"For the Pack... you and Kyla... you must have an heir."
The words hit me like a physical blow. My own breath hitched. I pressed myself back against the cold wall, my fingers twisting the worn fabric of my sleeve.
Duke's voice was low, a rumble of stone. "I promise you, Grandmother."
No hesitation. No emotion. Just a simple, brutal transaction.
I hadn't meant to eavesdrop. The pack's head butler, Alfred, had told me the Alpha was waiting for me. Waiting for me, it turned out, to be sentenced.
A long, piercing tone cut through the air. The steady beeping stopped.
Silence.
I watched as Duke leaned down, his movements precise and controlled, and gently closed Eleanor's eyes. He stood there for a moment, a statue carved from grief and duty.
Then he turned and walked out of the room.
His ice-blue eyes swept over me, through me, as if I were nothing more than a piece of furniture in the hallway. He didn't speak. He didn't even acknowledge my presence. He just kept walking, his broad shoulders disappearing down the corridor to begin the arrangements.
A chill, sharp and unforgiving, sank into my bones. It wasn't just sorrow for the woman who had, in her own distant way, been kind to me. It was the chilling humiliation of being nothing but a vessel. A means to an end.
Three days later, the sky wept over the Blake estate. A fine, miserable drizzle coated everything in a slick, gray sheen.
I stood at the edge of the crowd gathered in the family cemetery, a ghost at a funeral. The black dress the housekeeper had found for me was ill-fitting, a little too tight in the shoulders, a little too loose in the waist. It was another reminder that I didn't belong.
My eyes were fixed on Duke. He stood at the forefront, straight and unyielding as an ancient oak. Beside him, so close their arms brushed, was Jossie Cordova.
His Beta. His assistant. His shadow.
She was the picture of perfect grief, dressed in a tailored black suit that screamed quiet expense. Her expression was somber, her posture elegant. She murmured condolences to the arriving guests, handed Duke a handkerchief at just the right moment, and moved with an effortless grace that declared, I am the lady of this house.
Whispers slithered through the crowd. Eyes darted between Duke and Jossie, filled with an understanding that excluded me completely. For four years, I had been his Mate, bound to him by a fate I never asked for. But because I was wolfless, unable to complete the bond, I was invisible. A dirty little secret.
Jossie, on the other hand, was everything a future Luna should be. A powerful Beta wolf, from a good family, competent and always at his side.
My gaze snagged on the delicate diamond necklace sparkling at her throat. It seemed to mock the somber occasion, a small, defiant flash of possession.
An elderly Alpha from a neighboring pack, a man whose name I vaguely knew, made his way toward the front. His face was etched with deep lines of sympathy. He walked right past me, his eyes scanning the main group.
He went straight to Jossie.
He took her hand, his voice heavy with sorrow. "Please accept my condolences, future Luna. Eleanor would have been so proud of you and Duke."
The world stopped. The rain, the whispers, the beat of my own heart-it all just ceased.
A faint, becoming blush touched Jossie's cheeks. She dipped her head humbly, a flicker of triumph in her eyes so quick I might have imagined it. "Thank you for your kindness, sir."
She didn't correct him.
Of course, she didn't.
It was a slap. A loud, ringing slap that echoed in the sudden silence of my soul. I saw Duke's mother, Audrey, give Jossie a small, approving nod. His sister, Bella, just rolled her eyes, bored with the whole charade.
Blood rushed to my head, hot and furious, before draining away, leaving me cold and numb.
Four years. Four years of being a phantom in this house, in this pack. Four years of being the unnamed, unacknowledged Mate.
This public erasure was the final cut.
I wouldn't cry. I wouldn't scream. I wouldn't give them the satisfaction.
I took a deep, shuddering breath, forcing down the sickness rising in my throat.
Then I turned and walked away.
My heels sank into the wet grass, the sound swallowed by the rain. My movements were quiet, but my resolve was a deafening roar in my own ears.
Duke's head turned slightly. I felt his gaze on my back, a fleeting, dismissive touch. But then another guest claimed his attention, and I was forgotten once more.
I found a deserted corner of the cemetery, hidden by a weeping willow. The rain plastered my hair to my face, cold drops tracing paths down my cheeks like tears I refused to shed.
I pulled my phone from my small clutch. The screen was slick with water.
My fingers trembled, but my purpose was steel. I scrolled through my contacts, past the names of pack members who treated me with disdain, past the name I had saved as 'Alpha Duke Blake'.
I found the number I was looking for. A legal consultant specializing in Pack Law. A number I had saved a year ago, in a moment of quiet desperation, and never thought I'd have the courage to use.
I pressed the call button.
The rain pattered against the leaves, a mournful drumbeat.
"Henderson speaking."
My voice, when it came, was clear and steady, devoid of the storm raging inside me.
"Mr. Henderson, it's Kyla Dalton."
I paused, taking one last, final breath of my old life.
"I need to formally reject my Mate."