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After My Alpha Chose a Wolfless Rogue Over Me Novel Cover

After My Alpha Chose a Wolfless Rogue Over Me

The scent of burnt pine and rain always clung to Preston when he returned from patrol. It was a smell that used to make my wolf, Luna, whimper in gratitude—the scent of the man who pulled me from the ashes of my father’s pack house five years ago. Now, it just smelled like hypocrisy. I sat at the mahogany desk in the Alpha’s office, the ledger for the Eclipse Pack open in front of me. The numbers didn't lie, even if my mate did. We were over budget on border security again, bleeding funds to protect territories that weren't even ours. Preston loved to play the hero, extending his reach far beyond what was sustainable, just so neighboring packs would owe him favors. The heavy oak doors banged open, startling me. I didn't flinch, though. I learned long ago that flinching only fed his ego.
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Chapter 1

The scent of burnt pine and rain always clung to Preston when he returned from patrol. It was a smell that used to make my wolf, Luna, whimper in gratitude—the scent of the man who pulled me from the ashes of my father’s pack house five years ago. Now, it just smelled like hypocrisy.

I sat at the mahogany desk in the Alpha’s office, the ledger for the Eclipse Pack open in front of me. The numbers didn't lie, even if my mate did. We were over budget on border security again, bleeding funds to protect territories that weren't even ours. Preston loved to play the hero, extending his reach far beyond what was sustainable, just so neighboring packs would owe him favors.

The heavy oak doors banged open, startling me. I didn't flinch, though. I learned long ago that flinching only fed his ego.

"Mariana!" Preston’s voice boomed, breathless and laced with that adrenaline high he got from a crisis. "Get the medical kit. Now!"

He strode into the room, mud tracking across the pristine rugs I had just paid to have cleaned. In his arms was a girl. She was small, frail, and trembling so hard her teeth chattered. She was soaked to the bone, her clothes little more than rags, and she smelled… clean. Not like a rogue who had been living rough for months. She smelled like rain and fear, but underneath, there was nothing. No wolf scent. She was wolfless.

"Preston," I said, standing slowly. "Who is this?"

"A rogue. I found her wandering the northern border," he said, his eyes wild with that savior light I knew too well. He laid her gently on the leather sofa, treating her like fine porcelain. "She’s hurt, Mariana. Don't just stand there."

I looked at the girl. She wasn't bleeding. She was just cold. "She needs a blanket and a hot meal, not a medical kit," I observed dryly.

The girl looked up at me with wide, watery eyes, shrinking back into the cushions. "I'm sorry," she whispered, her voice trembling. "I didn't mean to cause trouble."

Preston turned on me, a low growl vibrating in his chest. "Look at her, Mariana. She's terrified. Have you forgotten what it's like to have no one? To be pulled from the wreckage?"

The words were a slap in the face. He never let me forget. Every day of the last five years was a reminder that I was the broken thing he had fixed.

"I haven't forgotten," I said, my voice steady. "But bringing a rogue into the Alpha’s office is a security breach. We don't know who she is."

He scoffed, walking over to me. He reached into his jacket and pulled out a crushed bouquet of moon flowers. The white petals were bruised and wilting. He shoved them into my hands.

"For you," he said, patting my head condescendingly. "My good little rescue. Always worrying about the rules. Josie needs us. She needs *me*."

I looked down at the flowers. I hated moon flowers. Their smell was cloying, like funeral lilies. I had told him this once, four years ago. He had laughed and told me I was wrong, that they were the symbol of the Moon Goddess’s grace. I had been accepting them ever since, choking on my own distaste.

"Thank you, Alpha," I said, the lie tasting like ash.

***

Dinner was a spectacle. Usually, the Alpha and Luna sat together at the head of the long communal table. Tonight, Preston had dragged a chair right next to his, seating the rogue—Josie—at his right hand. I was relegated to the left, the spot usually reserved for the Beta.

The pack sensed the shift. The clinking of silverware was quieter than usual. Eyes darted between me and the shivering girl Preston was currently hand-feeding a piece of steak.

"She’s so thin," Preston announced to the room, his voice projecting so everyone could hear his benevolence. "We must nurture the weak. It is the duty of the strong."

Josie chewed slowly, looking up at him with absolute adoration. It was the look I used to give him. It made my stomach turn.

Further down the table, a young warrior named Jax made a crude joke about rogues. It was disrespectful, a breach of conduct.

"Jax," I said, my voice cutting through the murmurs. "That is enough. Show some respect at the Alpha’s table."

The room went silent. Jax looked down, chastised. But Preston slammed his hand on the table, rattling the plates.

"Don't speak to my warriors like that, Mariana," he snapped. The Alpha tone in his voice hit me like a physical weight, designed to force submission. "Stop being jealous. It’s unbecoming. Be charitable, for once."

Jealous? I gripped my fork until my knuckles turned white. My inner wolf, usually dormant and suppressed under layers of gratitude, let out a low, dangerous growl. It wasn't a sound of submission. It was a sound of warning.

I didn't say a word. I just stared at my plate, letting the humiliation wash over me, storing it away with the rest of the darkness.

***

I didn't expect the summons to the Pack Hall an hour later. I thought the show was over for the night.

The Elders were there. The high-ranking warriors were there. And in the center of the room stood Preston, with Josie clinging to his arm like a vine.

I walked to the center of the circle, my chin held high. I was wearing my Luna ceremonial dress, a deep midnight blue. I looked like a queen. I felt like an executioner walking to my own hanging.

"Mariana Shaw," Preston began, his voice echoing off the stone walls. He didn't look at me; he looked at the crowd, performing for his audience. "For five years, I have tried to heal you. I have tried to make you whole after the tragedy of the Moonstone Pack."

A murmur went through the crowd. He was bringing up my dead family. Again.

"But a pack cannot be led by a broken wolf," he continued, feigning sadness. "You have given me no heirs. You have given the pack no strength. Your trauma runs too deep."

He turned to Josie, lifting her hand. "The Moon Goddess has shown me a new path. A chance to truly save a soul that is pure. Josie is my true chosen mate."

The air left the room. To reject a fated mate—or even a chosen mate of five years—was agony. It was a severing of the soul.

Preston looked at me then, his eyes gleaming with cruelty. He wanted me to scream. He wanted me to fall to my knees and beg him not to throw me away. He needed me to be the broken toy so he could be the big, strong man.

"I, Alpha Preston of the Eclipse Pack," he intoned, the ancient magic gathering in the air, heavy and suffocating, "reject you, Mariana Shaw, as my mate."

The bond snapped. It felt like a physical blow to the chest, a tearing of unseen ligaments. Pain, sharp and blinding, radiated from the mark on my neck. I saw Josie flinch, but she smiled through it, basking in his attention.

The entire hall held its breath. They waited for the tears. They waited for the Luna to crumble.

I closed my eyes for a second, feeling the pain. I acknowledged it. And then, I shoved it down into the dark pit where I kept everything else.

When I opened my eyes, they were dry. I looked Preston dead in the face. I saw his confusion flicker. He was waiting for the beg.

I squared my shoulders. My voice was not the soft whisper of a grateful rescue. It was cold, clear, and terrifyingly calm.

"I accept."

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