
Chapter 1 of After His Rejection, My Daughter Uncovered My Silent Sacrifice
The world tilted sideways as I stumbled against the washing machine, my fingers desperately clutching the cold metal to stay upright. The laundry room spun around me, the harsh scent of bleach suddenly overwhelming. Inside me, Lyra—my wolf—whimpered weakly, her once-vibrant aura flickering like a candle in the wind.
"Emily!" Someone caught me before I hit the floor. Through blurred vision, I recognized Beth, another laundry worker. "Moon Goddess, you're white as a sheet."
I tried to stand, to brush it off as nothing. "I'm fine, just tired—"
But my legs betrayed me, buckling beneath my weight. The pain in my chest intensified—that familiar hollowness where half of Lyra's strength should be. Where it would be, if I hadn't given it away.
"You need the healer," Beth insisted, her voice distant as darkness crept into the edges of my vision.
I wanted to protest—I couldn't afford another visit to Seraphina—but Lyra's whimpers grew more desperate, and I knew this wasn't something I could ignore. Not if I wanted to survive for Lily's sake.
* * *
"This is the third collapse this month, Emily." Seraphina's stern voice cut through the haze of healing herbs filling her den. The older she-wolf's hands glowed with a soft blue light as she passed them over my chest, her brow furrowed in concentration. "Your wolf is fading faster than before."
I stared at the ceiling, wooden beams crisscrossing above me like the tangled web of lies I'd woven. "How much time?"
Seraphina's hands paused, her eyes—sharp despite her age—meeting mine. "Without proper magical treatment? Months. Maybe weeks."
The words landed like physical blows. Weeks. Not enough time to see Lily grow up. Not enough time to ensure she'd be safe.
"The treatment—"
"Costs more than you can afford on laundry wages," Seraphina finished bluntly. "Emily, I don't understand why you won't go to the Alpha. Whatever happened between you two—"
"No." The word came out sharper than I intended. "That's not an option."
Seraphina sighed, the blue light fading from her fingertips. "Then find another option quickly. Your wolf is unnaturally weakened—I've never seen anything like it. It's as if half her life force is... elsewhere."
I turned away, unable to meet her knowing gaze. If she suspected the truth about the blood bond ritual, she was kind enough not to say it aloud.
"Rest here for an hour," she instructed, placing a small vial of glowing amber liquid beside me. "This will temporarily strengthen your connection to Lyra, but it's not a cure."
I nodded, clutching my worn moonstone pendant—the last reminder of who I used to be. Luna Emily Parker. Now just Emily, the pack outcast with the dying wolf.
* * *
An hour later, the temporary strength from Seraphina's potion flowed through my veins as I slipped out of the healer's den. Head down, shoulders hunched—the posture of someone trying to be invisible. I'd perfected it over the past year.
I nearly made it to the path leading to the outer territories when I heard them—footsteps approaching, accompanied by a scent that still haunted my dreams. Cedar and rain. Ethan.
Freezing in place, I pressed myself against the rough bark of a nearby pine, praying to the Moon Goddess they wouldn't notice me.
But fate had never been kind.
"Well, look who it is." Victoria's saccharine voice sliced through the air. "The former Luna herself."
I forced myself to look up, meeting her cold, calculating eyes first before allowing myself to glance at him.
Ethan stood tall and powerful, his black hair slightly longer than when we were together, his jawline tense. The sight of him sent Lyra into a frenzy of desperate howls that I struggled to contain. His wolf, Kael, must have sensed her, because Ethan's eyes flashed gold with fury.
"Alpha," I murmured, lowering my gaze in submission.
He didn't speak. Didn't need to. The contempt radiating from him was answer enough.
Victoria slipped her arm through his, her fingers possessively stroking his forearm. "We were just discussing final arrangements for our mating ceremony next full moon." Her smile was razor-sharp. "You should come, Emily. Show the pack there are no hard feelings about your... rejection."
Ethan's jaw clenched tighter, his eyes never leaving my face. For a heartbeat, I thought I saw something flicker behind the anger—confusion, perhaps. Pain. But then it was gone, replaced by cold indifference as he guided Victoria past me without a word.
* * *
The walk back to my cabin took twice as long as usual, each step draining what little energy Seraphina's potion had provided. By the time I reached the small clearing where my home stood—a dilapidated structure on the very edge of pack territory—darkness had fallen.
I smelled it before I saw it—the metallic tang of blood mixed with an unfamiliar wolf scent. My heart lurched as I approached my front door, where deep claw marks gouged the wood. A warning. A threat.
"Emily!" Rachel's voice called from inside. My younger sister burst through the door, her eyes wild with worry. "Thank the Goddess you're back. They were here again—those rogues."
"Did they hurt you?" I grabbed her shoulders, scanning for injuries. "Did they see Lily?"
"No, I got her hidden in time." Rachel's fierce eyes narrowed. "But this can't go on. You need to tell Ethan everything—the blood ritual, the rogues, Lily. His daughter, Em. He deserves to know."
"He deserves peace," I corrected softly, pushing past her into the cabin. "The pack deserves a strong Alpha, not one bound to a dying mate and hunted by rogues."
"And what does Lily deserve?" Rachel challenged. "A father? A future?"
The question hung in the air as I moved to the small bedroom where my daughter slept. Three years old, with her father's dark hair and my blue eyes. I gently brushed a curl from her forehead, my heart breaking all over again at the sight of her.
"Mama?" Lily's sleepy voice whispered as she stirred. "Bad wolves come again?"
"No, sweetheart." I gathered her into my arms, breathing in her innocent scent. "Mama's here. You're safe."
But as I held her, my eyes met Rachel's over Lily's head. We both knew it was a lie. None of us were safe. And time was running out.
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