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The Alpha's Rejected Vessel Novel Cover

The Alpha's Rejected Vessel

As a half-blood Vessel, Lia is valued only for her miraculous blood. After facing rejection, she falls into the hands of the ruthless Alpha Derek Damsi. While Derek blames Lia for the feral beast threatening to consume him, her blood is actually his sole salvation. As she struggles to tame his inner monster, each healing act signals their location to looming enemies. Lia must master the beast she fears to survive before they are both hunted down.
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Chapter 2

Six days until the marking ceremony.

Lia jerked awake to pounding on the door.

"Up," Mark's voice cut through the pre-dawn darkness. "Now. They need you."

Need. Not want. Not request.

Need.

She was on her feet before her brain fully engaged, Derek's cloak—his scent still clinging to it—wrapped tight around her shoulders. The cabin he'd deposited her in last night was small, isolated, perched at the territory's edge. He hadn't spoken. Hadn't explained. Just left her there like cargo.

"What happened?" Lia pulled open the door. Mark's face was grim.

"Elder Torin's son. Border skirmish with Silver Creek. He's dying."

The words hung heavy. Lia's stomach dropped. "And they think I can—"

"They don't think. They're counting on it." Mark's jaw clenched. "Move."

The main lodge was chaos when they arrived. Elders shouting. Pack members pressed against the walls. And in the center, on a blood-soaked pallet, a boy—couldn't be more than sixteen—gasping like a landed fish.

The smell hit Lia first. Blood. Infection. Death creeping closer with each rattling breath.

"There." Elder Morna's voice cracked like a whip, pointing at Lia. "Let's see if Derek's pet has any actual value."

Lia's hands clenched beneath the cloak. Pet. As if yesterday's humiliation hadn't been enough.

Elder Torin pushed through the crowd, his face haggard. "Please." The word clearly cost him—begging a half-blood. "He's my only son."

The boy's eyes found hers. Glassy with pain. Terrified.

Lia moved before she could think. She dropped to her knees beside the pallet. "Let me see."

Torin unwrapped the bandage with shaking hands.

Lia's breath caught.

Four parallel gashes ran from the boy's shoulder to elbow. Deep. So deep she could see bone gleaming white through shredded muscle. The flesh around the wounds was mottled purple-black, infection spreading in ugly tendrils up his arm, across his chest.

He was dying. Right here. Right now.

"Silver Creek?" Her voice came out steady. How, she didn't know.

"Dawn patrol," Mark confirmed quietly. "Three of them ambushed our scouts."

The boy whimpered. His skin was burning—fever cooking him from the inside.

"I need a blade." Lia held out her hand. "Clean. Sharp."

Someone pressed a knife into her palm. The Elders had already arranged a clay bowl on the low table. Waiting. They'd planned this. Probably the moment Derek claimed her yesterday.

Vessel.

But the boy was dying.

Lia pressed the blade to her left palm. The strange warmth in her chest—the thing that had pulsed to life yesterday when Derek's gold eyes found hers—stirred. Responding. Almost eager.

She cut.

Pain flared bright and sharp. Blood welled immediately, but wrong—darker than it should be, with something silvery catching the firelight.

The warmth surged.

Lia tipped her hand over the bowl. One drop fell. Two. The liquid shimmered, actually shimmered, silver light pulsing beneath the surface like a heartbeat.

The air grew warm. Fragrant. Like spring rain and new grass and something indefinably alive.

"What—" Torin started.

Lia didn't wait. She plunged her fingers into the bowl, coating them with blood—with whatever this was—and pressed them directly to the ravaged arm.

The world exploded in silver light.

Not gentle. Not gradual. It detonated from the point of contact, brightness searing across her vision, flooding the lodge until everyone threw up their hands, crying out.

The boy screamed.

But not in pain—in shock, in overwhelming sensation as the light poured into him like liquid fire.

Lia couldn't look away. Couldn't move. The warmth in her chest had become an inferno, pouring down her arm, through her hand, into the boy. She watched—transfixed, terrified—as the ravaged flesh began to knit.

No. Not knit.

Rebuild.

Muscle fibers wove themselves together like threads on a loom, fast enough to see. Skin crawled across the exposed tissue, pink and new and perfect. The black infection veins reversed, pulling back, vanishing as if they'd never existed.

The silver light pulsed once more—so bright Lia had to close her eyes.

Then silence.

The light vanished.

Lia opened her eyes slowly. Her hand was still pressed to the boy's arm. But there was no wound. Not even a scar. Just smooth, unmarked skin.

The boy sat up, gasping. He stared at his arm. Flexed his fingers. Touched the place where bone had been visible moments ago.

"I—" His voice cracked. "It doesn't... it doesn't hurt."

The lodge was dead silent.

Then someone whispered: "Silver blood."

"The legends," another breathed. "They're real."

"True Healer's blood," Morna murmured, but her voice had changed. No longer dismissive. Hungry. "Imagine what we could do with—"

The door slammed open.

Derek filled the frame.

His eyes swept the room in one predatory glance—the healed boy, the Elders' expressions, the clay bowl still shimmering faintly with residue.

Then his gaze locked onto Lia.

Every muscle in his body went rigid.

His nostrils flared. Once. Twice. His pupils dilated so fast it looked like his eyes were being swallowed by darkness.

And Lia watched—everyone watched—as gold bled into the blue. Not a flicker this time. A flood.

His hands clenched at his sides. She heard his knuckles crack from across the room.

The scent. That sweet, vital fragrance that had bloomed when her blood transformed. It was everywhere now, clinging to her skin, saturating the air.

And Derek was breathing it in like a drowning man gasping for air.

"What. Happened. Here." Each word was bitten off. Controlled. But Lia heard the strain beneath. Saw the tremor in his jaw, the rigid set of his shoulders, the way his hands were shaking.

