Chapter 3
Alpha’s Thrice Rejected Mate
Chapter 3
I dropped the knife, and it hit the d*rty dishwater with a final plunk.
Only then did Hale let go. âHonestly, Monroe. I didnât take you for a coward, like your father. Stabbing my father in the back after all those years of serving him loyally, Stabbing him in the back!â
I took a step back and didnât answer. Iâd heard this story many times before, but Hale seemed determined to tell it again.
âYour father let Lyle slither into our packlands with an army that decimated us! Do you even remember how many lives were lost beating him back?!â Hale took a step forward,
I slightly turned my head, averting my eyes from meeting his.
âAnd now you want me to feel sorry for you? Watch you kill yourself?!â Hale shook his head. âYou are unbelievable. Werenât we friends once? How could you do this?! Are you determined to make me suffer as your father made this pack suffer!! Donât you think HE made me suffer enough?t*
1
Even till now, as long as I shut my eyes, the world dropped dead, only the bloody moon that night up in the scarlet sky. Cries. Screams, Shouts. Blood Blood. Blood.
Under the bloody moon, Iâd sworn that day. No matter what it would take, I would sacrifice all I had to take revenge, for those dead souls who couldnât rest in peace, for their families who were still drowning in sorrow,
They must pay. I was on Haleâs side. The culprits who caused all these tragedies must pay.
Butâ¦â¦ The first time today, I looked into Haleâs eyes. My father had been beaten back along with Lyleâs pack. He was with
them now.
*Papa, please tell me. Were you really involved?â
âf**kâ Hale stepped away from me.
I didnât speak, hoping he would be the one who couldnât tolerate the dead silence first, and leave me alone.
Honestly, the current position was a bit weird. Alpha Hale was known for his taciturnity and dominant, and itâs true that he seldom made mistakes. Itâs been a long time to see him acting in a such emotional way like today.
âSo, this is your answer.â Hale laughed while gritting his teeth, âYouâre not gonna say a word.â
âWhat do you expect me to say, Alpha?â I slowly lifted my eyelids. âI will say whatever you want me say.â
However, what he said next immediately tore off my mask of pretended indifference.
Hale looked deeply at me and announced. âIâm exiling you after the rejection ceremony. Iâm not going to deal with this, Whatever you do after the ceremony makes no difference to the, or this pack.â
My heart pounded. Exile? That would completely ruin my plans. It hadnât even occurred to me that he might exile mel Children of traitors were meant to be warriors in the pack and die protecting it. Iâm sure that Hale knew this. Exile was unheard of.
âWith all due respect, Alpha, I would rather not be exiled,â I remained calm, âIt is my duty to protect the pack. I have no intention of abandoning that duty.â
Hale stepped closer, I could feel his gaze from above.
Next second, he lifted my chin, forcing me to look at him.
Want
âYou want to kill yourself in the pack conflict.â
An assertive sentence, but not a question. He already had a conclusion.
All these years, I couldnât quite believe the man whose gentle face still lingered in my mind had really betrayed Haleâs father, the former Alpha. I was desperate to find answers to the mystery that remainedânamely, why? Why had he done what he did? If I was exiled from the pack, I would never find out.
â1 prefer not to be exiled.â I repeated
Then Hale had both my wrists, and pulled me close to his chest. We stared at each other, breathing each otherâs air. âSo this is your plan? Kill yourself before the ceremony, on the battlefield or by the blade, or maybe off the edge of a cliff, huh? You want to destroy my wolf, is that it?â
âPain?â I furrowed, trying to free my wrist.
âDonât you know, as my mate, every time you try to hurt yourself, you cause me pain?!â
I couldnât help but blink my eyes.
There was no logic in what Hale just said, now he looked like a kid losing temper just because he didnât get what he wanted. âIâm sorry for your pain,â I apologized no matter if his words were true, deciding to end this conversation by myself.
