Happy Rejection, My Alpha
I was the ghost in the packhouse.
I never wanted jewels or roses. Just one promise, one promise.
A cruise.
Alpha Shawn Ravenshade had sworn it once. “One day, when we’re free,” he whispered, “I’ll take you across the borders. Just us.”
That was before power. Before the throne. Before I became Luna in name, servant in truth.
On my forty-eighth birthday, there were no greetings. No howl.
After dinner, I asked, “Do you remember what you told me… on my eighteenth birthday?”
He didn’t look up. “Which part?”
“That we’d travel. That we’d run the world together. You said when the pack was strong and our boy grown, we’d go. Just us.”
He chuckled, sharp. “You think you deserve that? Look at you, skin and bone. The world isn’t kind to old wolves. You’re not like Marga.”
Her name cut deep. Marga… His brother’s widow. Golden. The pack’s jewel.
The twins, my grandsons, snickered, calling me a corpse. Even my son, Mark, sneered, “Wash my clothes, Ma. That’s what you’re good for.”
And Shawn, Alpha of this pack, let them.
That night, I opened my red suitcase. My scarred hands were steady.
I used to be someone. A Vale. Daughter of the strongest Alpha. A she-wolf born of fire and dominance, a Luna by birthright.
Now? I was just the ghost in the packhouse. But not for long. My wolf stirred in the dark, whispering a promise an Alpha like Shawn would soon regret. She was awake, and she was done bowing.
Because maybe… just maybe, walking away from this pack of ingrates would be the best birthday gift I could give myself.
--
Stella’s POV
I was never meant to be Luna.
I was meant to be the ghost of the pack house, the forgotten shadow trailing behind the Alpha whose voice commanded all, but whose mate was nothing more than a servant in her own home.
I never asked for jewels. Never asked for roses. All I ever wanted was one promise. One promise.
A cruise.
Shawn, Alpha of the Ravenshade Pack, had sworn it back when he still had a soul left in him. When his arms felt like home instead of chains, when the scent of his wolf was strong and true and not drowned in the metallic tang of blood and firearm powder.
“One day, when we’re rich,” he had once whispered into my hair, his Alpha aura warm and protective, “I’ll take you around the world, baby. Just us. The moon and the sea, no one else.”
But that was before the empire. Before money and power corrupted his wolf. Before his heart turned to steel. Before, I became his Luna only in name and his servant in practice.
And today, today was my forty-eighth birthday. No one greeted me. No candles, no howl to honor my years, not even the smallest offering at the hearth. The pack celebrated everyone else. Just never me.
Maybe, just maybe… I thought it could be mine tonight.
I brought it up after dinner. He was in his leather chair, running that old, oil-stained cloth over a wolf-bone blade, polishing it like a relic passed down from blood to blood. The flatscreen muttered some forgotten Western, but no one was watching. My wolf whimpered inside me, small, weary, still clinging to a shred of hope.
“Do you remember what you told me… on my eighteenth birthday?” I asked, my voice quiet but steady.
He didn’t look up. “Which part?”
“That we’d travel. See the world together. You said once the business settled and our boy was grown… we’d go. On a cruise. Just us.”
Alpha Shawn chuckled, low and cruel, the sound rolling out of him like a growl from a wolf who had long since forgotten compassion. “Are you out of your mind? Do you think you deserve a cruise? Look at you, Stella. You look like a bamboo stick about to snap. You think any captain would roll out a red carpet for you? No, they’d mistake you for some stray mutt dragging fleas on board.”
My chest tightened. “But today is—”
“Today’s what?” His gaze finally rose, and I saw it, those amber wolf eyes, dulled, heavy, older now. “You’re not young anymore. The world isn’t kind to women like you. You’re not like Marga.”
The name hit like claws against my throat. Marga. My sister-in-law. His brother’s widow. Slim, golden-haired, all sharp perfume and silk dresses, a she-wolf who always carried herself like she belonged on the cover of a magazine. She judged me with her eyes every time we shared a room, and Alpha Shawn never once defended me.
“She’s younger,” he continued, “travels for business, makes appearances for the pack, represents the family. She’s part of the image. But you… You’ve always been the one behind the scenes. That’s where you belong. The house. The family. You keep things running.”
