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Home > Werewolf > The Alpha's Billion Dollar Mistake: His Rejected Secret Luna
The Alpha's Billion Dollar Mistake: His Rejected Secret Luna

The Alpha's Billion Dollar Mistake: His Rejected Secret Luna

Author: Victor Hale
Genre: Werewolf
I spent two years trapped in a loveless marriage with Gavin, the Alpha of the Carter pack. But when he returned from a trip, he brought back the overpowering scent of another woman and coldly initiated the rejection ritual. "I've fallen in love with my Fated Mate," he declared, offering me a pitiful one million dollars to disappear. He forgot that two years ago, I secretly saved his bankrupt company with my own money. When I threw the contract in his face-demanding the $1.5 billion my equity was now worth-he and his new lover panicked. They launched a vicious smear campaign, leaking stories to the press to brand me as a violent rogue and a greedy blackmailer. They even cornered me at the city's top law firm, bringing in a weeping, fake witness to publicly accuse me of stealing her life savings. They wanted to destroy my reputation so thoroughly that no lawyer would ever dare to take my case. I had poured my own fortune and sweat into saving his family's empire when everyone else abandoned them. How could they be so ruthlessly ungrateful, trying to frame me for a felony just to steal what was rightfully mine? They thought I was just an isolated, friendless rogue they could easily crush. They had no idea the legendary, undefeated lawyer they were desperately trying to hire was actually my secret ally, and the real war had just begun.
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Chapter 1

Kyla POV:

"We need to talk."

The words sliced through the suffocating silence of the living room. They were cold, impersonal, the kind of words a CEO uses to fire an underperforming employee.

Not the words a husband uses for his wife after a week-long business trip.

I didn't look up from the dagger in my lap. My fingers traced the familiar worn leather of the hilt.

The antique grandfather clock in the hall chimed ten. Each tick echoed off the marble floors and vaulted ceilings, a constant reminder of the two years I'd spent waiting in this opulent cage.

My wolf stirred, a low growl rumbling in my chest. I stilled my hands for a fraction of a second, then smoothly slid the dagger back into the sheath hidden in my sleeve.

Gavin Carter strode in, tall and imposing, the Alpha of the Carter pack. He looked every bit the part, with his dark hair, sharp suit, and an aura of power that demanded submission.

But tonight, he brought something else home with him.

A scent.

It wasn't the sterile smell of a hotel or the faint perfume of a female colleague. It was sweet. Overpowering. Vanilla and something floral, an Omega's scent, clinging to the fibers of his expensive coat like a second skin.

My pupils contracted. The warning growl in my chest intensified, a primal rejection of the betrayal that now had a name and a fragrance.

He tossed his briefcase onto a silk-upholstered sofa, the sound unnaturally loud. He avoided my eyes, his jaw tight.

That's when he said it. "Kyla, we need to talk."

I remained silent, letting him stew in it. I simply watched him, my gray eyes holding his gaze when he finally dared to meet it. I gave him nothing. No tears, no accusations. Just a flat, unwavering stare that seemed to unnerve him more than any screaming match could.

He loosened his tie, a nervous habit I knew well. "I've fallen in love with Catherine Meadows."

He said her name like a shield. A justification.

My face remained a mask of calm. Inside, my heart felt like it had been encased in ice. The name wasn't a surprise. I'd seen the lingering glances, heard the whispers. But hearing it from his lips, so bluntly, so devoid of remorse... it was different.

He seemed frustrated by my lack of a dramatic reaction. He wanted a scene, something to validate his decision, to paint me as the unstable, emotional rogue he'd always believed I was.

"She's my Fated Mate," he pressed on, his voice gaining a self-righteous conviction. His pupils, I noticed, were slightly dilated, and there was a faint, almost imperceptible tremor in his hands-the kind I'd seen before in wolves who'd been dosed with an Omega's concentrated pheromones. "The Moon Goddess has shown me the way. Our connection... it's undeniable."

He recited the words as if from a script, wrapping his infidelity in the sacred cloak of destiny. It was the ultimate excuse in our world, the one no one could argue with.

Except me.

Finally, I spoke. My voice was steady, devoid of the tremor I felt deep in my bones. "So?"

The single word seemed to enrage him. His control snapped. He took a step forward, unleashing a wave of his Alpha aura, trying to force me into submission. It pressed down on me, heavy and suffocating, but I was used to it. I'd learned to weather his dominance long ago.

"So, I am ending our union," he snarled, his voice dropping to a low, formal tone. He was initiating the ritual. Here. Now.

"I, Gavin Carter, Alpha of the Carter Pack, reject you, Kyla Martinez, as my mate and Luna."