"The half-blood healed my son," Torin said, wonder thick in his voice. "With her blood. It was extraordinary—"

"I can see what she did." Derek's voice was flat. Cold. But his eyes—his gold, burning eyes—never left Lia's face. "Mark. Remove her. Now."

"Derek—" Morna began, already moving toward Lia. Toward the bowl. "We need to discuss the implications. If her blood can do this, we should—"

"Touch her," Derek said softly, "and I'll remove your hand."

The room froze.

Derek took one step into the lodge. Just one. The movement was controlled, but Lia saw the cost. Saw the way his entire body locked up afterward, as if stepping closer had taken every ounce of willpower he possessed.

That scent—her transformed blood—hung between them like a living thing.

"Mark," Derek repeated. His voice had gone rough. Strained. "Get her out. Now."

Mark didn't argue. He gripped Lia's elbow, hauling her to her feet, toward the door. Toward Derek.

As they passed him, Derek's hand shot out.

Not touching. But close. So close she felt heat radiating from his palm, hovering inches from her bleeding hand.

His breathing changed. Faster. Shallower. His eyes were fixed on her palm, on the blood still seeping from the cut, and his lips parted. Canines longer. Sharper.

"Derek?" Lia's voice came out smaller than she intended.

His eyes snapped to hers. Pure gold now. Burning. Wild.

For one heartbeat, she saw it—the war raging behind those eyes. The thing inside him that wanted to close the distance. Wanted to—

He wrenched his hand back, slamming it against his chest. "Go."

Lia went.

Mark practically dragged her through the morning mist. Neither spoke until they were back at the cabin, door closed, bolt thrown.

"What the hell is wrong with him?" Lia demanded, cradling her bleeding palm. "Why did he look at me like—"

"Like you were the only thing in the world that mattered?" Mark shoved a roll of clean linen at her. "Bind this. Quickly. And listen very carefully."

His expression was grave. Worried in a way that made Lia's pulse spike.

"That scent from your blood. It's... different. Strong.

Every wolf in the pack can smell it, and it's making them restless."

Mark's jaw clenched. "Derek wants you to stay inside. Don't ask me why. Just... trust me. Something about that healing made you visible. Too visible."

"Visible to who?"

"I don't know," Mark lied. But his eyes said he knew exactly.

Mark moved to the window, scanning the treeline. "That's why Derek wants you hidden. That scent is a dinner bell, and you just rang it for every predator in the territory."

Cold dread washed through her. "How long will it last?"

"I don't know. Hours? Days?" Mark turned back. "But until it fades, you stay inside. You don't open this door for anyone but Derek or me. Understand?"

Lia nodded numbly.

Mark hesitated at the door. "And Lia? What Derek did back there—stopping himself from coming closer? I've known him my entire life. I've seen him fight entire packs without flinching. I've seen him take wounds that would kill most wolves and not make a sound."

He met her eyes.

"I've never seen him afraid before today."

Then he was gone.

Lia sank onto the cot, wrapping the linen around her palm with shaking hands. The cut throbbed dully, but that warmth in her chest had settled back to embers.

Beacon. Signal. Dinner bell.

She'd just painted a target on herself. On the entire pack.

And Derek—

She couldn't stop seeing his face. The gold eyes. The trembling hands. The way he'd looked at her blood like it was the answer to a question he'd been asking his entire life.

Like you were the only thing in the world that mattered.

Hours crawled past. The sun climbed, peaked, began its descent. Lia dozed fitfully, exhaustion from the healing crashing over her in waves.

She woke to evening shadows and a sound outside.

Not footsteps. Something else.

Scratching. Low and rhythmic and wrong.

Lia moved to the window, peering through the shutters.

Derek stood in the treeline, maybe twenty paces away. His back was to her, shoulders heaving.

As she watched, he raised one hand and dragged it down the trunk of a massive oak.

Five deep gouges appeared in the bark. Fresh. Raw. Sap weeping like blood.

He did it again. And again. Tearing into the wood with savage force, each strike punctuated by a sound that might have been a snarl or a sob.

Lia's breath caught in her throat.

Then Derek stopped. Pressed both palms flat against the scarred tree. His head bowed. Even from this distance, she could see him shaking.

Slowly—like it cost him everything—he turned.

His eyes found her window unerringly.

Gold. Still gold. Burning in the dying light.

They stared at each other across the distance. Predator and prey. Neither sure which was which.

Lia's hand moved to the window latch. She didn't know why. Didn't know what she'd say or do if she opened it.

But Derek saw the movement.

He took one step toward the cabin.

Then stopped. Froze. Every muscle locked.

His hands clenched into fists so tight she saw blood drip from between his fingers. He was clawing into his own palms.

"No," she heard him say. Just that one word, raw and broken. "No."

Then he turned and vanished into the shadows, leaving only the torn tree behind.

Lia's legs gave out. She slid down the wall, heart hammering.

After a long moment, she looked down at her wrapped palm. Blood had seeped through the white linen.

She unwrapped it slowly.

The cut was clean, already beginning to close. But the bandage Mark had given her—the one he said Derek had prepared—bore marks she hadn't noticed before.

Claw marks.

Deep gouges in the fabric, as if whoever had handled it had been gripping too tight. Fighting not to tear it apart.

Derek had prepared this bandage himself.

And he'd nearly shredded it in the process.

Lia pressed her bleeding palm against the fabric, her blood covering those desperate claw marks.

Six days until the marking ceremony.

Six days until she was bound to a man who clawed trees to shreds to stop himself from coming to her.

A man who looked at her blood with hunger and desperation and something that might have been need.

And she still didn't know what terrified her more:

The beacon she'd become.

Or the beast she'd awakened.

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