Behind me, the twins snorted. My grandsons. Wolves with fangs are already sharper than their manners.
“Yeah, Ma, you look like a skeleton in a funeral dress,” Ken sneered, his young wolf aura buzzing with arrogance.
“Smells like old mop water and dead cats,” Kurt added, pinching his nose.
They burst into cruel laughter. No one stopped them. No one ever did.
Mark, my son, both my pride and my shame, leaned against the fridge, his scent sour with beer and frustration. “Hey, Ma. Wash my clothes, yeah? My wife’s busy. And bleach the white ones this time. Unless you wanna ruin another set.”
“I’m not your maid,” I murmured.
His head snapped up, wolf energy crackling in the air. “What was that?”
“I said I’m not—”
A half-empty soda can slammed at my feet. “Then what the heck are you? Because you sure as heck ain’t doing anything else in this house! You don’t bring money. You don’t bring status.”
My blood boiled, my wolf stirring weakly inside me, though too suppressed to rise.
“I raised you,” I hissed. “Fed you. Keep you alive when your fever nearly took you. I’ve been working since before you were born.”
“Well, maybe you should’ve worked on smelling better,” one of the twins piped up.
“Yeah,” Kurt sneered, “our classmates say you look like some rogue wandering in from the wilds. Ugly enough to scare a whole pack.”
They laughed, voices ringing like knives in the hollow of my chest.
Alpha Shawn only reached for his wolf-bone blade,inspecting it as if it were worth more than me. “We’ve got money, Stella. Plenty of it. But I’m not wasting it on useless help. You’re here. You’ve got two hands. Why would I hire a maid when you’re already chained to this house? Besides, I never liked more omega wolves running around the pack house.”
The woman of the house. That’s what he called me. But I owned nothing. Not a car. Not a card. Every cent I needed, I had to beg for. And if I dared to ask for more, he demanded receipts, penny by penny, like I was some rogue to be monitored.
That night, when the noise died down and the wolves retreated to their rooms, I pulled out the old red suitcase from the closet. The one Alpha Shawn had bought me in Australia before our wedding, back when he had sworn to be my Alpha, my mate, my world.
I stared down at my hands. They no longer looked like mine. Lined. Broken. Calloused from work that was never acknowledged.
I used to be someone. A Vale. Daughter of the strongest Alpha. A she-wolf born of fire and dominance, a Luna by birthright. I gave it all up for love, turned my back on my bloodline, thinking an Alpha like Shawn Ravenshade’s bond was enough.
And now?
Now I was nothing. A ghost in a house of wolves.
No kingdom. No crown. No mate is worthy of the bond we once swore under the full moon.
Maybe… Just maybe, leaving this family, leaving this pack of ingrates, was the best gift I could give myself on my birthday.
Because I was done being a ghost.
And somewhere deep inside, my wolf stirred, whispering that the night was still mine.
Chapter 2
The next morning, the news came to me the way most truths did, sloppily, thoughtlessly, thrown like scraps.
Ken, crumbs clinging to his shirt, spoke with his mouth full of crisps. “Marga rented the whole top floor of the Starview Hotel! Big feast. Dad says it’s for us. A pack celebration.”
I paused mid-mop, the wooden handle slick in my palms. “Us?”
Kurt’s smirk was sharp enough to cut. “Not you, Ma. Grandpa said you’re… not up for it. I mean, look at you.”
Not up for it. As though I were sick. As though I were fading. As though I were a wolf too weak to even matter.
By sunset, the house had shed its noise. Alpha Shawn had shaved, combed back his silver-streaked hair, and doused himself in that rare cologne he reserved only for funerals or blood-oath gatherings. He looked every inch the Alpha he once was, broad-shouldered, commanding, untouchable. He adjusted the twins’ collars with the care of a proud elder while Mark smoothed the lapels of his best suit.
“Remember,” Alpha Shawn told them, his voice threaded with authority, “Marga does this because she loves us. She is family.”
The boys grinned, their voices cruel in unison. “That’s why we love Marga more than Grandma Stella.”
No goodbye. No promise to bring me back a plate or even a whisper of acknowledgment. Only the door shut with the finality of a coffin lid.
