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After My Alpha Betrayed Me, I Married His Rival Novel Cover

After My Alpha Betrayed Me, I Married His Rival

I wore the blue dress. Not because it was the most expensive one I owned, or because it matched the Ironcliff Pack's colors. I wore it because I had picked it out three weeks ago on a Tuesday afternoon, standing alone in a boutique in town, thinking about how Tristan's eyes always went to blue. Six years of small calculations like that. Six years of choosing things for someone else's reaction. The Ironcliff pack house was full by the time I arrived. Every major family in the region had sent someone — Silverpine, Greywood, the Ashford delegation from the coast. A Come of Age Ceremony for an Alpha heir was political theater as much as celebration, and everyone knew their role. Mine was to stand near the front, look like the future Luna, and remind every wolf in the room that the Silverpine-Ironcliff alliance was solid. I was good at my role.
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Chapter 1

I wore the blue dress.

Not because it was the most expensive one I owned, or because it matched the Ironcliff Pack's colors. I wore it because I had picked it out three weeks ago on a Tuesday afternoon, standing alone in a boutique in town, thinking about how Tristan's eyes always went to blue. Six years of small calculations like that. Six years of choosing things for someone else's reaction.

The Ironcliff pack house was full by the time I arrived. Every major family in the region had sent someone — Silverpine, Greywood, the Ashford delegation from the coast. A Come of Age Ceremony for an Alpha heir was political theater as much as celebration, and everyone knew their role. Mine was to stand near the front, look like the future Luna, and remind every wolf in the room that the Silverpine-Ironcliff alliance was solid.

I was good at my role. I had been practicing it for six years.

Tristan found me near the bar before the ceremony started. He smelled like whiskey already, his tie loosened, that easy grin on his face that I used to think meant he was happy to see me. Now I recognized it as the expression he wore when he had already decided something and hadn't told me yet.

"You look good," he said.

"You're drunk," I said.

He laughed. "It's my night."

I didn't argue. I never argued with Tristan when he was like this — I had learned early that it only made things worse, and I had spent six years being the one who made things better. I smoothed things over. I absorbed the damage. I told myself that was what loyalty looked like.

I found my seat near the front and watched the room fill up around me.

The ceremony started at nine. Alpha Gerald Mills gave a speech about legacy and bloodline and the future of Ironcliff. He was a precise, cold-eyed man who had always treated me like a line item in a budget — useful, accounted for, not particularly interesting. I sat with my hands folded in my lap and listened and waited for the part where Tristan took the stage and made it official.

He took the stage at nine-forty.

He was still grinning.

"I want to thank everyone for being here tonight," he said into the microphone, his voice carrying that particular loose warmth that whiskey gave him. "This is a big night. A night about the future."

I watched him. Something in my chest had gone very quiet.

"And I want to announce —" He paused, looked out at the crowd, and his eyes found mine for exactly one second before sliding away. "I want to announce that I've chosen my Luna."

The room shifted. A murmur, low and uncertain.

He said her name. I didn't know her — a she-wolf from one of the smaller Ironcliff families, standing near the side of the stage with wide eyes and pink cheeks. She looked surprised. Maybe she was. Maybe she wasn't.

It didn't matter.

The room went completely silent. Hundreds of wolves, and not one of them made a sound. I could feel the eyes turning toward me like a physical thing — slow, careful, the way you look at someone standing at the edge of something high.

I went still.

Not frozen. Not shattered. Just — still. The way I get when I'm reading a situation, measuring it, deciding what it requires. My wolf was quiet too, quieter than I expected, as if she had already known and had simply been waiting for me to catch up.

I looked at the promise ring on my finger. Silver band, small diamond. I had worn it for two years.

I reached over, picked up Tristan's glass from the table in front of me — he had left it there when he went up to the stage — and I slid the ring off my finger.

The clink it made dropping into the drink was very small. But the room was very quiet, and it carried.

I stood up.

I picked up my own glass, turned toward the stage, and I raised it.

"Congratulations," I said. My voice was steady. Steadier than I felt, maybe, but no one in that room would ever know that. "To the future Alpha of Ironcliff and his Luna. May the Moon Goddess honor the bond."

I drank. Set the glass down. Picked up my clutch.

And I walked out.

Past the front row, past the Greywood delegation, past the Ashford wolves who were already leaning together and whispering. Past two hundred stunned faces and not one of them said a word to me. I kept my chin level and my pace even and I did not look back. Not once.

The night air outside hit me like cold water. I stood in the Ironcliff parking lot for exactly three seconds, breathing it in.