The words hit me with physical force. A gasp tore from my lips as a searing pain erupted in my chest, radiating through every nerve in my body. It was the severing of a bond, a spiritual tearing. It felt like my soul was being ripped in two.

My hand flew to my chest, my fingers digging into the fabric of my shirt as I fought to stay upright. My vision swam with black spots. Through the haze of agony, I saw a flicker of satisfaction in Gavin's eyes before it was replaced by impatience.

The ritual required my response to be complete.

I didn't give it to him. Not yet. I let him stand there, waiting, watching the sweat bead on his forehead as the severed bond throbbed between us like an open wound. Let him wonder. Let him fear, just for a moment, that I might refuse-that I might trap him in this half-dead bond forever, a ghost haunting the edges of his perfect new life. The silence stretched, thick and suffocating. His jaw tightened. He was about to speak, to demand, when I finally gave him what he wanted.

"I, Kyla Martinez, accept your rejection."

The finality of my words sealed the act. The last, frayed thread connecting us snapped. The pain subsided into a dull, throbbing ache, leaving behind an unnerving emptiness.

But with the emptiness came a strange sense of release. Freedom.

I pushed myself to my feet, my legs unsteady. I needed to leave. To pack. To get out of this house that had never been a home.

"Wait," Gavin called out as I turned toward the grand staircase.

I paused, my back to him.

"My lawyer will have the divorce papers drawn up. You can move out, but I have a proposal for you."

"You've done well managing the corporate restructuring projects," he said, his tone condescendingly magnanimous. "After the divorce, you can stay on at Carter Group. I'll create a position for you."

A position. A handout. He was offering me charity. After tearing my soul apart, he was offering me a job, as if I were some stray he felt obligated to feed.

Slowly, I turned back to face him. For the first time since he'd walked in, a genuine expression crossed my face. A smile. It was a cold, sharp, merciless thing.

"Work?" I repeated softly, the word tasting like poison. My gaze swept over the ridiculously expensive art on the walls, the sterile furniture, and finally landed back on his face. "No, Gavin. I won't be staying."

My voice dropped, taking on the hard, lethal edge I had honed during my years as a rogue. "My work saved your company once. I won't save it a second time."

I let the words hang in the air, watching his confusion morph into anger.

"You and your family," I finished, my smile widening into a predatory baring of teeth, "had better pray you never need me again."

Before he could respond, I turned and walked away. As I ascended the stairs, my back straight and my head held high, I allowed myself one last glance into the living room. My eyes fell on a dusty, forgotten folder on a side table. It was the investment proposal from two years ago, the one that had pulled Carter Group back from the brink of bankruptcy.

The one he had never bothered to read past the signature line.

He had no idea who he had just thrown away.

And he was about to find out.

Chapter 2

Kyla POV:

The bedroom was a perfect metaphor for our marriage. His side was a mess of discarded clothes and financial reports. My side was neat, sterile, untouched. A clear line divided the space, a border we had both silently agreed upon long ago.

I walked to the closet and pulled out a worn, black duffel bag, not the designer luggage he'd bought me. I moved with an efficient, detached calm, the pain in my chest now a dull, manageable throb.

A few sets of practical clothes. My toiletries. The dagger went back into its hidden sheath. I left everything else. The jewelry, the designer dresses, the life he had tried to mold me into-it all stayed. None of it had ever been mine anyway.

My eyes landed on the nightstand on my side of the bed. Tucked beneath a book was a thin manila folder. I pulled it out. The paper was crisp, well-preserved. It was my copy of the Share Transfer Agreement, signed two years ago. My ace in the hole. My price for freedom.

I carefully placed the folder in the duffel bag's inner pocket, zipping it securely.

"The lawyer will contact you tomorrow."

Gavin's voice came from the doorway. He was leaning against the frame, arms crossed, watching me with an air of dismissive authority.

"I've arranged for a settlement. One million dollars. It should be more than enough for a rogue like you to start a new life."

He said it with such pride, as if he were bestowing upon me an incredible act of generosity. A million dollars. To him, it was pocket change. To a lone wolf with no pack, he believed it was a fortune.

The zipper on my bag made a sharp, final sound as I pulled it shut. I straightened up and finally faced him, a humorless laugh escaping my lips.

"One million?" I asked, my voice dripping with a contempt I no longer bothered to hide. "Gavin, are you forgetting something?"

He frowned, his brow furrowing in genuine confusion. "Forgetting what?"

I reached into my bag, pulled out the folder, and tossed it onto the bed between us. It slid across the silk comforter and came to a stop near his hand.

"Share Transfer Agreement," he read the title aloud, his voice faltering.

