MasukThe words kept ringing in my ears.
“I reject Seraphina Vale as my mate.”
A sharp pain ripped through my chest. I pressed a hand against my ribs and nearly stumbled. The hall exploded around me. Gasps turned into murmurs, then open whispers. People stared. Some looked away fast. Others didn’t hide their pity or their smirks.
I heard one woman mutter, “I knew the bond was wrong. Look at her.”
Heat flooded my face. I turned to leave, but my legs felt unsteady. Every step sent another wave through me.
“Seraphina, wait,” Lucien called.
I stopped. Part of me wanted to keep walking; another part, the foolishly hopeful part, made me stop and turn to face him.
He pushed through the crowd, face pale. Up close, his jaw worked like he was fighting for the right words. For a second I thought he might take it back.
“You don’t understand,” he said quietly. His eyes flicked to the watching pack members. “This was necessary. The pack needs strength right now. Selene fits better as Luna. Everyone sees it.”
I stared at him in disbelief….the boy who once defended me against cruel jokes now stood here explaining why I wasn’t enough.
“You rejected me in front of everyone,” I whispered. My voice cracked. “And now you want me to understand?”
He ran a hand through his hair. “I didn’t want to hurt you. But an Alpha has responsibilities. The bond clouded my judgment. I see clearly now.”
Around us the whispers grew louder. Someone laughed softly near the back.
Selene appeared beside him. She placed a hand on his arm and turned to me with wide eyes. “Oh, Sera. This must be so difficult for you. I never wanted it to happen this way.”
She lowered her gaze. For a moment our eyes met. The satisfaction in hers disappeared before anyone else could catch it.
Aunt Helena pushed forward, face tight. “This is a disaster. How could you let this happen, Seraphina? You stood there like a fool while he chose someone else.”
“I didn’t do anything wrong,” I said.
“You exist as you are,” she snapped. “That was enough.”
The words hit hard. I looked around. Elias, my younger cousin, took one step forward. Then Aunt Helena’s glare landed on him. He stopped and looked away.
I needed to get out. I turned and headed for the side doors. My steps stayed clumsy. The bond’s backlash kept digging in.
Lucien followed me into the corridor.
“Seraphina, please. We can still be civil about this. For the pack’s sake.”
I spun around. “Civil? You humiliated me. You chose my cousin over your own mate. And now you want civility?”
He flinched but held his ground. “Things are complicated. Tensions with other territories are rising. We need a strong image. Selene brings that. You…” He gestured vaguely at me. “You know how people see you.”
I leaned against the wall. My hands fumbled with the necklace Selene had fixed earlier. I yanked it off and let it drop. The clatter echoed down the hall.
“I thought the bond meant something,” I said. “I thought you saw me.”
For a moment regret crossed his face. Then it hardened. “I did what I had to do.”
Selene stepped into the corridor. “Lucien, give her space. She’s clearly overwhelmed.” She looked at me. “We’ll help you through this, cousin. Family supports family, remember?”
I didn’t answer. I walked deeper into the pack house until I found a small storage room. I slipped inside, closed the door, and let the tears come.
I slid down the wall. My knees hit the floor. For a while I just sat there staring at the door. Someone laughed somewhere outside. I don’t know why that sound hurts more than the rejection.
I don’t know how long I stayed there. The sounds from the main hall shifted.
Eventually voices approached. The elders.
I stayed quiet and listened.
“This rejection is a scandal,” Elder Marcus said. “Publicly casting aside a fated mate weakens us. Other packs will smell the instability.”
Aunt Helena answered sharply. “What do you suggest? The damage is done.”
Another elder spoke. “We have been negotiating alliances for months. The northern territories grow restless. War is close if we don’t secure something solid.”
There was a long pause.
“There may still be a solution,” Elder Marcus said. “The Lycan King requested a political bride weeks ago. We could offer Seraphina. A contract marriage to strengthen ties and repair our image.”
My stomach dropped. The Lycan King. I’d heard the stories growing up. Packs that crossed him disappeared. Mothers used his name to scare children into obedience.
“And if we refuse?” Aunt Helena asked.
“Then Black Hollow Pack will fall,” Elder Marcus replied. “The Lycan King’s reach is long. His temper is legendary.”
I pressed a hand over my mouth. They wanted to send me to him like some offering. As a replacement. As damage control.
The elders moved on, discussing details in low voices. Plans that didn’t include asking me.
I stayed hidden in that small room. No one had defended me. Not Lucien. Not my family. Not the pack that was supposed to be mine.
I was truly unwanted.
And now they wanted to send me to the one man everyone feared.
