border. I wear a deep green dress that Grayson chose. My hair is up. The mark on my neck is visible, the way it always is at formal events. Grayson looks magnificent tonight.