Maya helped Aria into the small cabin they shared with three other omega she-wolves. The space was cramped, with four narrow beds crammed into a room meant for two, but it had been home for the past eight years since Aria's parents died.
Now it just felt like a prison.
"Sit," Maya commanded, guiding Aria to her bed. She disappeared into the tiny bathroom and returned with a damp cloth, gently wiping the tears and dirt from Aria's face. "Talk to me. What are you thinking?"
"I have to leave." Aria's voice was hollow, distant. The pain in her chest had dulled to a constant, throbbing ache. Her wolf had retreated deep inside, whimpering and broken.
"Leave? Aria, you can't just—"
"I can't stay here, Maya." Aria grabbed her friend's hands, desperation flooding through her. "I can't see him every day. I can't feel the emptiness where the bond should be. It'll kill me."
Maya's eyes filled with tears. "Where will you go? You have no money, no resources. The territories beyond Silvermoon are dangerous for a lone wolf."
"I don't care." And she didn't. Death might be preferable to the agony tearing through her soul. "I'll find another pack. Or I'll become a rogue. Anything is better than this."
A sound at the door made both women freeze. Aria's heart leaped—could it be Kade, coming to take it back, to say he'd made a mistake?
But when the door opened, it was Garrett who stood in the doorway. The Beta's usually friendly face was tight with anger and something that looked like shame.
"Aria," he said quietly. "May I speak with you?"
Maya stood, placing herself protectively between Aria and the Beta. "I think enough has been said tonight."
"Please." Garrett's voice was strained. "I'm not here to hurt her. I'm here because what happened tonight was wrong, and I need her to know that not everyone in this pack agrees with our Alpha's decision."
Aria touched Maya's arm. "It's okay."
Reluctantly, Maya stepped aside but didn't leave the room. Garrett entered, closing the door behind him. He was a large man, built like all pack warriors, but he moved carefully, as if afraid to frighten her further.
"I'm sorry," he said simply. "What Kade did... there's no excuse for it. Rejecting your fated mate is one of the gravest sins a wolf can commit."
"Did he send you?" Aria asked, hating how hopeful she sounded.
Garrett's expression softened with pity. "No. He's locked himself in his office and won't speak to anyone. I came on my own because you deserve better than this."
"Why did he do it?" The question burst from Aria before she could stop it. "Was I truly so unworthy? So weak?"
"You're not weak," Garrett said fiercely. "And you're not unworthy. Kade is... broken. Has been since Elena died. He blames himself for her death, for not being there to protect her. I think when the mate bond snapped into place with you, it terrified him. The thought of caring for someone again, of potentially losing another mate—it was too much."
"So he pushed me away first," Aria whispered, understanding dawning. It didn't make the pain less, but it shifted something inside her. This wasn't about her being inadequate. This was about his fear.
"He's a coward," Maya spat. "Fear doesn't excuse cruelty."
Garrett nodded slowly. "You're right. It doesn't. But I wanted you to know the truth, Aria. This isn't your fault. And if you choose to leave Silvermoon, I'll help you. I have contacts in other packs. I can make sure you arrive safely."
Fresh tears spilled down Aria's cheeks, but these were different—tears of gratitude rather than devastation. "Thank you. That means more than you know."
"There's one more thing." Garrett pulled an envelope from his jacket. "Pack law states that a rejected mate is entitled to compensation. Kade is too much of a mess to think clearly right now, but as Beta, I'm authorized to act in the pack's best interests. This should be enough to get you settled somewhere new."
Aria took the envelope with shaking hands. Inside was more money than she'd seen in her entire life. "I can't accept this."
"You can and you will. It's yours by right." Garrett moved toward the door, then paused. "For what it's worth, I think Kade will regret this. Maybe not today or tomorrow, but eventually. And when he does, it'll destroy him."
After Garrett left, Aria sat in silence, staring at the envelope. Maya settled beside her, wrapping an arm around her shoulders.
"What are you going to do?"
Aria took a deep breath, feeling something shift inside her. The pain was still there, sharp and terrible, but beneath it, a spark of something else was kindling. Anger. Determination. The will to survive.
"I'm going to leave," she said, her voice stronger now. "Tonight. Before I lose my nerve."
"Then I'm coming with you."
"Maya, no—"
"Don't argue." Maya's voice was firm. "You're my sister in everything but blood. Where you go, I go. Besides, this pack hasn't exactly treated me well either. I'm third-rank, barely above omega. We'll find somewhere better. Together."
Aria threw her arms around her friend, holding tight. "Thank you."
They spent the next hour packing their meager belongings. Aria owned so little that everything fit into a single worn backpack. She changed out of the borrowed dress and into sturdy jeans, boots, and a warm jacket. As she tied her hair back, she caught sight of herself in the cracked mirror.
Her amber eyes, usually soft and gentle, held a new hardness. The girl who had walked into that clearing tonight—naive, hopeful, believing her mate would solve all her problems—was gone. In her place was someone who would have to learn to save herself.
