I was a wolfless Omega-a broken, shifting-less anomaly in a world ruled by bloodlines and teeth. Alec was the blood-born Alpha of the Blackwood Pack, the powerful CEO of the conglomerate, and, unofficially, the destined mate I was supposed to bind with next month.
Now, standing in the quiet corridor, my sharp ears picked up the low, serious murmur of voices from behind the cracked door.
I recognized them instantly: Alec, and his loyal Beta, Ethan Hayes, the second-in-command of our pack.
"Are the preparations for the bonding ceremony finalized?" Ethan's voice was low, laced with a tension I couldn't place.
A sharp, impatient sound-a scoff from Alec-cut him off.
"It's a formality, Ethan. A show for the elders to secure the final votes for the merger. You know that."
The cardboard tray in my hands suddenly felt flimsy. Hot coffee sloshed over the rim, scalding my skin, but I barely felt it.
My breath hitched. A formality?
"But Alec," Ethan pressed, his voice dropping lower. "Kay has been by your side for seven years. She literally designed the entire market strategy that saved our expansion. She's earned the title of Luna."
"Earned what?"
Alec's voice was laced with a chilling amusement that made my stomach clench. "The privilege of being my Luna? She's a wolfless Omega, Ethan. She should be grateful I even look at her. Her devotion is expected. It's the least a defective creature like her can do to prove her worth to this pack."
The words hit me like a physical blow, stealing the air from my lungs. Wolfless. The dirty little secret the pack pitied and scorned me for, now spoken by my destined mate as a measure of my uselessness.
"Her work on the acquisition strategy was brilliant," Ethan argued, a hint of desperation in his voice.
"Her work was adequate," Alec corrected him coldly. "It was a good way for her to contribute, to make up for... other deficiencies. And now that Breanne is back..."
Breanne Weiss. The name was a whisper of silk and old money. A true-blooded, noble Omega who possessed the perfect bloodline and the inner wolf I lacked.
"Breanne is who I want." Alec's voice was raw, stripped of all pretense. "She is the Luna this pack deserves. Her bloodline, her grace... she is my equal."
My equal. The words echoed in the sudden, roaring silence of my mind. If she was his equal, what was I?
A placeholder. A tool. A seven-year-long convenience.
"So, the plan is still to reject Kay after the merger is finalized?" Ethan asked.
"I can't risk the instability now." Alec said, his voice hardening again, becoming the Alpha. "We'll go through with the ceremony to appease the elders. Once everything is settled, I'll handle the rejection. She's weak, Ethan. She'll cry, but she won't fight it. Where would she even go without us?"
A wave of nausea washed over me. The phantom mate bond on the back of my neck, the one-sided connection I had cherished, flared with a white-hot, agonizing pain.
"And her project? The Phoenix Initiative?"
"I'm giving it to Breanne." Alec said, the casual cruelty of it knocking me back a step. "A welcome home present. Let her put her stamp on it."
My project. My baby. The one I had built from the ground up.
A bitter, metallic taste filled my mouth. It was the taste of betrayal. Of my own foolishness. I had given up a full scholarship to an Ivy League school for him. I had believed his promises, his whispered words in the dark, his assurances that my lack of a wolf didn't matter to him.
Lies. All of it.
"I'll pick Breanne up from the airport this weekend." Alec continued, his voice shifting, becoming lighter. "We'll have dinner."
This weekend. Saturday. My mother's birthday-the one he had promised we would celebrate together.
It was over. The perfect, fragile illusion I had built my entire adult life around had just been shattered into a million pieces.
I heard the scrape of a chair inside the office. Footsteps. Ethan was leaving.
My body moved before my mind could catch up. There was no conscious thought, only a primal instinct for survival. I couldn't let him see me. I couldn't let them know I'd heard.
I spun around, my movements swift and silent. The trash receptacle, a sleek stainless steel cylinder, was three feet away. In one fluid, decisive motion, I tipped the tray. The two vanilla lattes, the symbols of my pathetic, hopeful love, dropped into the bin with a soft, final thud.
Not a single drop spilled on the pristine carpet.
I didn't look back. I didn't wait to hear the office door open. I slipped into the adjacent doorway, pushing open the heavy metal door to the fire escape.
It slammed shut behind me, the boom echoing in the concrete stairwell, plunging me into dim, dusty silence.
The sound finally broke my paralysis.
I slid down the wall until I was sitting on the gritty steps, my corporate suit jacket bunching around my waist.
No tears came. Only a vast, cold emptiness.
My phone buzzed in my pocket. I pulled it out with a trembling hand. The screen lit up, showing my wallpaper: a smiling photo of Alec and me from last year's pack gala. His arm was around me, his eyes crinkling at the corners. He looked so happy. He looked like he loved me.
A cold, hard fury, something I hadn't felt in years, began to burn through the shock. It started in my gut and spread through my veins, chasing away the ice.
My fingers moved with a new, chilling precision. I went into my settings and changed the wallpaper to the phone's default, a bland, abstract swirl of blue. The photo of us vanished.
I opened my notes app. I created a new, encrypted file. I titled it: "Extraction Protocol."
Another buzz. An email notification flashed across the top of the screen. It was from HR.
Subject: URGENT: Venue Confirmation for Collins-Silva Bonding Ceremony.
The email asked for my digital signature to confirm the booking.
A laugh escaped my lips. It was a harsh, ugly sound in the quiet stairwell.
I tapped the notification. The email opened. At the bottom were two buttons: "Approve" and "Reject."
My thumb hovered over the screen for a single, heartbeat. Then, I pressed "Reject." A confirmation box popped up. "Are you sure you want to reject this request?"
I pressed "Yes".
And then, for good measure, I deleted the email.
I closed my eyes. I didn't pray to the Moon Goddess for strength or guidance. I made her a promise. I would not be the weak, crying Omega Alec expected. I would not accept this sham of a bond. I would not be his fool.
After a few minutes, the shaking stopped. The cold fury settled into a block of ice in my chest. I stood up, brushing the dust from my skirt. I straightened my jacket, smoothing the wrinkles with methodical, detached movements.
I pushed the fire escape door open and stepped back into the plush, silent hallway. The air was no longer filled with promise. It was just recycled, sterile air.
I didn't go back to my desk. I didn't go to the restroom to fix my face.
I walked directly to the elevator bank and pressed the down button.
The elevator descended. As it passed the lower floors, I made a decision. I wasn't just going to leave. I was going to erase myself from his life and his company so completely that it would be as if I had never existed.
The doors opened onto the lobby. The cold Chicago wind hit me as I pushed through the revolving doors, a blast of reality that felt like a baptism. It didn't make me shiver. It made me feel awake.
I didn't walk to my car. I walked to the curb, raised my hand, and hailed a cab.
As I slid into the back seat, giving the driver my address, I knew exactly what I had to do first.
I was going to draft my formal notice of mate rejection.
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