His eyes widened in recognition. He snatched the document, his hands fumbling as he flipped it open. I watched as the memory crashed back into him.

Two years ago. Carter Group was bleeding money, on the verge of a hostile takeover. The banks had cut him off. The board was calling for his resignation. He was desperate.

And I had walked into his office, not as his mate, but as an investor. I had learned of a private equity fund looking to short his stock into oblivion. Using my own network, I had front-run them, secured the capital, and presented him with an offer.

"I don't want interest," I had told him across that mahogany desk. "I want equity."

He was so cornered, so desperate, that he'd agreed without a second thought. He signed over 4% of the company's private shares in exchange for a five-hundred-million-dollar wire transfer that appeared in the company's accounts less than an hour later. He never asked where the money came from. He was too arrogant to imagine it was mine. He probably assumed I'd called in a favor from some shadowy rogue benefactor.

"That four percent," I said, my voice as cold and hard as diamond, "is now worth one and a half billion dollars, thanks to the restructuring plan I designed and executed."

I let that sink in.

"That is my property, Gavin. Not your charity."

The color drained from his face, then returned in a furious, blotchy red. He was cornered again, and he hated it. He hated me for it.

"You-" he sputtered, his Alpha dominance flaring uselessly. "You conniving bitch! You think you can just take that kind of money from my family? Without the Carters, you're nothing!"

I ignored his tantrum. I picked up my duffel bag and walked towards the door, towards him. I didn't flinch as I passed, my shoulder not even brushing his. He was an obstacle, but a small one.

"One and a half billion," I said without looking back. "Not a penny less. Or we can discuss it in court."

I left him standing there, clutching the papers that sealed his fate. For the first time since I'd known him, Gavin Carter was utterly speechless. He had lost control.

Downstairs, I didn't say goodbye to the staff. I didn't look back at the house. I walked out the massive front doors, pulled out my phone, and called a standard taxi. As the simple yellow car pulled up to the sprawling estate, I felt the first true breath of freedom fill my lungs.

The taxi pulled away, and I disappeared into the night, just another shadow.

Gavin POV:

I watched the taxi's taillights vanish down the long, winding driveway. My hands trembled with rage. I crumpled the agreement in my fist, the sharp edges of the paper digging into my palm.

One and a half billion.

The number was obscene. Impossible. She was a rogue. Where would a rogue get five hundred million dollars?

My wolf paced restlessly inside me, snarling in frustration. He hated her defiance, her coldness. He hated that, in my eyes, she had made me feel weak.

I stormed back into the bedroom and slammed the door. I needed to think. I needed... Catherine.

I pulled out my phone, my thumb jabbing at the screen. She answered on the second ring, her voice soft and soothing, like a balm on my frayed nerves.

"Gavin, darling? Is everything alright? Did you talk to her?"

"I did," I bit out, pacing the length of the room. "I rejected her. It's done."

"Oh, you poor thing," she cooed. "That must have been so difficult. Are you hurt?"

"I'm fine," I lied. The lingering ache from the rejection was a dull throb in my soul. "But she's not making this easy. The greedy bitch is demanding one and a half billion dollars."

There was a sharp intake of breath on the other end of the line. "What? Why? On what grounds?"

I explained the story of the old investment, the 4% equity. I told her how Kyla had thrown it in my face.

Catherine was silent for a moment, and I could almost hear the wheels turning in her clever mind.

"Gavin, honey, calm down," she said, her voice a strategic caress. "Think about it. She's a rogue. She appeared out of nowhere with no pack, no family, no history. Where would someone like that get five hundred million dollars overnight?"

Her words cut through my anger, planting a seed of suspicion. I noticed, absently, that my head felt clearer when I focused on her voice-and heavier when her perfume lingered in my memory, a sickly sweet fog that made thinking feel like wading through honey.

"That money," she continued, her tone laced with faux concern, "its source has to be questionable. It could be dirty money, Gavin. Laundered, maybe. No legitimate bank would just hand over that kind of cash to a lone wolf with no collateral."

She was right. Of course, she was right. I had been too blind, too desperate at the time to question it.

"If the initial investment was illegal," Catherine's voice dropped to a conspiratorial whisper, "then the contract is null and void. She wouldn't be entitled to a single dollar."

A slow, vicious smile spread across my face. My anger began to cool, replaced by a cold, calculating resolve.

"We can look into it," Catherine added gently. "We can find out where that money came from. Don't you worry, my love. I'll help you. We'll handle this. We'll handle her."

"Thank you, Catherine," I breathed, a wave of relief washing over me. "You're brilliant."

"I just want to see you happy, Gavin," she murmured. "She's been a shadow over your life for too long. It's time for the sun to come out."