Silence settled in the pack house. Not the peace of quiet, but the hollow echo of being forgotten. It rang louder than any slap.
I stood in the hallway in my worn slippers, clutching a basket of unfolded clothes. My stomach growled, but I hadn’t cooked. Why feed a ghost?
Out of defiance, I switched on the television.
There they were, projected larger than life on the evening broadcast. The Starview Hotel sparkled with crystal chandeliers, golden candelabras, and the low hum of violin strings. Marga glowed in her white fur shawl, Alpha Shawn beside her, my son and his mate smiling with the polish of politicians. The twins, Ken and Kurt, raised soda glasses in tuxedos tailored too fine for their spoiled shoulders.
The reporter announced it with reverence: “A private Ravenshade Pack gathering- Marga Hartclaw’s homecoming. The family behind one of the most powerful shipping empires in the country.”
But I was not in the shot. Not in the story. Not in whispers.
They toasted with champagne. I sipped stale coffee.
They laughed under gilded chandeliers while I wiped a smudge from the glass door.
Then came the cut deeper than any blade, Marga leaning toward Alpha Shawn, whispering something that sent both of them into laughter. My son joined in. I didn’t hear her words, but my wolf bristled. I felt them. And I knew they were about me. The bond between wolf and insult does not need translation; it burns through the bones.
**
Hours later, well after midnight, the front door open. My heart leapt, foolishly, thinking perhaps my son, Mark, had returned to me. But no. It was them.
Marga entered like she owned the ground she walked on, her heels striking the marble with the confidence of a queen. Alpha Shawn leaned heavily against her, drunk and pliant, his tie undone, his lips still stained with wine.
“Oh, Luna Stella,” she cooed, smirking when she found me rooted at the staircase like a phantom. “Didn’t think you’d still be awake.”
She steered him forward, arm entwined with his as if she were his Luna instead of me. “Mark and the boys are staying at my penthouse. Too tired to come back. But Alpha Shawn…” She patted his chest possessively. “Well, he can’t rest in strange beds. Poor Alpha.”
I recognized the lie immediately. She was not helping him home; she was parading my replacement in front of me.
From her bag, she pulled a container and tossed it carelessly at my feet. “Leftovers,” she said, her tone mocking sweet. “Go eat, Luna. You look like you weigh thirty kilos at best. A wolf that frail wouldn’t last a hunt.”
I didn’t move. My fists clenched, nails biting into my palms. My wolf snarled low inside me, desperate to lash out.
“I’ll put Alpha to bed,” Marga added, a sly curl on her lips. “I know you two don’t share a room anymore. He told me your side of the bed reeks of…”
“She looked me over from head to toe, as if weighing my every flaw and strength, measuring what I was truly capable of, then she continued.
“...disappointment.”
I stepped forward once. Just once. My hand twitched with the urge to claw her across the face. It would have felt good, almost holy. But I didn’t. Because the true knife came from him.
Drunk, his eyes glazed, Shawn smiled at her like she was the only star in the sky. “Marga’s so pretty,” he slurred. “Smells like peaches. My luna, Stella, just smells like dishwater and old arguments.”
They ascended the stairs together, his weight resting against her, her laughter echoing down the hall like a song of conquest.
And in that moment, I realized: they did not kill me.
They simply replaced me.
**
I waited. Not because I still cared, but because I needed to know.
One o’clock. Two o’clock. Still no sign of her leaving. The lights above remained lit, the silence heavy but alive.
Then came the sound. A thump. Then another. Steady. Rhythmic. Intimate.
My blood turned to ice. My wolf growled inside me, dragging me forward like prey tethered to a predator.
I climbed the stairs, each step heavy as stone, each breath sharp as broken glass. The hallway stretched like a grave path, leading me to the bedroom, the Alpha’s room that once had been ours. The door was ajar. I saw.
Marga, bare and shameless, straddling Shawn. Her red painted nails raked his chest like talons. Her head tossed back, curls wild, as she rode him with the hunger of a she-wolf in heat.
And Shawn, my mate, my Alpha of three decades, grunted beneath her, his hands gripping her like she was his salvation.
My knees threatened to give. My throat burned dry.
