Chapter 2

The Royal Court complex loomed before me like something from another world—gleaming marble columns stretching toward the sky, intricate stone carvings depicting ancient pack victories, and guards in formal uniforms standing at attention. My heart hammered against my ribs as I adjusted the strap of my bag, feeling the weight of my father's journals inside.

"Quite impressive, isn't it?" Kiera murmured within me. "These wolves have forgotten what true strength looks like."

I squared my shoulders and approached the entrance, where a stern-faced Beta checked my appointment letter.

"Elaina Patterson," he read aloud, his eyebrows rising slightly. "The rejected mate from Shadowcrest?"

The words stung like salt in an open wound. I kept my expression neutral. "That's correct."

He led me through marble hallways lined with portraits of past Lycan Kings and Queens. Every step echoed, announcing my arrival to the curious eyes that followed us.

The interview room was intimidating—a circular chamber with high ceilings and a horseshoe-shaped table where five Council members sat. Their scents filled the air, each distinct and powerful.

"Ms. Patterson," began Victor Blackwood, Alpha of the Blackwood Pack and notorious traditionalist. "Your... situation is unusual. Why would someone of your status seek strategic positions at the Royal Court?"

I met his gaze steadily. "Because I can provide what the Court needs."

"Bold words from someone whose mate rejected them publicly," another Council member remarked, her lip curling slightly.

Kiera snarled within me. *Show them. Make them see.*

I reached into my bag and pulled out my father's territorial vulnerability analysis. "With respect, Council members, the current defensive strategies along the eastern border are fundamentally flawed."

I spread the maps across the table, my finger tracing the attack patterns I'd analyzed for years in secret.

"The rogue coalitions aren't random. They're coordinated, exploiting the thirty-minute patrol gaps created when Alpha units change shifts." I pointed to the marked zones. "If you adjust the rotation schedule and implement cross-pack support here and here—"

The room fell silent as I outlined a comprehensive restructuring of the eastern defense system. When I finished, Victor Blackwood leaned forward, his eyes narrowed but interested.

"These are... unconventional solutions."

"They're effective ones," I countered. "And based on actual attack patterns, not tradition."

---

"The Lycan King will see you now," announced Marcus Reeves, the King's Beta.

I followed him through another corridor into a private study. The Lycan King stood by a window overlooking the city, his broad shoulders silhouetted against the light.

"Your analysis was... provocative," he said without turning around. His voice was deep, carrying natural authority without effort.

"Truth often is, Your Majesty."

He turned then, and I caught my breath. The Lycan King was younger than I'd expected—perhaps in his early forties—with silver-streaked dark hair and piercing blue eyes that seemed to see straight through me.

"Marcus tells me you challenged every conventional approach to territorial defense." He gestured to a chair across from his desk. "Sit."

I obeyed, noticing how his eyes lingered on my father's journals.

"You understand the risk you're taking?" he asked. "Challenging established military doctrine?"

"I understand the risk of doing nothing while rogues exploit our weaknesses," I replied.

Something flickered in his eyes—approval, perhaps. He opened my territorial assessment, scanning it with practiced efficiency.

"Provisional junior position as territorial analyst," he said finally. "You'll work directly with Marcus. Prove yourself, and we'll discuss permanent placement."

He held out his hand to seal the agreement. When our hands touched, a strange warmth spread through me, and Kiera stirred unusually.

*His wolf,* she whispered. *He feels it too.*

---

The grand Council chamber buzzed with conversation as pack leaders gathered for the monthly assembly. I stood quietly at the edge of the room, still learning names and faces.

"Elaina?"

I turned to find Marcus beside me, his expression grim.

"You should know—Shadowcrest's representatives arrived. Charles and his Luna."

Before I could respond, a ripple of whispers spread through the chamber. Charles entered with Fernanda on his arm, her auburn hair elaborately styled, her head held high.

"Look who's here," Fernanda's voice cut through the noise as she spotted me. "The rejected mate who couldn't accept her place."

Charles's eyes locked with mine, his expression unreadable.

"You've been busy," Fernanda continued, loud enough for nearby Alphas to hear. "Teaching our future Alpha's children how to be proper wolves?"

Kiera growled dangerously within me.

"I'm exactly where I belong," I replied evenly.

Fernanda stepped closer, her smile venomous. "A disgraced family's daughter playing at Court politics? You're pathetic."

"You're embarrassing yourself," Charles said suddenly, but his words weren't directed at Fernanda—they were aimed at me.

His Alpha aura expanded, pressing down on me like a physical weight. "Know your place, Elaina. You're nothing here."

The chamber fell silent as every eye turned toward us.

Chapter 3

I stood perfectly still as Fernanda's words hung in the air, her venomous smile widening as she waited for me to crumble. The chamber had fallen silent, all eyes upon us—upon me—waiting for the rejected mate to break.

"You're nothing here," Charles repeated, his Alpha aura pressing down on me like a physical weight.

