Mag-log inHe looked me in the eyes and chose someone else. Damien Blackthorn, Alpha of the Ironveil Pack, rejected me on the night of the Blood Moon ceremony. In front of his ranked wolves. Like I was nothing. Like the mate bond between us meant nothing. I didn’t beg. I didn’t cry — not where he could see me. I just left. Five years later, I have a life, a career, and two children who have their father’s eyes and their mother’s spine. I never planned to go back. I never planned to see him again. But the pack needs a Luna. And somehow, fate is cruel enough to bring me back to the one man I spent five years trying to forget. Damien has a fiancée now. A beautiful, powerful she-wolf who stands at his side like she was born for it. And he has no idea his twins exist. When my daughter looks up at the Alpha and asks why he abandoned their mother — in front of the entire council — I realize the past I buried is about to burn everything to the ground. Damien wants answers. He wants forgiveness. He wants me. But I am not the girl he rejected. I don’t need his pack, his protection, or his crown. The question is whether the man who broke me has become someone worth trusting again. He says he has. He’ll have to prove it. “You were always my mate, Elena. I was just too much of a coward to deserve you.” Rejected. Rebuilt. Returning. Pregnant After the Alpha’s Rejection — a story about the woman who survived, and the Alpha who has to earn his way back.
view moreI was twelve years old the first time Damien Blackthorn looked through me as if I were air.
He was sixteen, already built like a warrior, already wearing authority on his shoulders like a second skin. The Alpha’s son. The future of Blackthorn Pack.
I was nobody—the daughter of a dead omega and a father who drank more than he breathed.
“Move, runt.”
That was all he said. I was standing at the packhouse gate, waiting for my father to collect his monthly food ration. Damien walked past me with three boys trailing behind him like shadows, and he shoved my shoulder without even looking at my face.
I stumbled. My knee hit the gravel. Blood came.
None of them stopped.
I sat on that ground for a long time, watching him disappear through the packhouse doors. Something burned in my chest. Not hatred. Not yet. Just the quiet, terrible knowledge that some people were born to take up space, and some were born to be pushed out of it.
I was the second kind.
My name is Elena Voss.
For eighteen years, Blackthorn Pack taught me what I was worth.
Nothing.
My father, Gerald Voss, was an omega who lost his mate during my birth and never forgave me for surviving. He did not beat me every day. Some days he simply forgot I existed, and those were almost worse, because hope would start to grow in my chest, and then he would come home smelling of whiskey and everything would begin again.
“Useless. Just like your mother. She died to give me you.”
I cooked. I cleaned. I kept my head down at school while the other girls wore their wolf marks with pride and I wore long sleeves to hide what my father left behind. I ran small errands for the packhouse kitchen so we could eat. I told myself survival was enough.
It was not enough.
But I kept going. Because somewhere underneath all that pain, something in me refused to die.
My wolf, the one I shifted for the first time at fifteen, was different. She was white. Pure white, not the grey or brown of omega wolves. She was larger than she should have been. When she appeared, I hid her. I did not understand why instinct screamed at me to keep her secret, but I listened.
Some gifts, shown too early, get taken away.
The night everything changed, I was seventeen and carrying a pot of stew across the packhouse courtyard for the kitchen staff.
The annual Alpha Ceremony was three days away. The whole pack was restless with excitement. Damien Blackthorn was about to be installed as Alpha of Blackthorn Pack, the youngest in pack history. Everyone worshipped him already. Girls painted their lips and pressed their dresses and prayed the Moon Goddess had written his name next to theirs.
I prayed for nothing. I wanted nothing from Damien Blackthorn except distance.
The pot was heavy. My arms were shaking.
Then I felt it.
A pull. Deep in my chest. Behind my ribs. Like something reached inside me and grabbed hold of my soul and yanked.
I stopped walking.
The pot nearly slipped.
“Watch where you are standing.”
I looked up.
Damien stood three feet away. He was eighteen now, taller than I remembered, jaw sharper, eyes darker. He wore a black training shirt, and there was dried blood on his knuckles from sparring. He stared at me the way a man stares at something in his path that he has not decided whether to step over or crush.
The pull hit him too.
I saw it. One fraction of a second where his eyes changed, where something animal and ancient moved across his face.
Mate.
My wolf whispered it like a prayer.
His jaw locked.