We hung up a few minutes later. I stood in the silent room, the crumpled agreement still in my hand. Kyla thought she had won. She thought she could walk away with a fortune.

She had no idea what was coming. We would dig into her past. We would expose her. We would ruin her.

She would get nothing.

Chapter 3

Kyla POV:

The next morning, the aroma of freshly ground coffee did little to soothe the knot in my stomach. I sat across from Sebastian Beaumont in a quiet, upscale café downtown. He was in his late sixties, with sharp, intelligent eyes that missed nothing. As the only independent director on the Carter Group's board, he was one of the few people I respected, and perhaps, even trusted.

"So, the boy finally did it," he said, stirring his espresso. It wasn't a question.

"He did," I confirmed, my voice flat. "I'm leaving the company, and I've initiated divorce proceedings."

Sebastian nodded slowly, a grim look on his face. "I'm not surprised. I am, however, deeply disappointed. Gavin is a fool. He's throwing away his greatest asset."

I offered a small, noncommittal smile. I wasn't here for pity or praise. "I wanted to thank you, Sebastian. For your support over the past two years."

"The support was for your talent, Kyla, not your marital status," he said gruffly. He leaned forward, his expression turning serious. "This is going to get ugly. The Carters don't part with money or power gracefully. Do you need help?"

"I can handle it."

"I'm sure you can," he said, a hint of amusement in his eyes. "But even the sharpest wolf can be overwhelmed by a pack of hyenas. They have the best legal team money can buy." He pulled a small, elegant fountain pen from his jacket and wrote on a napkin.

"If you find yourself in need of the best lawyer in the country-and I mean the absolute best-contact him."

He slid the napkin across the table. It didn't have a name or a number. Just a moniker, "Mr. Sun," and the ID for a highly encrypted messaging app.

"He's discreet, and he doesn't lose," Sebastian added.

I tucked the napkin into my pocket, a silent acknowledgment.

Later that day, the first attack came. It wasn't a legal notice or a threatening phone call. It was far more public, and far more insidious.

My phone buzzed with a news alert. A major society magazine had just published photos from a charity gala held the previous night. The headline was a gut punch: "Carter Matriarch Endorses Son's New Love."

There she was, Eleanor Carter, the picture of aristocratic grace, beaming as she embraced Catherine Meadows on the red carpet. Gavin stood beside them, his hand possessively on Catherine's waist.

I scrolled through the article. A reporter had asked Eleanor about the divorce.

"We are all saddened by the situation," she was quoted, her tone dripping with feigned sympathy. "Kyla is a capable young woman, but sometimes, destiny has other plans. There was simply no fated spark between her and my son."

The implication was clear. I was the placeholder. The mistake.

Then, she gushed about Catherine. "Catherine is a breath of fresh air. She is like sunshine, bringing new life and happiness to Gavin. We are thrilled to welcome her."

The message was broadcast for our entire world to see. I was out. Catherine was in.

The comments section was a cesspool. Anonymous accounts, likely paid trolls, were having a field day.

Gold-digging rogue finally gets what she deserves.

Heard she's trying to extort him for over a billion! Shameless.

She was never one of us. Good riddance.

They had leaked the 1.5billion-dollar figure, conveniently omitting the fact that it was tied to a legal equity agreement. They were painting me as a blackmailer.

This was their game. Trial by public opinion. Ruin my reputation so thoroughly that no one would believe my side of the story.

My phone rang. It was Sebastian.

"You've seen it, I assume," he said, his voice tight with anger.

"I've seen it."

"This is how they operate, Kyla. They'll bury you in filth until you suffocate. Are you still so sure you don't need help?"

I looked down at the phone in my other hand. The napkin from Sebastian was in my pocket. The weight of it felt heavier now. I had faced down rival rogues in dark alleys and corporate sharks in boardrooms. But this was different. This was a war of whispers and lies, fought on a battlefield I didn't know.

I thought of the Carter's army of lawyers, their PR machine, their deep-seated influence. Fighting them alone would be a slow, grinding defeat.

"Mr. Sun..." I murmured the name under my breath.

I pulled out my phone, downloaded the encrypted app, and typed in the ID. A simple, secure chat window opened. The profile picture was a stylized black sun.

My fingers hovered over the keyboard. For two years, I had relied on no one but myself. Asking for help felt like an admission of weakness.

But this wasn't weakness. It was strategy.

I took a deep breath and began to type my first message. I needed a lawyer. A ghost. A weapon. Someone who could fight a family of wolves and win.

"A wise choice," Sebastian's voice came through the phone, as if he could read my mind. "Trust me on this, Kyla. The sun casts out all shadows."

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