My fingers trembled as I reached out, wanting to trace the sharp line of his jaw. Wanting to feel the warmth of his skin under my fingertips, a confirmation that last night was real.
Before I could touch him, a vibration buzzed on the nightstand.
His phone lit up the dim room.
A name glowed on the screen.
Kelsey ,Kelsey Wilcox is Bryson's mistress.
My hand froze mid-air. The air in my lungs turned to ice. Every ounce of warmth from the night before vanished, sucked into a black hole of dread.
Bryson was awake instantly. Not slowly, like a normal person, but with the sharp alertness of an Alpha. His ice-blue eyes, still clouded with sleep, focused on the phone.
The moment he read the name, the fog cleared. A softness I hadn't seen in years bloomed in his gaze.
He didn't hesitate. He didn't even look at me.
He answered the call, swinging his legs over the side of the bed and walking toward the floor-to-ceiling windows, his back to me. A solid wall of muscle and indifference.
His voice was a low murmur, intentionally quiet, but in the silence of the room, I heard every gentle word.
"Kelsey? Don't cry. I'm on my way."
I curled into a ball, pulling the duvet up to my chin. The space where he had been lying was already growing cold. Just like my heart. Just like my entire life.
He ended the call and started dressing with an efficiency that was brutal. No wasted movements. Just a man on a mission. A mission that had nothing to do with me.
He pulled a fresh shirt from the closet, his movements sharp. He didn't spare me a single glance.
My voice was a dry rasp, scratching its way out of my throat. "Bryson, today is our..."
"I know," he cut me off. The words were clipped, laced with an annoyance that felt like a physical blow. "Kelsey has an emergency. She's alone, and she's not feeling well."
His explanation wasn't an apology. It was a statement of fact. A reminder that another woman's discomfort was more important than our four-year bond. More important than our anniversary.
I watched him button his shirt. The movements were so clean, so precise. It was agonizing to watch.
A bitter thought surfaced. In four years, I had never once helped him with his tie. He never let me.
He walked to my side of the bed, looming over me. His eyes, now fully awake, were chips of ice. "You are my fated mate, Aria. Don't act like a shrew."
It wasn't comfort. It was a warning. An Alpha's command to his possession.
I didn't answer. I just pulled the covers tighter, creating a flimsy shield against him.
My silence seemed to satisfy him. He turned and strode out of the room.
The click of the bedroom door shutting was deafening. It sealed me in with the lingering scent of him, a ghost of a man who was never really there.
I lay on the massive bed, feeling small and insignificant. The whispers from the pack, the pitying looks, the four years of cold shoulders and lonely nights-it all came rushing back.
I used to believe the fated mate bond was unbreakable. A sacred gift from the Moon Goddess.
Now I knew the truth.
It was a cage. And I was the only one trapped inside.
Finally, I threw back the covers. My bare feet hit the cold hardwood floor. I walked to the window, my reflection a pale, haunted stranger.
Down below, the headlights of Bryson's sports car cut through the pre-dawn gloom. He was speeding away, heading in the direction of Kelsey Wilcox's apartment.
My gaze drifted from the disappearing taillights to my own wrist. To the small, pale brown mole that had been there my whole life.
I remembered the old pack legends. The forbidden stories whispered by the elders.
About the Rejection Ritual.
A crazy, desperate, and utterly final idea bloomed in the barren wasteland of my mind. It was sharp and clear, a single point of light in the darkness.
I picked up my own phone. My thumb hovered over the contact list. There was only one name I could even think of calling.
Crystal Rollins.
My best friend.
I didn't press the call button. I just stared at her name, the first real choice I had considered making in four years.