Her voice cut through me, a howl of mockery. “Alpha Shawn, ruin me. Fill me the way she never could.”
And Shawn, panting like a beast, exclaimed, “You’re perfect, Marga. You’ve always been the one.”
I fled, my wolf clawing inside me, screaming to tear them apart, but my body faltered. I stumbled into the downstairs bathroom, retching until my ribs cramped, the sound of their betrayal still pounding in my ears.
It was not about intimacy. It was about erasure. About being bared of my place in the pack, my mate bond rotting while another woman wore my crown.
They didn’t just want to humiliate me. They wanted to watch me wither.
But a she-wolf who survives this doesn’t stay curled on the floor. She waits. She remembers. And she learns to haunt quietly,
until the night she finally lets her wolf break free.
Chapter 3
I woke before the birds, not because of habit or alarm, but because the moon, waning but still strong, dragged me from sleep as it always did. No tears. No ache. Just the ragged pull of breath, shallow and sharp, as though the wolf inside me had grown weary of caging herself in flesh too fragile, too human. My skin prickled, veins humming with the restless thrum of something ancient. I washed my face with a damp cloth, tied my hair back, and marked my mouth with balm, not for beauty, but as a mask, a camouflage. Alive enough to play the part of the weak, docile Luna, they believed me to be. But beneath the surface, my wolf prowled, teeth bared in silence. And then I reached under the bed, where my true life waited inside a battered red suitcase, its scent carrying the promise of blood, freedom, and the moon’s call.
I slid it out and unzipped it an inch. Cash, collected from quiet sales, but never just empanadas or breads, as they thought. Men paid extra because their instincts, however dulled, whispered that something in me was different. A passport, bearing my maiden name, Stella Vale… An identity untainted by Alpha Shawn. And a photograph of me at eighteen, smiling with teeth too sharp for innocence, a wildness burning in my eyes before marriage dulled it into obedience. I shut it again before my pulse betrayed me.
The kitchen was dark, the air heavy with lemon cleaner and silence. I boiled water, cracked eggs, and sliced bread. My hands moved on their own, the motions so ingrained they felt more like ritual than routine. Stir. Season. Flip. Feed. That was when I heard them, bare feet padding across the hardwood floor. Her laugh first, honey-sweet and venomous. Then his voice, low and indulgent, as if he had forgotten entirely that this was still my house.
Marga drifted into the kitchen in one of Shawn’s shirts, unbuttoned halfway, her hair messy from the kind of sleep that smells of skin. Shawn followed, freshly showered, reeking of soap and betrayal. Together they looked like honeymooners, radiant with appetite.
“Coffee, Stella,” she said casually, like I was the maid. “Make his strong, mine with cream. You know how he likes it.”
I placed the mugs in front of them without a word. Shawn sipped and smirked, not even sparing me a glance. “Bacon and omelet, Stella. Marga loves it the way I do. None of that salty mess you used to make. She’s watching her figure, not that it shows, huh?”
Marga leaned against my counter as though it were hers already, eyes bright with victory. “Not everyone wants to look like a stick wrapped in sadness, darling.”
I smiled then, not in surrender, but because baring one’s teeth was the oldest language of all. They didn’t notice. They had never truly seen me.
I cracked more eggs, let the oil sizzle, and pretended not to hear them recall the gala, the penthouse, the sheets that smelled of champagne. They spoke of me as though I were an afterthought, a shadow that clung too long. They did not know that shadows can bite.
The front door burst open then, laughter filling the house. My son Mark and his mate, Lydia, swept in with the twins. Lydia flaunted her new purse, her earrings, all “gifts” from Marga, while Mark poured wine before the clock had struck nine. The boys dragged in a massive framed photograph, the family portrait from the Starview Hotel gala. Marga at the center, with Alpha Shawn’s hand on her body, my children orbiting her like planets around a brighter sun.
I was not in the picture.
“Look, Grandma,” Kurt said, smirking like a wolf pup that thought itself grown. “Don’t we look like a real family here?”
“Too bad you weren’t there,” Ken added, grinning with all his teeth. “Oh, right! You were left behind. Guess you looked too much like the maid.”
