Rejected by My Alpha, Claimed by the True King – “I’ll take Adeline’s place and accept the marriage-mating with the man you promised her to,”I said,my voice flat as stone.“But I want two things in return.One billion in gold-backed funds transferred through the Pack vault.And a Blood-Severance Letter,sealed by Alpha and Luna,witnessed by the Council,declaring that I am no longer a Wyatt.” The Wyatt ancestral study smelled of smoke,old parchment,and wolfbane oil used to preserve sacred documents.Above the hearth hung the Pack’s first Alpha’s pelt,whitened by age,the eyes replaced with onyx so they always looked awake.Beneath it sat the black table carved with the moon-phase runes that every Wyatt pup learned to trace before they learned to read. I tossed the agreement onto that table.
The parchment slid over the carved symbols and stopped at the center sigil,as if the Pack itself had caught it. My father’s aura snapped outward,a cold Alpha pressure that pressed against my lungs.He didn’t even bother to hide his anger.He raised his goblet and slammed it onto the stone floor with enough force to crack the base. “One billion?”he thundered.“Do you want to bleed the Wyatt Pack dry?” The glass shattered.A shard cut into my ankle.Blood seeped warm between my toes,staining the pale stone. I didn’t flinch.Wolves were taught early that pain was information,not permission to be weak. I lifted my head,met the eyes of the Alpha who had fathered me,and smiled. “What?”I asked softly.“Is Adeline’s life not worth that much?” For a moment,the fire popped.The onyx eyes above us gleamed.My mother’s hands tightened in her lap,but she didn’t speak.
My father stared at me as if he was seeing a stranger wearing my face.“Why are you suddenly agreeing to this?”His voice dropped into suspicion.“Don’t you love Brian Herbert the most?” A laugh tore out of me,sharp and bitter.It pulled at my ribs and pain flashed white behind my eyes.I’d learned to breathe around broken bones,to speak around the ache,to keep my voice steady even when my body begged me to curl up and disappear. Two weeks ago,it had been my twenty-fifth birthday. In our world,twenty-five wasn’t just a number.It was the age the Pack considered a wolf fully claimed by the Moon,old enough for a formal bond,old enough to stand before a Council without being dismissed as a pup. That night,I was taken. Not by rival Pack warriors.Not by Council enforcers.By rogues.Unclaimed wolves and half-men who lived outside territory lines and sold their claws to the highest bidder. Adeline Wyatt arranged it. They broke three of my ribs with the lazy cruelty of men who enjoyed hearing bone give way.They whipped my back until the skin split open,until the sting became heat,until the heat became numbness.
They laughed when my wolf tried to rise and protect me,then stuffed wolfsbane smoke into my face until my beast retreated,choking and terrified. I’ve always had claustrophobia.A real weakness,the kind elders call“a human sickness.”They knew that too. So they locked me in a room barely wider than my shoulders.No window.No moonlight.Just darkness thick enough to press against my eyes.For twenty-four hours I listened to my own breathing,to the blood in my ears,to the distant drip of water that counted time like a curse. When I started losing hope,the door exploded inward. Brian Herbert arrived with his men,the air shifting as his Alpha dominance hit the room.The rogues dropped to their knees like the Moon itself had commanded it.He strode straight to me,and when his gaze landed on my blood and bruises,his eyes filled with tears. “Lilian,”he said,voice breaking.“Don’t close your eyes.We’re almost at the infirmary.
Hold on a little longer.” I clung to his scent,anchoring myself in it.Cedar,smoke,and something that used to make my wolf go quiet with trust.He carried me out like I mattered. Like I belonged. At the Pack hospital,the healers pressed silver-threaded bandages to my wounds and murmured prayers to the Moon Goddess.The moment I hit the bed,exhaustion dragged me under. When I woke,pain slammed through my entire body like a second beating.My ribs screamed.My back burned.My wolf lay curled inside me,shaking,as if it didn’t trust the air yet. I reached for the call bell. And then I heard voices outside my door. “The rogues who originally took Miss Wyatt have been caught,”an assistant reported. “They confessed.It really was Miss Wyatt who hired them to stage the whole thing.” My breath caught so hard I tasted blood. Brian went quiet for a beat.Then his voice came,low and mocking. “So Adeline was right then.” His assistant hesitated.“But…why did you hire someone to keep Lilian locked up for another twenty-four hours?She was in bad shape when we found her.” Brian’s reply didn’t hesitate at all. “She loves playing the victim,”he said,cold as ice.“So I gave her a real lesson.” “The rogues demanded ransom from Adeline.She panicked.
