CHAPTER 3

1353 Words
Damien’s POV Strength has always been the language of my world. It was the first thing my father placed in my hands, long before I ever learned to shift, long before I understood the weight of a title. He shaped my childhood with the philosophy that an Alpha must never bend, never hesitate, never allow softness to take root in his decisions or his heart. And as the future Alpha of Silvercrest Pack, I absorbed those lessons until they molded every part of who I became. I learned to walk with a straight back, to speak with authority, and to treat emotions like fragile things meant to be hidden away, kept far from the battlefield of leadership. Because in Silvercrest, strength is not an option—it is our identity. It is the spine upon which our reputation rests. Our warriors are feared, our borders respected, and our discipline unmatched. The pack does not bow. The pack does not retreat. And certainly, the pack does not embrace weakness. This is the world I was raised to inherit. A world that required me to evaluate everything—every ally, every threat, every choice—through one unforgiving lens: Will this make the pack stronger, or will it break us? And on the night of the Mate Ceremony, that question echoed in my mind more sharply than ever. The hall had been overflowing with wolves from every family, every rank, every corner of our territory. Laughter bounced off the walls, the air humming with anticipation. The ceremony marked the beginning of adulthood for many, but for me, it carried a deeper significance. It signaled the moment my path toward becoming Alpha would finally align with destiny. My father had made it clear countless times—my mate would one day stand as Luna of Silvercrest, the heart and voice of the pack beside me. She would be expected to possess the same steel that ran through our bloodline, the same fire that held our pack together. So when the bond snapped into place—sharp, intense, undeniable—it felt like the entire world paused. It was as if the air thickened, as if every sound in the room blurred into nothing but the steady thrum of fate pulling me forward. My wolf surged instantly, powerful and eager, pushing me to follow the magnetic pull that anchored itself deep in my chest. For the first time in my life, my wolf and I felt the same hunger, the same need. I turned, expecting to find a woman who radiated power, someone whose presence commanded attention, someone built to stand beside an Alpha. But when my eyes landed on her—Aria Williams—everything inside me stilled. She stood near the edge of the hall, half-hidden beside her friends, small in posture but not in presence. Her hair framed her face in soft waves, her eyes steady yet gentle. She carried herself quietly, slipping through the pack like she wanted to be invisible, as if she had spent her whole life trying not to draw attention. And yet, at that moment, she stood out more sharply than anyone else in the room. Aria. The girl I’d seen training countless times, always pushing but never quite matching the ferocity of her peers. The girl who healed slower than others. The girl who stayed behind after drills, as if she was desperately trying to catch up to a standard no one believed she could reach. The girl the pack laughed at. The girl the pack dismissed. The girl the pack called weak. And now—the goddess was telling me she was my mate. My future Luna. The future face of Silvercrest Pack. My heartbeat thundered painfully against my ribs. My wolf howled with joy, his voice rich with approval, urging me to go to her, to claim her, to accept the bond instantly. But while my wolf saw a future, all I saw was risk. Luna was the backbone of a pack. Luna needed strength, authority, the ability to stand tall even when storms threatened to crush everything. Aria did not possess that. At least, not from what I’d seen. The pack expected a Luna who reflected their pride. Not someone who embodied everything they mocked. I took one step toward her then stopped. Her eyes lifted to mine, Wide, Hopeful and Innocent. I saw trust—trust that I knew I could not return. Trust that demanded more of me than I was taught to give. That look—soft, open, unguarded—felt like a direct challenge to everything I had been raised to believe. If I accepted her, would the pack respect her? Would they respect me? Would they follow our leadership without question? Or would they see my choice as a sign of weakness? My father’s voice echoed relentlessly in my mind: “A Luna reflects the Alpha. If she is fragile, the pack fractures.” I exhaled, feeling the weight of every eye in the hall shift toward me. The moment stretched thin, every second pressing down on my chest. Then I made the choice that would mark the turning point of my life. I stepped forward—slow, cold, deliberate—allowing the silence of the hall to build until it became suffocating. Aria watched me with quiet anticipation, her fingers nervously clenching her dress, but she did not look away. She didn’t tremble. She didn’t shrink. She simply waited. I hated that she looked calm. I hated that she seemed resigned. I hated that she wasn’t fighting for anything. It made rejecting her feel almost… expected. I let my voice rise, steady and dominant, echoing across the hall with all the authority of a future Alpha. “I do not accept this bond. A mate who cannot stand as a Luna beside me is not a mate I can claim.” Gasps filled the room. Whispers exploded instantly. My wolf snarled in agony, clawing at my insides, furious, betrayed, desperate. But I forced myself to continue, knowing hesitation would be perceived as weakness. “I, Damien Walkers, future Alpha of Silvercrest Pack, reject you as my mate.” The moment the words left my mouth, pain shot through my chest—a ripping, violent tearing that felt like claws digging directly into my heart. My wolf roared, the sound echoing through every corner of my mind. But Aria… she didn’t break, she did not beg, she just lifted her chin—just slightly, but enough to make my breath catch—and spoke with a calmness that did not match the girl I thought I knew. “I accept your rejection.” Her voice was sharp and audible enough for me to hear. Something inside me faltered because her acceptance felt… wrong. Too easy, too composed. It wasn’t the reaction of a fragile girl. It wasn’t the reaction of someone weak. It was the reaction of someone who understood something I didn’t. She turned away with her friends, walking out of the hall with quiet dignity. Not a single look back. And I—future Alpha Damien Walkers—found myself standing there, surrounded by approval, praise, and murmurs of satisfaction… yet unable to shake the strange, hollow ache spreading through my chest. My wolf paced angrily, refusing to calm. He did not understand why I had turned my back on the one the goddess gave us. He didn’t share my logic. He didn’t care about strength or politics or the future of the pack. All he cared about was her. And for the first time in my life, my wolf and I stopped moving in the same direction. The rejection was supposed to be simple, clean and necessary. But nothing about the way Aria walked away felt simple. And long after the hall returned to its usual noise, long after the congratulations faded into silence, one truth continued to gnaw at me: I had rejected her but something in me knew that was not the end for us but I don’t know what else to expect.
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