The room howled with laughter, my blood with it, though for different reasons. Alpha Shawn laughed. My son laughed. Even Lydia wiped tears from her eyes. Marga sipped her coffee and said lightly, “Don’t worry, Stella. I’ll leave some of my old dresses in your closet. Maybe some perfume too. They’re a little snug on me now, but you might squeeze in.”
Shawn chuckled without looking at me. “You can dress a corpse in Versace, it’s still a corpse. And she smells like disappointment.”
Their laughter was deafening. But I only gathered their plates, washed them one by one, and stared out the window at the lemon tree blooming in the neighbor’s yard. They thought they had finished me. They thought this was the end. But they had never seen what I looked like when I stopped begging to belong.
**
That night, when the wine was drained and the house fell silent, I stood alone in the living room before the portrait. Hung high like a false idol, it glared down at me, Marga in the center where I should have been, Alpha Shawn beaming at her like she was the crown of his life.
I didn’t hear him approach until his voice cut through the dark. “What, jealous again?” His tone was jagged with contempt. “You stare at that thing like it’s gonna cry for you.”
I said nothing. Words were wasted on men who had already chosen blindness.
He sneered.“Come on, Stella. If I could turn back time, I would’ve left your sorry wolf to rot in the countryside where I dragged you from. Should’ve claimed Marga instead, at least she knows how to run a pack, how to keep her muzzle shut, how to stand beside an Alpha without stumbling.”
Still, I stayed quiet. Silence is patience. Silence is hunting.
His anger flared at my stillness. He kicked me hard in the knee, the pain exploding like fire under my skin, but instead of crumpling, I felt something uncoiled. He turned away, dismissing me as broken. “Enough drama. You’re too old for this matter.”
Then his phone rang, and with it, the transformation in his voice. “Hey, baby,” he said, warm and young again, as if I were already rotting in the ground. “Yeah, I’m packing. Can’t wait to see you in that bikini. Just you and me. Open sea.”
I stayed on the floor, not out of weakness but because the tremor running through me was no wound, it was awakening. A surge older than flesh, sharper than bone, a pulse buried beneath years of forced obedience. My nails carved crescents into my palms, my breath quickened, ragged, as though my lungs were too small for the beast pushing inside me. My teeth throbbed with an ache that was not human, begging to lengthen, to tear.
They thought they had broken me, erased me. But the moon was rising, and the blood in my veins had never forgotten the wolf.
They're wrong.
Chapter 4
I didn’t follow Alpha Shawn Raveshade.
He walked away still laughing, his voice pitched high and stupid, whispering about bikinis and champagne into Marga Hartclaw’s ear as though I were already gone, as though I were nothing more than the rug he wiped his shoes on.
He carried himself like a man renewed, shoulders squared and steps steady, while I remained on the floor, knees aching, pride cracked, and soul halfway gone, as if the very earth had claimed me while he walked away untouched.
I rose, slow and deliberate, my joints creaking like old doors. My palm smeared across the tile, gathering dirt, dust, and what little dignity still clung to me. I moved toward the bathroom and shut the door softly, careful not to wake the house. The mirror caught me in its unforgiving light: red eyes, swollen cheeks, hair unpinned and wild. I looked like someone who had tried to cry underwater and failed, someone who had already drowned but kept moving out of sheer habit.
There was no coffin, no candles guttering in the dark, no veils drawn or prayers whispered to the night. Yet I was in mourning. Not for him, not even for the ruin of what we had been, but for myself, for the girl I once was. The wild flame that laughed too loud, that clawed too deep, before I smothered her fire for his comfort, before I clipped my own wings and dulled my claws just to fit inside his grasp. I grieved for every part of me buried beneath quiet sacrifices, for each version of myself that withered when I chose him over me, until all that remained was a shadow, a husk, haunting the bones of the wolf I used to be.
He passed by the door then, his laughter low, edged with cruelty. His phone was glued to his ear, but he paused long enough to bark, “Pack my things. Business-leisure trip. We leave tomorrow.”
No glance. No “please.” Just command. Just ownership.