She got a fever.She suffered.Good.” He exhaled like he was bored.“I told them to rough Lilian up a little.Nothing fatal.She’s just too fragile.” In my bed,my scalp prickled.A chill swept over me so thoroughly it felt like my blood had been replaced with winter. So this was the truth. Adeline had already blamed it on me,called it my scheme,and Brian believed her so completely that he decided punishment was deserved.He didn’t rescue me because he loved me.He rescued me because the story required a hero,and he wanted to choose which wounds I was allowed to have. When I was eighteen,the Wyatt Pack brought me back from the outskirts like retrieving lost property.That was when I learned the truth about the“marriage”everyone whispered about. It wasn’t romance.It was politics. A Herbert–Wyatt alliance contract,written under moonlight ink,sealed with Alpha blood and Council witness.Everyone in London’s werewolf circles said Brian and Adeline were childhood sweethearts,raised under the same territory stars.They said he would choose her,because that was how these things were meant to go. And then Brian chose me instead. He pursued me relentlessly.He marked me with attention,with protection,with words that sounded like vows even before a ceremony.
Adeline accused me of stealing everything meant for her,and Brian turned on her with a grim face. “I only care about your sister,”he’d said.“You’ve enjoyed the Pack’s warmth your whole life.Lilian survived outside without asking for anything.Why are you making such a fuss?” Back then,it had felt like safety.Like love. Now I understood it had been temporary.A phase.A convenient rebellion. Love that can expire was never love at all. I drew a slow breath and pushed the memory down like a blade into a sheath.Then I looked back at my parents,still seated beneath the watch of onyx eyes and old pelts. “Have you decided?”I asked calmly. Mr.and Mrs.Wyatt exchanged a look.I saw it in their faces:not grief,not guilt,but calculation.They were weighing rumors about the Lloyd Pack,the wolves who didn’t forgive insult or weakness,the bloodline said to have descended from the first Moon-blessed Alpha.A Pack whose ceremonies were older than our laws. After a long pause,my father reached for the quill.My mother finally spoke,voice thin. “Fine,”she said.“In seven days,the funds will be transferred.The ceremony will happen.” My father’s gaze sharpened.“But you will not reveal the exchange.Not to the Council.Not to outsiders.Not to anyone.” As if silence could keep the Pack clean. They signed.Then they pressed their thumbs into the ink bowl mixed with a drop of Alpha blood,leaving fingerprints beside the Wyatt crest.
The agreement accepted.The transaction complete. I grabbed the parchment and turned to leave. Only then did my chest ache,deep and tearing,as if something inside me finally snapped loose from its last thread of hope. They had never loved me. The only child they protected was Adeline,their adopted daughter who didn’t even share our blood,yet wore our name like a crown. Since that was the truth,I no longer wanted a Pack.Or a family.Or a mate. I would give them exactly what they wanted. Outside the study,I pulled out my phone and called a friend with eyes in places the Council pretended didn’t exist. “Find every piece of footage that proves Adeline’s involvement in my kidnapping,”I said. Then,after a brief pause,I added,“Also spread the news about the new cross-territory project.Get Brian to invest.Then cut access to the core technology and supply lines for both Herbert and Wyatt operations.” In seven days,I would give them a gift they would never forget. Back in my room,I gathered every photo of me and Brian.Every smile I’d trusted.Every moment that had once made my wolf settle. One by one,I tossed them onto the floor and set them on fire. The flames climbed fast,eating paper,devouring faces,turning my past into ash. Watching the fire rise,I whispered,cold and steady,like a vow spoken under a moon that no longer belonged to me. “This time…we’ll never meet again.”