Then my phone rang.

Grandfather.

I stared at his name on the screen. Of course. Someone had already called him — or he had someone watching, which was more likely. I answered.

"Get back to Silverpine." His voice was the temperature of January. "Now."

He didn't ask if I was all right. He never did.

---

The elder meeting was already assembled by the time I arrived. Seven wolves seated around the long table in the Silverpine council room, my grandfather at the head, and every face in the room wearing some version of the same expression: controlled alarm dressed up as disapproval.

My grandfather did not stand when I walked in. He looked at me the way he always looked at me — like a problem that had failed to solve itself.

"The Ironcliff alliance is gone," he said. "Greywood is already making inquiries about our eastern border. The Ashford Pack has requested a meeting to 'reassess terms.' We have three weeks before this becomes a territorial crisis."

I sat down. "I know."

"You should have managed him better."

Something moved through me — not anger, exactly. Something older and quieter than anger. "I spent six years managing him."

"Clearly not well enough." He folded his hands on the table. "If you cannot produce a solution to this within the week, I will have no choice but to reassign your standing. The pack cannot afford a future leader who cannot hold an alliance."

Omega. He didn't say the word but it sat in the room like smoke.

I looked at him. At the elders. At seven wolves who had watched me grow up and not one of them was looking at me like a person right now. I was a liability. A broken piece on a board.

I had been here before. Not in this room, not with these exact words, but in this exact position — being told that my value was conditional and my standing was borrowed and I had better fix something that was never my fault to begin with.

I was done bending.

I stood up.

"I'll have a solution by morning," I said.

My grandfather's eyes narrowed. "Siena —"

"By morning," I said again, and I walked out of the council room without waiting for his response.

---

I drove to Blackmoor alone.

It was past midnight by the time I reached the territory border. The Blackmoor pack house sat at the edge of a dense stretch of forest, all dark stone and clean lines — nothing decorative, nothing wasted. Like its Alpha.

The gate wolves stopped me. I gave them my name and my pack and told them I was there to see Rhys Patterson on a matter of pack business. They looked at each other. One of them made a call.

Five minutes later, I was inside.

Rhys was in his study when they brought me in. He was standing at the window with a glass of water — not whiskey, I noticed, not anything — and he turned when I entered with the particular unhurried quality of a man who had never once been surprised by anything and did not intend to start.

He was exactly as I remembered from the territorial negotiation three years ago. Tall, controlled, with the kind of stillness that wasn't calm so much as compressed. The Frost Lycan. That was what they called him across the territories. I had beaten him at that negotiation through sheer preparation and I had never been entirely sure he had forgiven me for it.

"Siena Sullivan," he said. Not a question.

"Rhys Patterson." I set my clutch on the chair beside me and stayed standing. "I have a proposal."

He waited.

I laid it out cleanly. No preamble, no apology for the hour. A contract mating — a formal, binding strategic bond. Silverpine would gain Lycan-level protection and the political weight of a Blackmoor alliance. Blackmoor would gain territorial access to the three contested forest parcels on our shared border and a direct route to the eastern coast through Silverpine land. Clean. Mutual. Logical.

He listened without interrupting. His expression didn't change.

When I finished, he was quiet for a moment. Then he crossed to his desk, opened a drawer, and produced a document.

A contract. Already drafted. Every term I had just proposed, laid out in clean legal language.

I stared at it.

"I've been expecting a proposal of this nature," he said, which was not quite the same as saying he had been expecting it from me, and I filed that distinction away to examine later.

He set the contract on the desk between us and extended his hand.

I reached across to shake it.

And then I caught his scent.

Dark cedar. Winter rain. Something underneath both of those things that I had no word for — something that moved through me like a current, like recognition, like a door opening in a wall I had spent years building.

My wolf went absolutely silent for one full second.

Then she said one word, very quietly, in the back of my mind.

*Mate.*

I went still. My hand was still in his. His grip was steady and warm and he was watching me with an expression that revealed nothing — absolutely nothing — and somehow that was the most unsettling part.

I shook his hand. I let go. I picked up the pen he offered and I signed the contract with my hand perfectly steady and my heart doing something I refused to name.

Rhys watched me sign. When I set the pen down, his eyes met mine, and for just a moment — one fraction of a second — something moved in them. Not surprise. Not triumph.

Something that looked, impossibly, like relief.

"Welcome to Blackmoor," he said.

I nodded once, picked up my copy of the contract, and told myself I had simply made a strategic decision.

I told myself that all the way to my car.

I almost believed it.

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