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After My Alpha Chose Another, I Cut the Bond Novel Cover

After My Alpha Chose Another, I Cut the Bond

The ghost-mark on my neck started burning the moment I stepped into the banquet hall. I told myself it was nothing. Just nerves. Just cold air on three years of pale, raised skin where Cassian's mark should have been and never was. My name is Delilah Wilson. Daughter of a disgraced former Beta. Fated mate of Alpha Cassian Carter of Shadowridge Pack. Unmarked. Unacknowledged. Twenty-one years old, and tonight, under the full Moon Banquet, I had let myself believe, for one stupid hour while I zipped up my pale dress, that this might be the night he finally saw me.
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Chapter 3

I found out about the tracker on a Wednesday.

Bess told me, in the way Bess told me things — sideways, while she was doing something else, her eyes on the pot she was stirring and not on me. She said Marcus had sent one of the younger Deltas out before dawn three mornings running. Said the boy had come back each time and gone straight to Cassian's office.

I stood in the kitchen doorway and let that settle.

Cassian had rejected me in front of the entire pack. He had stood on that platform and said the words and chosen Aleyna and watched me hit the floor. And now he was having me followed.

I didn't say anything to Bess. I thanked her for the coffee and I went back to my room and I sat on the edge of my bed and I looked at the honey jar on the windowsill until the light changed.

I kept going to the neutral grounds. I didn't know what else to do with myself at five in the morning, and the bond-sickness was always worst before dawn — that hollow, nauseating pull in my chest, my body still reaching for a tether that had been ripped out of it. Running helped. The cold helped. And if August happened to be on the far side of the field when I got there, well. I hadn't asked him to be.

I told myself that every morning.

***

The ankle happened on a Thursday.

The neutral training ground had a section near the east fence where the terrain was uneven — old tree roots pushing up through the packed dirt, a dip in the ground that was invisible in low light. I had run that path a dozen times. I knew it was there. I was tired, and the bond-sickness had been bad the night before, and I misjudged the dip by half a step.

I went down hard. My right ankle folded under me and I hit the ground on my palms and one knee, and I stayed there for a moment with my teeth clenched and the cold dirt under my hands and the specific humiliation of having hurt myself doing something I was supposed to be good at.

August was across the field. He was there in under a minute.

He didn't make a fuss. He crouched beside me, checked the ankle with both hands — careful, clinical, the way someone trained in field assessment moves — and said, "It's not broken. You'll want to stay off it today."

"I'm fine," I said.

"You're limping," he said. "Let me drive you back."

I wanted to argue. My ankle throbbed every time I put weight on it and the pack house was forty minutes on foot. I looked at his face. He wasn't offering out of pity. He was offering because it was practical and he had a car and I was hurt.

"Okay," I said.

I didn't think about what it would look like. I should have.

***

They were on the steps when we pulled up.

Cassian and Aleyna, side by side, like they'd been placed there. Aleyna had her hand in the crook of his arm and a cup of something warm in her other hand and she looked like a photograph of what a Luna was supposed to look like. Cassian had his arms crossed. His eyes went to the SUV before we'd even stopped moving.

I saw the moment he clocked the crest on the door. Silver moon and crossed blades. The Lycan royal house. His jaw tightened.

August came around to my side. He opened the door and offered his hand to help me down — my ankle was still tender and the step was high — and his fingers closed around mine for maybe four seconds while I found my footing. His other hand came up briefly to steady my elbow.

Four seconds. That was all.

Cassian looked like he'd been struck.

I don't know what I expected. Indifference, maybe. He had rejected me. He had chosen her. He was standing on those steps with his chosen Luna's hand on his arm. He had no claim on me, no right to any expression at all, and yet the thing moving across his face was not indifference.

Aleyna's hand tightened on his arm. I watched her fingers press in, a small, deliberate pressure. She was smiling at me. The smile didn't touch her eyes.

"Delilah," she said, warm and pleasant. "What happened to your ankle?"

"Nothing," I said.

I walked past them both and into the pack house and I did not look back.

***

He found me in the corridor two hours later.

I heard him before I saw him — the particular weight of his footsteps, the way the air pressure in a hallway changes when an Alpha is moving through it with intent. I had just come out of the supply room with a roll of bandage wrap for my ankle. I turned and he was already there.

His hand closed around my wrist before I could step back.

Not a grab, exactly. Worse than a grab. Deliberate. His fingers wrapped all the way around and he pulled me back against the wall and the bandage wrap hit the floor and I felt the stone cold through my shirt.

"Cassian—"

"Who gave him permission," he said, "to put his hands on you."

His voice was low. Not the Alpha tone — something rawer than that, something that didn't have the pack's authority behind it, just his own fury, and somehow that was worse.

"He helped me out of a car," I said. "My ankle—"

"I don't care about your ankle." His grip tightened. I felt the bruise forming. "You are on my territory. You carry my pack's scent. You don't—"

"You rejected me," I said. Flat. Quiet. "Four weeks ago. In front of everyone. You said the words, Cassian. You said them."

Something moved through his face. He didn't let go.

His head dropped toward my neck.

I understood what he was doing a half-second before he did it, and my whole body went rigid — not from the bond, not from the ghost-mark's familiar ache, but from something colder and more fundamental. He was going to scent-mark me. Here, in this corridor, four weeks after the rejection, with Aleyna's perfume still on his collar.

The aura hit before his face reached my neck.

It came from the corridor entrance like a pressure front — dense, immense, the kind of power that doesn't announce itself because it doesn't need to. August's Lycan aura. I had felt it before, distantly, at the academy, the way you feel a storm before it arrives. Up close, in an enclosed space, it was something else entirely.

Cassian's wolf went down.

Not slowly. Not with a fight. His knees buckled and his grip on my wrist released and he caught himself against the wall with one hand, his head dropping, his whole body bowing under the weight of a power that outranked everything he was.

I looked toward the corridor entrance.

August stood in the doorway. His coat was still on. His expression was controlled and absolutely still, the way a very cold thing is still. He was not looking at me. He was looking at Cassian.

He didn't speak. He didn't move. He just stood there and let his aura do what it was doing, and the silence stretched out long enough that I could hear my own heartbeat.

Cassian straightened. It took effort. His jaw was tight and his eyes were dark and he looked, for one unguarded moment, like a man who had just understood something he didn't want to understand.

Then he walked away down the corridor without a word.

August's aura receded. The air in the hallway went back to normal, or something close to it.

I bent down and picked up the bandage wrap from the floor. My hands were steady. I was a little surprised by that.

August crossed the corridor and stopped in front of me. His eyes went to my wrist. I watched him look at it — the redness already deepening toward purple — and I watched him not say anything about it, because he understood that I didn't need him to.

"I'll have someone bring your things to the neutral house," he said quietly. "Tonight, if you want."

I looked at my wrist. Then at him.

"Not yet," I said.

He nodded once. He didn't argue.

I wrapped my ankle in the supply room and went back to my quarters and sat on the edge of my bed and looked at the bruise forming on my wrist in the afternoon light. Three days, Bess would have said. That kind of bruise takes three days.

On my windowsill, the honey jar caught the last of the sun and glowed.

My wolf was very quiet. But she was awake.

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