
Chapter 1 of The Alpha Rejected Me, So I Ended Him
I stood at the head of the room, my fingers wrapped around the cool metal of the microphone, surveying the crowd that had gathered for tonight's gala.
The crystal chandelier cast warm light across the marble floor of Silver Moon Pack's grand ballroom, each facet reflecting the faces of werewolves dressed in their finest evening wear.
Everything was perfect. Every detail had been meticulously planned, every expense carefully calculated—and every dollar had come from my personal trust fund.
I had spent three months organizing this event, working eighteen-hour days to ensure the Silver Moon Pack would make the right impression on the visiting Alphas from neighboring territories.
The pack's reputation had been sliding for years, whispers of financial instability following us like shadows. Tonight was supposed to change that narrative.
The irony wasn't lost on me that I was standing here alone, preparing to give a toast on behalf of an Alpha who couldn't be bothered to show up to his own pack's most important social event of the year.
"Ladies and gentlemen," I began, my voice carrying clearly through the sound system I'd personally tested three times that afternoon. "Welcome to Silver Moon Pack's annual—"
The screech of tires on gravel cut through my words like a blade.
Every head in the room turned toward the floor-to-ceiling windows that overlooked the estate's front lawn. Through the glass, I could see headlights cutting through the darkness, moving far too fast for the winding driveway that led to the main house.
The engine roar grew louder, more aggressive. This wasn't the careful approach of a late-arriving guest. This was something else entirely.
A collective gasp rose from the crowd as a black SUV burst through the ornate iron gates I'd had restored last spring.
The vehicle didn't slow as it hit the circular drive. Instead, it veered sharply to the right, tires spinning as it carved deep ruts into the pristine lawn.
My heart stopped as I watched the SUV plow directly through the flower beds I'd spent weeks planning with the landscaper. Rare orchids and imported roses—each one worth more than most pack members made in a month—disappeared under spinning wheels. Soil and petals exploded into the air like confetti at a funeral.
The SUV finally skidded to a halt mere yards from the ballroom's French doors, engine still rumbling. Steam rose from the hood. Clumps of earth and destroyed flowers clung to the front bumper like battle scars.
Silence fell over the ballroom. Even the orchestra had stopped playing, violins hanging suspended in mid-note.
The driver's door swung open with deliberate slowness.
Alpha Draven stepped out.
Even from a distance, I could see the satisfied smirk on his face as he surveyed the destruction he'd caused. He wore his formal Alpha attire—the navy suit I'd had tailored for him last Christmas—but his tie was askew and his hair disheveled. He looked like a man who'd been in a hurry to get somewhere, or more accurately, to make an entrance.
But he wasn't alone.
The passenger door opened, and a woman emerged. She wore a tight red dress that looked like it had come from a discount store, the kind of synthetic fabric that caught light in all the wrong ways. Her blonde hair was teased into an elaborate style that screamed desperation rather than sophistication.
I'd never seen her before, but something about the way she moved—the calculated sway of her hips, the practiced toss of her head—told me everything I needed to know about what she was.
Draven circled the SUV and wrapped his arm around her waist, pulling her against his side with possessive familiarity. Together, they walked toward the ballroom, their shoes crunching on the scattered petals of my destroyed garden.
The French doors burst open, sending a rush of cold night air through the warm ballroom. Several guests near the entrance shivered and stepped back, but no one dared speak.
Draven strode through the crowd like he owned not just the pack but every person in the room. His Alpha aura rolled off him in waves, commanding attention and submission. Pack members automatically stepped aside, creating a clear path to the main stage where I still stood, microphone in hand.
The woman—Bella, I realized as I caught fragments of whispered conversation, clearly I was the only one who was blinded from her existence—clung to his arm like a barnacle.
Up close, I could see the cheap makeup caked around her eyes, the way her dress pulled tight across her midsection. There was something different about her scent too, something that made the female wolves in the crowd shift uncomfortably.
Draven reached the stage and climbed the steps with confident strides. He didn't look at me as he approached, didn't acknowledge the fact that I was in the middle of addressing our guests.
Instead, he simply reached out and plucked the microphone from my fingers.
The casual dismissal hit me like a physical blow. Five years of partnership, of building this pack from near-bankruptcy to prosperity, and he treated me like a servant who'd outlived her usefulness.
"Pack members, honored guests," Draven's voice boomed through the speakers, rich with Alpha authority. "I apologize for my dramatic entrance, but I have an announcement that couldn't wait."
He pulled Bella closer, his hand splaying possessively across her lower back. She gazed up at him with worshipful eyes, playing her role to perfection.
"The Moon Goddess has blessed me with a gift," Draven continued, his voice carrying to every corner of the silent ballroom. "This woman, Bella, carries my wolf cub. She is my true mate, chosen by the Goddess herself to stand at my side and continue the Silver Moon bloodline."
The words hit the crowd like a physical force. Gasps and murmurs rippled through the assembled werewolves. I caught sight of visiting Alphas exchanging meaningful glances, their expressions ranging from surprise to calculation to barely concealed amusement.
I stood frozen beside Draven, my face a mask of composure even as my world crumbled around me. Five years. Five years of pouring my heart, my money, my very soul into this pack, into this man, and this was how it ended.
Not with a private conversation. Not with the dignity of a closed-door discussion.
With public humiliation in front of everyone who mattered in our world.
Draven turned to me then, his eyes cold and dismissive. "Calista has been a... companion to me these past five years," he said, the word 'companion' dripping with disdain. "But she has never been able to prove our mate bond through scent, as you all know. And despite my patience, she has failed to provide me with an heir."
Each word was a knife between my ribs, delivered with surgical precision to cause maximum damage.
"Therefore," Draven continued, his voice rising with Alpha command, "Calista will immediately step down from her position as Luna. She will vacate the main house and take residence in the servant quarters, so that Bella may safely carry my child without the stress of... conflicting authority."
The silence that followed was deafening. I could feel hundreds of eyes on me, waiting for my reaction. Waiting for me to scream, to cry, to beg, to make a scene that would cement my fall from grace.
Instead, I did something that surprised everyone, including myself.
I nodded.
One small, controlled movement of my head. An acknowledgment that I'd heard him. Nothing more.
Then I turned and walked away.
My heels clicked against the marble floor with steady, measured beats. I didn't run. I didn't stumble.
I didn't look back at the man who'd just destroyed me in front of our entire world.
Behind me, I heard the crowd erupt into whispered conversations, the sound rising like a tide. I caught fragments as I walked: "...always knew she was weak..." "...never could smell their bond..." "...about time he found a real mate..."
I ignored them all.
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