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After My Alpha Betrayed Me, I Took His Pack Novel Cover

After My Alpha Betrayed Me, I Took His Pack

I stood in front of the full-length mirror in our bedroom—*his* bedroom, really, though the pack still called it ours—and smoothed the silk of my gown one last time. Deep emerald green, the color Jackson once said made my eyes look like cut glass. I'd chosen it deliberately. Tonight was our fifth mating anniversary, and I intended to look every inch the Luna he'd married. The dining table downstairs was set with precision: candles that cost more than most pack members spent on groceries, wine from the cellar he thought I didn't know he kept locked, and a meal I'd overseen personally because I no longer trusted our kitchen staff not to gossip. The anniversary gift I'd wrapped sat beside his plate—cufflinks engraved with the pack insignia, because sentimentality had stopped working on Jackson Moreno years ago, but vanity never failed. I checked my phone. He was twenty minutes late. My wolf stirred uneasily in the back of my mind, a low whine I felt more than heard. *He's not coming*, she murmured, and I silenced her with the practiced ease of someone who'd been having this conversation for longer than I cared to admit.
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Chapter 2

The morning sun cut through the packhouse windows at an angle that made everything look sharper than it was. I stood in the hallway outside the training grounds, watching Regina Carroll stride across the yard with the kind of confidence that came from not yet understanding how badly she'd miscalculated.

She'd called an emergency pack training session—using her Beta authority to override the schedule I'd set weeks ago. The message had gone out at dawn, and I'd read it over my unsweetened tea with the same detached interest I might give to weather I had no intention of standing in.

Dara appeared at my elbow, her expression carefully neutral. "She's trying to provoke you."

"I know."

"Half the warriors are confused. They're asking whether to follow your schedule or hers."

I took another sip of tea. "Redirect them to the eastern perimeter. We've had rogue scent there for three days, and Jackson's been too distracted to address it properly. Make it a critical border patrol—full rotation, extended shift."

Dara's mouth curved into something that wasn't quite a smile. "That'll leave her training session pretty empty."

"That's not my concern." I handed her my empty cup. "Make sure Marcus Vane is assigned to the patrol. He's been entirely too comfortable lately."

She took the cup and disappeared without another word. I didn't need to watch to know what would happen next: Dara's authority carried weight in this pack, and the warriors who mattered—the ones who actually kept Moonveil secure—would follow her lead over Regina's theatrical command any day of the week.

I turned away from the window and walked back to my office. I had resource audits to finalize.

---

Jackson's summons came an hour later, delivered via mind-link with enough alpha pressure behind it that a weaker wolf might have flinched.

*My office. Now.*

I finished the paragraph I was reading, saved the document to my encrypted off-site server, and stood. I didn't hurry.

When I entered his office, he was pacing behind his desk—a tell I'd catalogued years ago. He only paced when he was trying to convince himself he was in control.

"You undermined my Beta," he said, his voice already edging toward that alpha command tone that worked on everyone but me.

I closed the door behind me with a soft click. "I redirected warriors to address a security concern you've been ignoring for three days. That's not undermining. That's leadership."

"Regina called a training session—"

"Regina called a training session that conflicted with critical patrol schedules and served no strategic purpose beyond making herself feel important." I kept my voice even, almost gentle. "If she wants to play Beta, she should learn what the role actually requires."

His jaw tightened. "You will show her respect."

The air in the room shifted as he let his alpha aura bleed into the space—pressure, command, the weight of his authority designed to force submission.

I went still.

Not tense. Not braced. Just—still. Absolutely motionless in a way that made the hairs on the back of his neck rise, because he'd seen me do this exactly three times before, and each time someone had lost something they couldn't get back.

"Use that tone on me again," I said quietly, "and I will walk out of this office, out of this packhouse, and take every resource and ally that actually matters with me. You'll be Alpha of a territory that collapses within the month."

The aura faltered. Just slightly. Just enough.

"You can't—"

"The eastern perimeter has had confirmed rogue activity for seventy-two hours, Jackson. You've done nothing. Our supply routes are hemorrhaging money because you haven't reviewed the vendor contracts I flagged. The pack's financial reserves are down eighteen percent because you've been signing off on expenditures without reading them." I tilted my head, watching him. "You don't run this pack. I do. And the moment you forget that is the moment you lose everything."

He stared at me like I was something he'd never seen before.

I turned and walked out before he could find his voice.

---

I was halfway through the afternoon resource audit when Jackson's mother arrived at the packhouse.

I heard her voice before I saw her—that particular pitch of false warmth she used when she wanted an audience. I didn't look up from my work.

She found me in the archives, surrounded by file boxes and spreadsheets, and her smile was the kind that never reached her eyes.

"Adalee, dear. Working so hard, as always." She moved closer, her gaze sweeping over the organized chaos of my workspace. "Though I suppose you have to stay busy, don't you? A barren Luna who can't even keep her mate's attention—what else is there?"

The words landed like a physical blow.

I didn't move. Didn't breathe. The pen in my hand pressed hard enough against the paper that the tip nearly punctured through.

And suddenly I wasn't in the archives anymore.

I was in the packhouse three years ago, standing in the storage room where she'd cornered me over resource allocations she thought should belong to her. I could feel her hands shoving me backward, the sharp edge of the shelf catching my side, the way my body had known—instantly, horribly—that something was wrong. The cramping. The blood. The silent, agonizing hours in my bathroom where I'd lost the pup I'd never told anyone I was carrying, because telling Jackson would have meant explaining why his mother had put her hands on me in the first place, and he would have chosen her. He always chose her.

I blinked, and I was back in the archives. My hand was steady. My face was unreadable.

"If you'll excuse me," I said softly, "I have work to finish."

She watched me for a long moment, her smile fading into something colder, and then she turned and left.

I sat in the silence, surrounded by files that documented every resource this pack had, every asset I'd built, every piece of leverage I'd quietly secured.

And I realized, with a clarity that felt almost like relief, that I was done protecting people who had never protected me.

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