âBut it wonât be a problem much longer. I wonât be a problem much longer. In two weeks, there is the rejection ceremony, and our bond will be severed. Then you will care nothing for me, and I can.. Alpha, Iâm not suicidal. Donât you want me to disappear from your life? Isnât that what the rejection ceremony is all about?â
*Disappear from my life?â Hale repeated, somehow, I thought his eyes darkened though I didnât know why.
âYes, disappear from your life,â I reiterated impatiently. âYou wonât need to worry about me. Honestly, Alpha, if you are so concerned about me, why reject me at all?â I gestured to the third scar on my faceâHIS scar.
He didnât say anything, but the silence was already an answer.
âExactly,â I said. âIâm the daughter of a traitor. I couldnât possibly be your Luna. I will always be unforgiven for what my father did. It is my fate to die for this pack, and it is your fate to lead it. Thatâs where we are.â
Hale looked to be on the edge of another tirade, so I tilted my head to the side and pretended to hear something,
âMy leader is calling. I need to go, Alpha.â I stepped back from him, gently extricating my wrists from his grasp
I didnât understand his reaction. I didnât understand my reaction. I couldnât believe Iâd spoken so forcefully to the Alpha of our pack, as though we were children and friends again. As though I had some right to speak to him.
Iâd even dared to lie to him.
But when my hand was on the doorknob, I suddenly heard Haleâs voice again.
âYou made your decision, and I will make mine.â He said.
âIâve got to go,â I repeated, and this time, I didnât look back.
1 saw Giselle in the hall outside the kitchen, holding the back of her head. Her eyes flashed at me, but for once she didnât say a thing. I wondered what had happened, but was still trying to make my escape, so I didnât stop to ask.
Not that I would have, anyway. I was a traitorâs daughter and was not allowed of speaking to her first. Then there was also the fact that Iâd long since stopped caring about her wellbeing
I made my way back to my small quarters in the warriorsâ section of the dormitoryâoften referred to as the traitorsâ cave. It was dingy, not wellâmaintained, cold, and generally uncomfortable. A perfect place to put all the pack traitors.
My roommate was asleep. That seemed like a good idea to me. Iâd missed my usual patrol by half an hour, speaking withi Hale, and would be punished just as harshly whether I arrived late or not at all.
I closed my eyes, glad, at least, that Iâd made my point clear. Any punishment was worth severing ties with Hale. I had things I needed to accomplish in this pack before I could even consider any âexile.â Haleâs hovering attention just made the task more difficult.
He wouldnât come to me again, that I knew: After feeling the mate bond flare between us, he would know just as well as I did. how dangerous his obsession was. I wouldnât see him again until the rejection ceremony.
Now the only question left was whether or not Iâd convinced him to let me stay.
With that lingering worry in my head, I closed my weary eyes.
Iâd sleep on it. My father had always said, if you couldnât find a solution right away, you should sleep on it
Heâd also said you should sleep on it before starting an argument. I hadnât done that very well today. I supposed,
But at least this was the end of Mason Hale interfering in my life.
I didnât know how long I slept. Our door banged open, and my roommate and I both jolted upright.
Mason Hale was standing in my doorway.
What did he want?
âKora Monroe, get out of bed and come with me,â the butler standing next to him ordered.
With an obedient nod, I slid off of my cot and pulled on my boots.
I walked over to them, head bowed. âWhat is your will, Alpha?â
Hale didnât answer. The butler did instead. âStay out. Youâre leaving.â
I frowned slightly. He couldnât mean to exile me already. âAlpha, the ceremony will be next weekâ¦â
âMove,â the butler said.
w bed.
I kept my eyes on the floor as I went to our twoâdrawer dresser and emptied my things out onto my
As I began packing it, I noted the other maids who had arrived with the butler looking repulsed by me.
>My eyes flicked up of their own accord to Hale, and our gazes met. There was definitely a burning something⦠in Haleâs
eyes. It created a funny feeling in my stomach I didnât want to examine.
But when I was going to turn back to my suitcase, a manâs hand stopped me.
I turned around.
And met Haleâs cold eyes..