"Ready?" Maya asked, slinging her own pack over her shoulder.
Aria took one last look around the tiny cabin. Eight years she'd lived here. Eight years of servitude, of being treated as less than. She'd stayed because she had nowhere else to go, because she'd been waiting for something—someone—to change her life.
Well, her life had changed. Just not the way she'd hoped.
"I'm ready."
They slipped out into the night, keeping to the shadows. The pack house loomed in the distance, most of its windows dark. Aria's eyes were drawn to the third floor, where Kade's office was located. A single light burned there.
Was he staring out into the darkness? Could he feel the echo of their severed bond, the phantom pain of what they'd lost?
Stop it, her wolf Luna whispered weakly. He made his choice. Now we make ours.
Luna was right. Aria turned away from the pack house and didn't look back.
They made it to the territory border without incident. Most of the pack was still reeling from the dramatic rejection, distracted enough that two omega she-wolves slipping away went unnoticed. As they crossed the boundary line, Aria felt a strange sensation—like stepping out of a cage she hadn't fully realized she'd been in.
"Where to?" Maya asked.
Aria pulled out her phone, the cheap device Garrett had included with the money. She'd already researched their options. "Nightshade Pack territory is about fifty miles northeast. Their Alpha is known for being fair, for judging wolves by their character rather than their rank. If we can make it there and request sanctuary..."
"Then that's where we go."
The journey was grueling. They couldn't shift and run in wolf form—two rogues crossing multiple territories would be seen as a threat and likely killed on sight. Instead, they had to travel as humans, sticking to back roads and avoiding major pack routes.
They walked through the night and into the next day, stopping only for brief rests. Aria's body ached, but the physical pain was almost welcome. It distracted from the constant throb in her chest where the mate bond had been.
As they crossed into neutral territory—the no-man's-land between pack domains—the forest grew denser, more dangerous. This was where rogues lurked, wolves who'd been exiled or who'd left their packs and gone feral without the structure of pack bonds to keep them sane.
"Stay alert," Aria murmured, her wolf senses on high alert despite Luna's weakened state.
They'd barely gone another mile when the attack came.
Three rogues melted out of the shadows—two males and a female, their eyes wild and hungry. Their scent was wrong, tainted with the madness that came from too long without a pack.
"Well, well," the larger male said, his voice rough with disuse. "What do we have here? Two little she-wolves, all alone. You lost, sweethearts?"
Maya shifted slightly, positioning herself at Aria's back. "We're just passing through. We don't want trouble."
"Too bad." The female rogue circled them, her movements predatory. "Because trouble found you."
Aria's heart raced. They couldn't shift fast enough to fight three rogues. As omegas, they'd never been trained in combat. They were going to die here, in this forest, and no one would ever know what happened to them.
But then something unexpected happened. As the rogues closed in, as Aria's fear spiked and her wolf surged up in a desperate bid for survival, she felt heat bloom in her chest. Not the heat of the mate bond—that was gone—but something else. Something that had always been there, dormant and waiting.
Power.
It rushed through her veins like liquid fire. Her hands began to glow with a soft, silver light.
"What the—" The lead rogue stumbled back, eyes wide.
Aria didn't understand what was happening, but she acted on instinct. She thrust her hands forward, and the silver light exploded outward in a concussive wave. The rogues were thrown backward, slamming into trees with bone-cracking force.
For a moment, everyone froze in shock—including Aria.
Then the rogues scrambled to their feet and ran, disappearing into the forest with terrified howls.
"Aria," Maya breathed. "What was that?"
"I don't know." Aria stared at her hands, which still tingled with residual power. The glow had faded, but she could feel it inside her, pulsing like a second heartbeat. "I've never... I didn't know I could do that."
Maya grabbed her shoulders, eyes bright with excitement and fear. "You have power. Real power. Do you know what this means? You're not just an omega. You never were."
Aria's mind reeled. All her life, she'd been told she was weak, powerless, the lowest of the low. Even her own mate had rejected her for it. But what if they'd all been wrong? What if there was more to her than anyone—including herself—had ever realized?
"We need to keep moving," she said finally. "Before those rogues come back with reinforcements."
They practically ran the rest of the way to Nightshade territory. By the time they reached the border, both were exhausted, dirty, and running on pure adrenaline.
Two border guards intercepted them immediately—large wolves who shifted to human form, eyeing them with suspicion.
"State your business," the taller one demanded.
Aria stepped forward, summoning every ounce of courage she had left. "My name is Aria Blackwood. This is Maya Rivers. We've come from Silvermoon Pack, and we're requesting sanctuary with Nightshade Pack. We seek an audience with Alpha Dante."
The guards exchanged glances. "You're from Silvermoon? Kade Thornridge's pack?"
"Not anymore," Aria said firmly.
Something in her voice, or perhaps the obvious desperation in their appearance, made the guard's expression soften slightly. "Wait here."