I nodded, though he wasn’t looking, and when the house swallowed his voice, I dried my hands on the crooked towel and went to his room like a servant obeying her master. His closet was chaos, suits collapsing into long-sleeved shirts, shoes buried beneath dirty socks. A man with the habits of a spoiled pup, yet he believed himself king.
I began folding his shirts, smoothing his linen with a precision I no longer felt. Then, when my elbow brushed the side table, a folder slipped and fell to the floor.
Inside were cruise tickets.
I read the names once. Then twice. Each letter sharpened until my vision blurred. Shawn Ravenshade. Margarette Hartclaw. Mark. Lydia. Ken. Kurt.
Not me.
Not even as an afterthought.
The cruise I had carried in my chest for thirty years, the promise whispered into my hair when I was eighteen, had been gifted to Marga as casually as one gifts a bone to a favored dog.
Marga’s birthday. He remembered hers. He never remembered mine.
I folded the tickets with care, as if paper could bleed. Then I packed his suitcase anyway. Shoes polished. Shirts ironed. Cufflinks shining like silver teeth. Mark came in without knocking, beer in hand, and told me to pack for him, too. And for the twins. Lydia’s perfume. Snacks labeled with love. They dumped their burdens on me, one after another, and left without thanks.
I obeyed. Because obedience had been hammered into me for decades, the way one breaks a wolf until it forgets the taste of its own blood.
Later, alone in my room, trembling, I let my mind wander back. To eighteen. To Alpha Shawn, when his touch was a promise, not a bruise. When his eyes had not yet hardened into steel.
He had sworn to guard me always. To build a future no pack or prophecy could tear apart. His words burned brighter than the blood-moon itself, and like a fool beneath its spell, I believed them. I believed him even when it meant defying my father, Alpha of the Vale, whose wrath was older than the mountains and whose wolf carried the bite of centuries.
“You are no daughter of mine,” he had snarled, his voice shaking the stones, his beast pacing beneath his skin. The ground itself seemed to bow beneath his fury. “Take that boy if you wish, but know this: your bond to me is severed. Crawl back to my gates, and I will rip your throat myself before I ever call you kin again.”
I had stood in the shadow of his dominance, my own wolf trembling but unbroken, and whispered through the storm of his rage: “I love him.”
“You love a shadow,” he spat, eyes gleaming with silver fire. “And shadows always devour their own.”
Thirty winters have passed, and his curse has come to gnash its teeth in truth. The boy I once loved, the mate I bled for, has withered into a man who can snarl me down, shove me aside, and never look back. A man who books moonlit voyages with another female while leaving me to scrub his boots as if I were nothing but packless prey.
And I finally understood. My father hadn’t banished me out of cruelty. He had recognized the rot long before I did.
I stared at the landline. Old. Forgotten. But it still worked. My hand moved before I could stop it. I dialed the number I had carried like a scar for three decades.
It rang. Once. Twice. A third time.
And then…
“Hello?”
His voice. Older now. Roughened with years. But still him. Still the Alpha of the Vale. Still my father.
My throat closed. I held the receiver like it was the last rope keeping me from drowning. Tears fell, quiet and relentless.
“…Father,” I whispered, the word splintering from me like bone. “…It’s me. Stella...”
Chapter 5
The line was still warm in my hand when I heard my father’s voice. His tone carried the weariness of a wolf who had howled through a thousand lonely nights, the kind of exhaustion that seeps into marrow and lingers like frost. Yet beneath it, there was a calm I hadn’t heard in decades.
“Come home, Stella,” he said, his voice roughened by age and silence. “I’ve been waiting for you for twenty years.”
Twenty years. Two decades of empty seasons. Of full moons where I stood alone, my wolf restless but shackled. Of battles I had fought in silence, my pride too sharp, my heart too wounded, my spirit too broken to return.
My knees threatened to give way, but instead of collapsing, I sank to the edge of the bed and let the tears fall freely, hot rivers cutting through years of restraint.
“I’m coming home,” I whispered, my voice no louder than a ghost brushing across the wind.
There was no further word from him, only the sound of his breathing, steady, real, grounding me like the heartbeat of a pack I had long abandoned. I hung up before I could weaken, before I could whisper a goodbye I wasn’t ready to say.