“No.” He said it quietly. Almost to himself. Then his eyes found mine and they were cold again, colder than before, cold like he had reached inside that one warm second and killed it with his bare hands. “Absolutely not.”
My mouth was dry. “What?”
“You heard me.” He stepped closer. His voice dropped low so no one around us could hear. “Whatever you think you just felt, forget it. I am three days from becoming Alpha of this pack. I will not have an omega as a mate. I will not have you.”
The words landed like stones in still water.
“The bond is not real,” he said. “I reject it. I reject you, Elena Voss. Completely and permanently.”
The pain came without warning.
It started in my chest and spread to every nerve ending I had. My knees buckled. I caught the pot before it fell, but I could not catch myself. I gripped the courtyard wall with one hand and breathed through it, breathed through the tearing sensation of something being ripped from the center of me.
Damien watched. He did not flinch. He did not look away. He watched me suffer like a man confirming a decision he had already made.
“Clean yourself up before the ceremony guests arrive,” he said. “You look pathetic.”
He walked away.
I stood there against that wall, in the middle of a cheerful, decorated courtyard full of pack members laughing and stringing lights, and I made myself a promise through the pain.
I will leave. And when I come back, you will know exactly who you rejected.
I did not know then how true that would become.
I did not know what was already beginning inside me.
Chapter Twenty-One: What Four Years Old Looks Like With PowerI moved past Idris without answering her.Whatever she had just said, whatever the implications were, they belonged to a version of this moment where I had time to stand still and process, and I did not have that version. I had the version where my children were in a room somewhere in this building and I had not seen them in over an hour and everything else was secondary to that fact.“Where,” I said to Forrest.He did not make me ask twice. Whatever the meadow signal had done to the wolves who witnessed it, whatever Lunara recognition felt like from the outside, it had done something to Forrest’s willingness to cooperate that I was not going to question right now. He walked. I followed. Rhys behind me. The corridor was stone and cool and smelled of a different pack, different wolves, different history, foreign in the specific way that puts every animal instinct on alert.Second door on the left.Forrest stopped outside it.
Half.I pressed my hand flat against my sternum and felt it. The warmth that had started in my mother’s palm and moved through me and then stopped, cut off mid-transfer by a distraction I had not seen coming, by children who had been moved while I was looking at a list of names with my back turned.My fault.That thought landed and I let it land because there was no use in not letting it. I had turned my back in an open meadow with my children six feet behind me and I had been so focused on the name on the paper that I had stopped tracking where they were and someone had used that thirty-second window with professional precision.My fault.And now I was going to fix it.“How far is Silvermark?” I said.“Twenty minutes by car,” Rhys said. “Twelve if you shift and run the border route.”“Alliance warriors have vehicles at the boundary line,” the lead warrior said. He was still three feet away, still holding the weight of what he had just told me, watching my face with the careful attent
Rhys moved before I did.He was already running by the time I turned fully around, crossing the meadow with the long efficient stride of a man who had spent years in border patrol and knew how to cover ground fast without burning out in the first thirty seconds.The person running was faster.I watched them cross the meadow’s northern edge and hit the tree line and disappear into the oaks and the specific quality of their movement told me something my brain was still trying to catch up to, something about the way they ran, the particular gait, familiar in a way that landed in my chest as wrongness before it landed as identification.I looked down at the paper.The name is near the bottom.Priya.I looked at the space where Priya had been standing twenty seconds ago.Gone.She had been behind me when I took the paper. She had positioned herself behind me, which I understood now was not a coincidence but habit, the habit of someone who had spent years knowing where the information was a
A shifter.Not a wolf shifter. Something older and considerably more specific. A skin walker, the kind that existed in the oldest pack legends alongside the Lunara, alongside the Apex bloodline, alongside all the things the current pack hierarchy had spent generations categorising as mythology because mythology was easier to manage than truth.Someone who could wear another person’s face.Who had worn Marta’s face into the lodge this morning and sat at our table and listened to every word we said with cold grey eyes behind borrowed warmth and then walked back out and reported to someone who was not Caius and was not Sera and was not anyone we had named yet.I looked at the person standing between Priya’s warriors.They were not bothering with Marta’s face anymore. It had dropped the moment Priya brought them into the meadow, like a coat shrugged off, and what remained was a woman of indeterminate age with grey eyes and no expression and the particular stillness of someone who has been






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