
Chapter 1 of Rejected by the Alpha, Claimed by the King
The morning sun cast long shadows across the training grounds as I adjusted my stance, feeling the familiar weight of the practice sword in my hands. The joint training session between Shadowridge Pack and our neighboring allies had drawn a decent crowd, wolves from three different packs gathered to share combat techniques and strengthen inter-pack relationships.
"Remember, when dealing with a rogue who's been isolated for months, their fighting style becomes erratic," I explained to Jake Martinez, one of our pack's most promising warriors. "They've lost the coordinated pack instincts, so they rely more on desperate, unpredictable movements."
Jake nodded, his dark eyes focused as he mirrored my defensive position. "So we need to be ready for anything, not just textbook attacks."
"Exactly." I demonstrated a blocking technique, my movements fluid from years of experience in rogue rehabilitation. "The key is maintaining your center while staying flexible enough to counter their chaos."
The training felt natural, professional. This was who I used to be—someone with expertise worth sharing, someone who contributed more to the pack than just standing pretty beside an Alpha. Jake was a good student, respectful but not deferential, treating me as the skilled trainer I was rather than just the Luna he had to humor.
"Try the sequence again," I instructed, stepping back to observe his form. "But this time, imagine your opponent is someone who hasn't eaten in days and sees you as their only chance for survival."
Jake's expression grew more serious as he adjusted his stance. The desperation I'd described wasn't theoretical—I'd seen it firsthand in the rogues we'd successfully rehabilitated, the hollow look in their eyes before they learned to trust pack bonds again.
"Luna Carly, your insight into rogue psychology is remarkable," called out Marcus Silverfang, Alpha of the visiting pack, who'd been observing from the sidelines. "Have you documented these techniques? My pack could benefit from this knowledge."
A flush of pride warmed my chest. "I've been working on a comprehensive guide. The psychological aspects are just as important as the physical training."
"I'd be very interested in reviewing your work," Marcus continued, approaching our practice area. "We've had some challenges with rogue integration lately."
Jake lowered his practice sword, wiping sweat from his brow. "Luna Carly's methods have a ninety percent success rate. She's gotten rogues to integrate who other packs had written off as hopeless."
The easy camaraderie felt like breathing after holding my breath for months. This was conversation between equals, recognition of skills I'd worked years to develop. For a moment, I almost forgot the constant weight of being watched, analyzed, judged.
Then the temperature seemed to drop ten degrees.
I felt Grayson's presence before I saw him, that familiar Alpha aura rolling across the training grounds like a storm front. My wolf immediately tensed, recognizing the dangerous edge to his energy. When I turned, his gray eyes were fixed on me with an intensity that made my stomach clench.
He strode across the training ground with predatory grace, his jaw set in a hard line. The conversations around us gradually died as other wolves sensed their Alpha's mood, the easy atmosphere evaporating like morning mist.
"Carly." My name came out clipped, controlled. Too controlled.
I straightened, instinctively shifting into the submissive posture he expected. "Grayson. I didn't know you were planning to observe today's training."
His gaze flicked to Jake, then to Marcus, before settling back on me with laser focus. "I wasn't planning to. But it seems I should have been."
The implied accusation hung in the air like smoke. Jake took an unconscious step back, recognizing the Alpha's displeasure even if he didn't understand its source. Marcus maintained his position but his expression grew carefully neutral.
"The training has been very productive," I said carefully, trying to keep my voice steady. "We've been working on techniques for—"
"I can see what you've been working on." Grayson's Alpha tone cut through my explanation like a blade, commanding immediate silence. The power in his voice made every wolf present freeze, their heads automatically lowering in submission.
My cheeks burned as I realized what this looked like to him—his Luna, laughing and training intimately with another male, receiving praise and attention that should have been his to give or withhold.
"As Luna of this pack," Grayson continued, his voice carrying clearly across the now-silent training ground, "you will remember your place. From now on, you will only train with female pack members. Your rehabilitation work will be supervised and conducted through proper channels."
The humiliation hit me like a physical blow. Around us, wolves from three different packs watched their Alpha publicly dress down his Luna like a wayward child. Jake's face had gone pale, Marcus looked uncomfortable, and I could feel the pitying stares of every wolf present.
"Grayson, please—" I started, but his Alpha aura flared, cutting off my words.
"The training session is over," he declared, his tone brooking no argument. "Everyone return to your duties."
The dismissal was absolute, final. As wolves began to disperse with uncomfortable murmurs, I stood frozen in the center of the training ground, my practice sword suddenly feeling impossibly heavy in my trembling hands.
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