Kiera snarled within me, her fury a living thing clawing at my insides. *Let me tear her throat out. Let me show them who we really are.*

"Control," I whispered under my breath, so softly that only those closest could hear.

"Elaina," Fernanda stepped closer, her perfume cloying and suffocating. "Did you really think you could just walk into the Royal Court and pretend you belong? Everyone knows what you are—what your family is."

I met her gaze steadily, my hands steady at my sides despite Kiera's growing rage. "And what am I, exactly?"

"A disgrace," she hissed. "A rejected mate from a disgraced family who can't accept her place."

Charles shifted uncomfortably, but said nothing to defend me. The betrayal cut deeper than I'd expected—even now, after everything.

"I am exactly where I choose to be," I replied, my voice carrying across the silent chamber. "And I have nothing to prove to either of you."

I turned away from them, my movements deliberate and controlled. As I did, I caught the approving nods from several Council members who had been watching the exchange. Victor Blackwood's expression remained impassive, but I noticed the slight tilt of his head—interest, perhaps. Recognition.

"Quite impressive," murmured Marcus Reeves beside me. "Most wolves would have challenged or broken under that kind of public humiliation."

"I'm not most wolves," I replied simply.

---

The alarms sounded at midnight.

I bolted upright in my small quarters at the Royal Court, Kiera instantly alert within me. The emergency sirens wailed through the corridors, followed by hurried footsteps and shouted commands.

"Ms. Patterson!" A young Delta appeared at my door. "Emergency Council session. The Lycan King requests all strategic personnel immediately."

I grabbed my father's journals and followed him through the panicked corridors. Something was terribly wrong—the Court hadn't sounded emergency alarms in over a decade.

The situation room was chaos when we arrived. Maps covered every surface, communication officers relayed reports, and the Lycan King stood at the center, his face grim.

"The Rogue Coalition has launched coordinated attacks on three allied territories simultaneously," Marcus explained as he pulled me into the fray. "All within the same night."

I stared at the territorial maps, my mind racing. "These aren't random attacks—look at the pattern."

"Conventional military responses have failed," the Lycan King said, his voice cutting through the noise. "Casualties are mounting."

I moved closer to the maps, studying the attack vectors. Kiera paced restlessly in my consciousness, her tactical instincts feeding mine.

"The eastern border is next," I said suddenly. "They'll hit there within hours."

All eyes turned to me.

"How can you be certain?" Victor Blackwood demanded.

I traced the pattern with my finger. "Because this isn't random violence—it's strategic. They're systematically isolating our strongest packs from each other."

The room fell silent as the implications sank in.

"The Council will meet in one hour," announced the Lycan King. "We need solutions, not speculation."

---

The emergency Council session was tense, the air thick with fear and frustration. Military leaders presented their conventional responses—more troops, stronger borders, targeted strikes—but each was dismissed as inadequate or too slow.

I sat quietly at the back, my mind racing through possibilities. Kiera had been unusually quiet, focusing her energy on analyzing the crisis.

"Are there any other proposals?" the Lycan King asked, his voice betraying his exhaustion.

I rose slowly. "I request permission to present strategic solutions."

The room fell silent. Victor Blackwood's eyebrows shot up in surprise.

"Ms. Patterson," the Lycan King said carefully, "this is hardly the time for—"

"With respect, Your Majesty," I interrupted, "this is exactly the time."

Something in my voice must have convinced him. He gestured for me to continue.

I moved to the central map table, my heart pounding but my hands steady. "The Rogue Coalition isn't using random tactics—they're employing a classic divide-and-conquer strategy."

I outlined my first solution—a rapid response force that could deploy within hours rather than days. Then the second—a communications protocol that would prevent pack isolation during attacks.

"Third," I said, pulling out the territorial map I'd been working on since the alarms sounded, "we need to implement what I call the Central Territory Strategy."

I explained how we could consolidate forces in a central location, creating a mobile strike force that could respond to any attack within hours. The room listened in stunned silence as I detailed the logistics, the tactical advantages, and the long-term security benefits.

When I finished, no one spoke. The Lycan King stared at the map, his expression unreadable. Victor Blackwood leaned forward, studying my proposal with narrowed eyes.

Finally, the Lycan King looked up at me. "These are... unprecedented solutions."

"They're effective ones," I replied simply.

The Council members exchanged glances, their expressions ranging from shock to grudging respect.

"Implement them," the Lycan King said finally. "All three."

As the Council erupted into action, I caught Marcus Reeves watching me with newfound respect—and something else I couldn't quite name.

"The Central Territory Strategy," he murmured, testing the words. "Where did you come up with that?"

I thought of my father's journals, of years spent in the shadows crafting strategies no one would ever acknowledge.

"Sometimes," I said quietly, "the best solutions come from those who've been forced to think differently."

Kiera stirred within me, her pride warming my chest. *We showed them. We finally showed them who we really are.*

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