The Rejection
The full moon hung heavy in the night sky, casting silver light across the Silvermoon Pack territory. Aria Blackwood stood at the edge of the clearing, her heart hammering against her ribs as wolves gathered for the monthly pack meeting. Tonight was different. Tonight, she turned eighteen. Tonight, she might finally find her mate.
"Stop fidgeting," Maya whispered beside her, squeezing Aria's hand. Her best friend's warm brown eyes sparkled with excitement. "You look beautiful."
Aria smoothed down her simple blue dress, suddenly self-conscious among the other she-wolves in their elegant gowns. As an omega, she didn't have money for fancy clothes. This dress was borrowed, like most things in her life.
"What if he doesn't want me?" Aria breathed, voicing the fear that had plagued her all day.
"Then he's an i***t," Maya said fiercely. "Any wolf would be lucky to have you as their mate."
Before Aria could respond, a commanding presence washed over the clearing. Every wolf fell silent, heads turning toward the pack house. Alpha Kade Thornridge emerged from the shadows, and Aria's breath caught in her throat.
He was magnificent. Tall and powerful, moving with lethal grace that spoke of barely contained strength. His ice-blue eyes swept across the gathered pack with cool detachment. Even from a distance, Aria could feel the authority radiating from him, the dominance that made weaker wolves instinctively lower their gaze.
She'd seen him before, of course. The Alpha was impossible to miss. But she'd always kept her distance, knowing her lowly rank meant she was beneath his notice. Omegas didn't interact with Alphas. That was the natural order.
Kade took his place on the raised platform, his Beta Garrett standing at his right. The Alpha's jaw was set in its usual hard line, his expression carved from stone. Aria had never seen him smile. Rumor said he hadn't since his first mate died three years ago.
"The pack meeting will now begin," Garrett announced, his voice carrying across the clearing.
Aria tried to focus on the announcements—patrol schedules, territory disputes, upcoming alliances—but her wolf was restless beneath her skin. Luna paced anxiously, whining softly. Something felt different tonight. Electric. Like the air before a storm.
Then it happened.
A scent hit her like a physical force. Pine and winter frost, leather and something uniquely male. It wrapped around her, pulled at something deep in her chest. Her wolf surged forward with a joyful howl that echoed only in Aria's mind.
Mate. Mate. MATE.
Aria's knees nearly buckled. Her eyes flew to the platform, and she found Kade staring directly at her. His entire body had gone rigid, those ice-blue eyes wide with shock. For one perfect, crystalline moment, the world narrowed to just the two of them. The mate bond snapped into place with an intensity that stole her breath, a golden thread connecting her soul to his.
Alpha Kade Thornridge was her mate.
Her fated mate.
Joy exploded through her chest. After eighteen years of being nobody, of being overlooked and undervalued, the Moon Goddess had given her the most powerful wolf in the territory. She took an instinctive step forward, drawn to him like metal to a magnet.
But then Kade's expression changed. The shock melted away, replaced by something that made Aria's blood run cold. His eyes hardened to chips of ice. His jaw clenched. And when he looked at her, there was no warmth, no recognition of the sacred bond between them.
There was only cold, brutal rejection in those blue depths.
"No," Kade said, his voice cutting through the silence. "This is impossible."
The pack erupted in whispers. Maya grabbed Aria's arm, steadying her as the world tilted.
"Alpha Kade?" Garrett stepped forward, confusion written across his face. "You've found your mate?"
Kade's gaze never left Aria. She felt pinned beneath it, like prey beneath a predator's stare. "I, Kade Thornridge, Alpha of the Silvermoon Pack, reject you, Aria Blackwood, as my mate."
The words hit like a physical blow. Aria gasped, clutching her chest as pain ripped through her. The golden thread connecting them frayed, tearing at her very soul. Around them, the pack descended into chaos. Rejection was rare, almost unheard of. To reject your fated mate was to spit in the face of the Moon Goddess herself.
"Kade, wait—" Garrett started, but the Alpha silenced him with a look.
"Accept the rejection, omega," Kade commanded, his voice devoid of emotion. "Now."
Tears streamed down Aria's face. Through the bond that was dying between them, she could feel his pain, his fear, his desperate determination to push her away. But she could also feel the wall around his heart, impenetrable and cold.
"Why?" The word came out broken, barely a whisper.
Something flickered in Kade's eyes—regret, perhaps, or pain—but it was gone in an instant. "You're an omega. Weak. I need a strong Luna by my side, not someone who can barely defend herself. You would be a liability to this pack."
Each word was a knife to her heart. Around them, pack members shifted uncomfortably. Even among werewolves, where strength was valued above all, rejecting your fated mate for being weak was considered cruel.
"Accept it," Kade repeated, his voice harder now. "Or I'll have you exiled from pack lands."
Maya's arm tightened around Aria's waist, holding her upright. Aria's wolf howled in anguish, clawing at her from the inside, begging her not to do this. But what choice did she have? She had no power here, no voice. She was nothing but an omega, exactly as he'd said.
With shaking hands pressed to her shattered heart, Aria forced the words past her lips. "I, Aria Blackwood, accept your rejection."
The bond snapped completely. The pain was excruciating, like her chest was being ripped open. Aria's legs gave out, and she collapsed to her knees in the dirt. Maya dropped beside her, arms wrapping around her as she sobbed.
Through her tears, Aria looked up one last time at the man the Moon Goddess had chosen for her. Kade stood rigid on the platform, his face an emotionless mask. But his hands were clenched into fists at his sides, knuckles white with tension. For just a second, she saw his wolf flash in his eyes—golden and anguished.
Then he turned and walked away, disappearing into the pack house without looking back.
The gathered wolves slowly began to disperse, whispering among themselves. Some looked at Aria with pity. Others with disdain. A rejected omega was worse than just an omega—she was a wolf even her fated mate didn't want.
"Come on," Maya said gently, helping Aria to her feet. "Let's get you out of here."
Aria let herself be led away from the clearing, her body moving on autopilot while her mind splintered into pieces. Behind them, she heard Garrett's raised voice, angry and disbelieving, likely confronting his Alpha about what had just happened.
But it didn't matter. Nothing mattered anymore.
The Moon Goddess had given her a miracle, and it had been torn away before she could even touch it.
As they reached the small cabin Aria shared with other omegas, one thought crystallized in her broken mind: she couldn't stay here. Not in this pack. Not where every day she'd have to see him, to feel the ghost of what might have been.
She had to leave. Had to run.
And she had to do it before sunrise.