The door creaked open, and that was when Alpha Shawn appeared, sliding into the room like a shadow that had always belonged there. His scent hit me before his words, bitter wine laced with deceit, the musk of a wolf who had long since traded loyalty for ambition. His eyes locked on mine, cold and calculating, nostrils flaring like he could already scent the truth clinging to my skin.
“I know you saw the tickets,” he said, his smirk slicing like a blade across my already raw nerves. Six only. Me. Marga. Mark. Lydia. The twins. That’s it.”
My throat tightened, but I forced myself to swallow past it.
“You were never included,” he continued, his voice dropping into that dead calm, sharp as winter ice cracking beneath one’s feet.
Then came the mockery, his promise wrapped in poison. “When I get back, I’ll buy you a diamond set. Take you to Hawaii.” As if trinkets and faraway shores could mask the truth. As if he thought I could be distracted like some desperate she-wolf begging for scraps of affection.
He turned his back on me without another glance, leaving behind nothing but the faint musk of arrogance and the slam of the door, a sound that felt more coffin than closure.
The next morning, I moved like a ghost through the kitchen, preparing omelets, bacon, and toast. The scent rose sharply in the air, almost mocking me with the illusion of family. From the living room, the twins’ laughter rang out, high and wild, like wolf pups on a first hunt.
“This cruise is the biggest ever!” Mark howled. “We’re going to have so much fun!”
Their voices were innocent, bright, but cruel in their ignorance.
Marga soon arrived, her arms laden with takeout bags. She dropped them onto the counter with a deliberate thud, her smirk flashing like a wolf baring her teeth.
“I don’t like Stella’s cooking,” she announced, loud enough to echo. “It’s like chewing on cardboard, or swallowing salt straight from the shaker. Bland. Over-salted. Completely uninspired. Just like her.”
Her words hit like claws raking across my ribs. The twins giggled. Lydia leaned in, her grin sharp.
“Honestly, Mum, it’s sad. You cook like you’re punishing us. Like every burnt edge is your little rebellion. But we see right through you.”
Invisible, I faded into the background, a shadow in my own home. Their words bared me down until only bones remained. Still, I clenched my jaw, swallowing the bitterness before it could burn my mouth.
Then Alpha Shawn’s voice cut through the room like a whip.
“Where’s my wallet?” His eyes snapped to me instantly, burning with suspicion. “You’re hiding it, aren’t you? Always hiding. Hiding from respect, hiding from responsibility. Useless. Jealous. Nothing.”
I shook my head, but he didn’t wait for the truth. His hand lashed out across my face with a crack that echoed like a breaking bone. My head snapped sideways, blood flooding my nose. The world spun. My wolf stirred within me, howling in pain, clawing at the cage I had built around her all these years.
I crumpled to the cold tiles, the scent of iron filling the air.
Marga’s voice was sweet poison. “Oh, Alpha,” she purred, pulling his wallet from her bag with a smirk only I saw. “I must have taken it by mistake. How clumsy of me.”
The trap was perfect. The humiliation is complete.
They gathered their bags, voices light and cruel.
“Don’t worry, Mum, I’ll bring you a fridge magnet,” Mark said.
“And I’ll bring you a keychain,” Lydia added.
“We’ll bring you dirty laundry, Grandma,” the twins howled, their laughter cutting deeper than claws.
The slam of the door left behind a silence so sharp it felt alive.
I didn’t cry. I didn’t scream. I simply rose, went to my room, dropped to my knees, and dragged out the old bag I had hidden long ago. My hands moved steadily, deliberately. I packed only what mattered. The rest could rot with them.
At the airport, my phone buzzed.
Guard the house while we’re gone. We’ll be out for a week. Don’t mess anything up.
Another message followed instantly.
Sorry, I slapped you. But you provoked me. If only you weren’t always so jealous. You ruin things for yourself.
I stared at the words, and something inside me, something wild, something ancient, finally snapped free. I blocked his number, deleted the thread, and slid the phone into my pocket.
The smile that curved my lips wasn’t joy. It was the wolf inside me, stirring for the first time in years, baring her teeth in savage clarity.
I was done guarding a house that had never been a home.
I was going back to the only place that ever was.
Back to the pack. Back to blood. Back to the forest where my name still lived.
Home.