The sound of wooden staffs colliding echoed across the courtyard. I should have kept walking back to my rooms, but my feet carried me closer anyway. I stopped near the edge, half-hidden behind a stone pillar. Soldiers sparred in pairs on the packed dirt, their boots kicking up dust with every shift. Grunts mixed with the sharp crack of wood on wood.One soldier, broad and loud, landed a solid hit and laughed. “Keep that up and you’ll end up like those Black Hollow fools. Rejected by one alpha and married off to another like some spare part.”A few others chuckled. The words hit harder than I expected. I stepped back quickly and turned away before anyone spotted me. My face burned the whole way back.In my room I picked up a book. I read the same page three times without taking in a single word. The old shame sat heavy in my chest again. Spare part. That’s how they still saw me. Helpless. Unwanted. Always depending on someone else to decide my place.By evening the yard had mostly clea
Word reached me during breakfast. A delegation from Black Hollow had arrived. Not Lucien or Selene, but Elder Harlan, Captain Reyes, and a couple of their advisors. They claimed it was about trade routes and winter preparations. I didn’t believe that for a second. They weren’t here for trade routes.My appetite disappeared. I pushed my plate away. Mara noticed and gave my shoulder a light squeeze. “His Majesty will handle the formal talks. You don’t have to attend if you’d rather not.”I almost said yes. Instead I shook my head. “I should be there.”The meeting took place in the large hall. I arrived a few minutes after Kael. He sat at the head of the table, posture relaxed but commanding. When I walked in, the Black Hollow group turned. Elder Harlan’s eyes widened slightly. Captain Reyes gave a stiff nod. No warmth.“Seraphina,” Elder Harlan said, his voice polite in that careful way I remembered. “You look… well.”I sat down across from them, hands folded in my lap so no one would s
The next morning I woke up and checked my wrist first thing. Nothing. No silver lines. No warmth. No whisper. Part of me felt relieved. The other part wondered if I had imagined the voice in the firelight. “Wake.” It sounded ridiculous now, sitting here in daylight with tea cooling on the table.Mara came in while I was finishing breakfast. “His Majesty requested your presence this morning, my lady. He wants you to join him on a ride through the territory.”My stomach dropped. “Did I do something wrong?”She smiled gently. “No. He simply asked. The carriage will be ready soon.”I changed into warmer clothes and tried not to overthink it. When I met Kael in the courtyard, he was already mounted on a large black horse. Another horse stood saddled beside him, steady and calm.“We’ll check the outer villages and supply stores before the heavy snows,” he said. “You don’t have to come if you’d rather not.”I shook my head. “I’ll come.”The ride took us beyond the Citadel walls and down wind
The next morning I woke with one question stuck in my head. What wasn’t Kael telling me? I rubbed my wrist before I even opened my eyes. Nothing. No symbol. No strange warmth. Just ordinary skin. Somehow that bothered me more than seeing it.I got dressed and tried to push the thoughts away. Sitting around wondering wouldn’t change anything. When Mara knocked with breakfast, I asked if there was anything useful I could do around the Citadel. She looked pleased.“The village could use extra hands distributing winter supplies today,” she said. “If you’re willing.”I nodded. Anything beat pacing my rooms thinking about locked doors and secrets.The mountain air felt crisp as we walked down to the village. Snow dusted the rooftops and the stone streets. Mara carried a list while I helped push a small cart loaded with blankets, sacks of grain, and bundles of dried herbs. My arms ached after a while, but it felt good to do something.At the first house an older woman opened the door. She to
“I don’t know what you mean,” I said. My voice came out weaker than I wanted.Kael’s gaze stayed fixed on my wrist. “The symbol.”I looked down. My skin was bare. No glow. No mark. Nothing. For a second I wondered if I had imagined it. The warmth. The light. The strange pull beneath my skin. But I knew I hadn’t.“It disappeared,” I said quietly.The narrow hallway seemed to close in around me. Dust drifted through the shafts of afternoon light. Somewhere deeper in the Citadel, a door slammed shut.His eyes lifted from my wrist to my face. “Has that happened before?”I hesitated. The truth should have been simple. Yet something about the way he asked made me nervous. “A few times. Since I arrived.”His expression hardened. Not anger. Concern. Real concern. My stomach tightened.“What is it?” I asked.“Nothing.”The answer came too quickly.I folded my arms. “That didn’t sound like nothing.”For a moment neither of us spoke. Then Kael exhaled slowly. “There are parts of this Citadel you
I couldn’t stop thinking about the signing. Not the contract itself. Not even the way my name now sat next to his on that paper. It was the way Kael had spoken up for me. Twice now. Nobody had ever done that before. I hated how much it stuck with me.Mara found me in the library the next morning. “Would you like to see more of the Citadel, my lady? It might help you settle in.”I nodded. Anything beat sitting alone with my thoughts.She led me through the halls and out into the main courtyard. The mountain air hit sharp and cold, carrying the clean scent of pine and damp stone. Soldiers trained in neat rows, their boots scraping against the packed dirt, metal clanging as blades met. When Kael walked by on the far side, they straightened without him saying a word. One older worker carrying tools called out a greeting, his voice rough but easy. Kael gave a short nod. The man actually smiled after, shoulders relaxed.Nobody rushed to get out of his way. Nobody looked terrified. They simp







