My Mate Rejects Me For Her Sister's Mate

My Mate Rejects Me For Her Sister's Mate

Daniel

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I'm Andrew, a wolf with "skin hunger".All I've ever craved is closeness. But for three cold years, my bonded mate Sophia, who's terrified of germs, only had eyes for Daniel, her sister Grace's mate. When I tried to get near her once, she sneered, "What, are you that desperate?"​ I found her workshop stuffed with Daniel's sculptures, and that's when I knew-I signed the bond-breaking papers . At an auction, I heard Daniel admit, "Sophia's my backup-she thinks I saved her." Then he had my vas deferens cut. Later, Sophia learned I was the one who'd saved her that day.​ When I bonded with my childhood friend Stella, Sophia begged, "Give me another chance!" I told her, "I don't love you anymore." Daniel attacked me, but Sophia took a dagger for me. Later, I got a letter from her: "Wishing you happiness." I hugged Stella tight-finally, I felt whole.

Chapter 1 Chapter 1

I'm Andrew Johnson, and I have this thing-skin hunger, they call it.

The awful, longing desire to be touched.

To feel somebody near. But my mate, Sophia Lewis, is a she-wolf with a germ phobia so acute that it is as if I were anathema to her.

I touch her arm and she scrubs her hands raw with half a bottle of sanitary wash.

I steal a kiss, and she scrupulously brushes her teeth for ten minutes, as if I were a kind of a wrecking germ.

I once attempted to act the drunken role, and staggered to her bed, hoping to find a crack in the ice wall encompassing her, but she rolled me out-me and the whole bed-clothing set, too. She rolled it out with us as if we were the trash of yesterday.

She stood over me, her eyes glistening as with the ice cold light of the winter's moon, and said to me, sneeringly:

"What, are you that desperate?"

The words were like a slap on the face, tingling, and made me shiver.

We have been bound together three years, and I had tried everything imaginableto get in touch with her.

She is a mountain, immovable.

The lowest point? I had resorted to the artifice of stealing her worn clothes from the laundry, and clutching them in my hands as a sort of a creep, in the hope of finding some reflection of herself.

Pathetic, isn't it?

But I had gotten to that point.

I was completely through with it.

I was through to the point of being beaten.

I went into my study and printed some bond-breaking papers which I had had prepared for several weeks, and poising myself, made up my mind to go and find her in the guest room and get her to sign them.

But when I entered the hall I saw her leave her room and make straight to her workshop at the end of the hall.

Sophia had been almost exclusively a painter before she took up her family's business, and this workshop of hers was her heaven, where she spent most of her time. Even on the occasion of our bond, or so-called sacred bond, she had spent the whole of the time inher own private room.

I used to ask about it occasionally, just out of curiosity, and she would look at me with a sudden frost in her face more rapidly.

I learned rapidly to avoid it, as I did not want to embitter her mind. But now, with the bond-breaking papers in my hands, what of it?

I had to know what this strange thing meant, which held her in such close leagues. I followed her after the manner of one of the shadows.

A glance through the apt crack of the door opened my mouth and I bit into my hand to stifle a gasp.

The workshop had its walls furnished with innumerable sculptures, each swathed in purple silk, thereby hiding their shapes.

But Sophia was on her feet before one of them, a life-size one, and there was a shy, hungry look in her countenance as she stood staring at it, and a look of blush on her face.

She moved forward, kissing the air where the lips of the statue would, alone, have been on it, and swayed in turn to it, and to a voice, soft, sweet and dripping with desire, instead of voice, and coldly commanding, as usual.

"Daniel," forsooth, she exclaimed, over and over again, "I want you; I need you."

The silk was gently slipped aside, disclosing the face of the statue. I recognized it instantly. Daniel Chase, to wit, who was the mate of her sister, I had no doubt about.

My heart shattered. All this time, I thought she was just wired different, too clean, too closed-off.

But no. Her passion was all for him, the wolf she could never have.

I couldn't watch anymore. Clutching the papers, I stumbled away, her low moans echoing in my ears. She stayed in there all night. I sat on the couch downstairs, staring into nothing, the papers crumpled in my fist.

Morning came.

Sophia rushed downstairs, barely glancing at me. "I'm heading to the old house," she said, her voice flat.

My eyes burned with the clarity of unspilled snarls.

I tore my mouth into a bitter grin, tasting the iron on my tongue.

"Sophia" I reached for the papers, holding them out, edges curling like crushed bone. "Sign."

She rocked back, brow knit, but her phone trilled.

Daniel's ring tone-one I recognized anywhere-and her concentration shattered.

She grabbed a pen, scrawled her name swiftly as her nose wrinkled at the tear stains that blurred my signature like raindrops on a scent trail.

Grabbing a cleansing wipe, she passed it over her hands as if my touch was a disease, and fled, her boots thumping on the floor.

I watched her go with the feeling in my chest of the rip of a pack bond, tears froze over, and I clenched the papers tighter.

I drove to the pack's court. The clerk handed me the receipt, her voice flat like rock. "Thick days' wait. After that she is free."

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