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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 3

The interrogation room in the Blood River pack house was nothing like the velvet-draped cages Preston preferred. It was stark concrete, smelling of damp earth and old iron. A single bulb flickered overhead, casting long, dancing shadows against the walls. I sat on a metal chair, my hands resting flat on the cold table, resisting the urge to wring them together.

Across from me sat Alpha Mark. He hadn’t bothered to put on a shirt since shifting back at the riverbank, only throwing a leather jacket over his bare chest. It should have been intimidating—the raw display of power and muscle—but his eyes held a calculating intelligence that terrified me far more than brute strength.

"You're asking for a lot, Mariana," Mark said, his voice a low rumble that vibrated through the metal table. "Sanctuary. Protection from a neighboring Alpha. That’s an act of war."

"Preston is already at war with you in everything but name," I countered, keeping my voice steady. "He’s bleeding funds to encroach on your northern borders. He’s bribing the council to overlook your territorial claims."

Mark leaned back, crossing his arms. "And why should I trust the woman who slept in his bed for five years? You could be a spy. A pretty little Trojan horse sent to open my gates."

I didn't flinch. I reached into my pocket and pulled out a folded piece of paper—a map I had drawn from memory during my escape. I slid it across the table.

"The Eclipse Pack is nearly bankrupt," I said flatly. "Preston has been funneling money into 'charity projects' to boost his image, leaving the eastern perimeter defenses virtually non-existent on Tuesdays and Thursdays due to staffing cuts. If you wanted to strike, you wouldn't need a spy. You’d just need a calendar."

Mark picked up the map, his eyebrows raising slightly as he studied the detailed notations of patrol routes and blind spots. He looked up at me, a new glint in his amber eyes. Respect?

"You’re selling him out," he observed.

"I’m buying my freedom," I corrected. "I am not a damsel, Alpha Mark. I am an asset. I know his books, his strategies, and his weaknesses better than he knows them himself."

Mark stood up, the chair scraping loudly against the floor. He extended a large, calloused hand across the table. "Deal. But if I catch even a whiff of betrayal, Mariana, I won’t just exile you. I’ll hunt you myself."

I stood and took his hand. His grip was warm and firm, encompassing my smaller hand completely. As our skin touched, a jolt of static electricity—sharp and undeniable—zipped up my arm, settling heavily in my chest. My wolf stirred, lifting her head with interest for the first time since the rejection. Mark stiffened, his eyes widening a fraction. He felt it too.

We both pulled away quickly, the air between us suddenly thick with unspoken tension. Politics came first. Always politics.

***

Life at Blood River was a shock to the system. There were no grand speeches about saving the weak, no performative charity. Everyone worked. Everyone fought.

Two days later, I found myself in the training ring. Mark had insisted on evaluating my combat skills personally. The sun beat down on the dusty arena as I circled him, my breathing heavy. I was rusty. Five years of playing the perfect, submissive Luna had softened my edges.

Mark lunged, a mock strike aimed at my shoulder. I dodged, but my footing slipped. I scrambled back, instinctively curling inward to protect my vital organs—a submissive posture.

Mark froze. He raised a hand, perhaps to help me up or to signal a break.

I flinched.

It was a small, involuntary jerk of my head, expecting a blow or a condescending pat. The air in the training ring went dead silent.

Mark lowered his hand slowly, his expression darkening. It wasn't anger at me; it was a cold fury directed at the ghost of the man who had trained that reaction into me.

"Stand up, Mariana," he commanded softly.

I scrambled to my feet, dusting off my leggings, shame burning my cheeks. "I'm sorry, Alpha. I—"

"Don't apologize," he cut me off. He stepped into my personal space, forcing me to look up at him. "In this pack, we do not cower. We do not flinch. If someone raises a hand to you here, you don't bow. You bite back."

He grabbed my wrist, placing a training dagger in my hand. "Again. And this time, if I come at you, you aim for my throat."

***

The peace didn't last long. By the end of the week, the perimeter alarms were wailing.

Preston had arrived.

I stood on the ridge overlooking the borderlands, dressed not in silk and velvet, but in borrowed tactical leathers that fit like a second skin. Beside me, Mark radiated a lethal calm, his warriors fanned out behind us in a wall of muscle and teeth.

Down in the valley, Preston stood in front of his Escalade, flanked by two dozen of his Gamma guards. He looked frantic, his hair disheveled—the picture of a worried mate.

"Mark!" Preston’s voice was amplified, booming across the clearing. "You have kidnapped my Luna! She is mentally unstable! She needs her medication and her Alpha! Send her down, and there doesn't have to be bloodshed!"

Mentally unstable. Of course. That was the narrative. Mariana the broken toy, lost without her owner.

Mark looked at me. "Your call."

I stepped forward to the edge of the ridge, letting the wind catch my hair. When Preston saw me, his relief was palpable, quickly followed by confusion at my attire.

"Mariana!" he shouted, opening his arms wide. "Thank the Goddess. Come down here, sweetheart. I forgive you for running away. Josie is worried sick about you!"

I laughed. It was a dry, humorless sound that carried down the valley. "You don't get to forgive me, Preston. And I don't need your medication."

I let my aura flare. It wasn't the soft, muted presence of a Luna anymore. I pushed the suppression down, letting the Alpha blood of the Moonstone line surge forward. It wasn't as strong as Mark's, but it was undeniable—heavy, metallic, and commanding.

Preston stumbled back as if I’d slapped him. His warriors shifted uneasily, sensing the power rolling off me.

"I am not your Luna," I projected my voice, clear and biting. "And I am not your charity case. I pledge my allegiance to the Blood River Pack. If you want me, Preston, you'll have to come through them."

Beside me, Mark let out a low, approving growl. He stepped closer, his shoulder brushing mine, his massive aura flaring up to wrap around mine like a shield. It was a public declaration. He was claiming my fight as his own.

Preston’s face twisted from concern to an ugly, snarling rage. He had lost his audience. He had lost his victim. And for the first time, he looked small.

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