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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 5

I had known it was a trap before I walked through the door.

I had known it on the stairs when Petra's mouth did that small, satisfied twitch. I had known it in the empty corridor, in the set stillness of the room, in the way Aleyna was sitting on that examination table like she had been waiting for a long time and was very pleased the wait was over.

I had walked in anyway.

Because I didn't have a choice. Because the pack notice was under my door and the hierarchy was clear and I was an unmarked she-wolf with no standing and no Alpha and no one in this building who would have helped me refuse. Because three years of being made small had trained me to walk through doors I already knew were wrong.

So I stood in the center of the room and I looked at Aleyna's smile and I waited for whatever she had planned.

She didn't make me wait long.

"You know," she said, tilting her head, "I've been worried about you. The bond-sickness. It must be so hard."

One of the she-wolves near the counter made a soft sound. Not quite a laugh. The kind of sound that comes before one.

"I've seen it," Aleyna continued. Her voice was gentle. Concerned. A performance so polished it would have been convincing to anyone who hadn't spent three years watching her work. "The way you flinch when someone gets close to your neck. The trembling in the mornings. That look you get — like you're going to be sick."

She slid off the examination table and stood. She moved the way she always moved — easy, unhurried, like the room belonged to her because it did.

"Does it hurt?" she asked. "Right now? Is it hurting right now?"

She reached out and touched two fingers to the side of her own neck, mimicking the ghost-mark's location. Then she shuddered — a small, theatrical shudder — and looked at the circle with wide eyes.

The laughter came then. Low and collective, the sound of women who had been waiting for permission.

I kept my face still. I had learned that a long time ago. You give them nothing and they have to work harder for it, and sometimes the working harder is the only dignity you have left.

Petra stepped forward.

I had time to register her intention and not enough time to stop it. Her fingers hooked into the collar of my shirt and pulled it down and to the side, exposing the left side of my neck. The ghost-mark. That pale, faintly raised line of skin that had been forming for three years, embedding itself deeper every month, a scar of something that was never completed.

The room went quiet in a different way.

"There it is," Petra said. Her voice was almost reverent. She was looking at the mark the way you look at something you've been wanting to see for a long time. "The scar of a wolf too weak to be wanted."

She let go of my collar. She didn't step back.

"Three years," she said, to the room rather than to me. "Three years and he never marked her. What does that tell you?"

I heard the commentary move around the circle. Murmured, amused, the specific cruelty of women who have decided someone is beneath them and are enjoying the confirmation. I stood in the center of it and I breathed and I kept my face still and I thought about the honey jar on my windowsill and the way August had said *drive safe* in the cold outside the market.

Then Aleyna leaned in close.

Close enough that I could smell her — something floral and sharp, the scent she wore like armor. Close enough that her voice was only for me, a private thing in a public room.

"He told me," she said softly. "In bed. He said your scent made him physically ill." A pause. "He said the Moon Goddess must have made a mistake."

The circle went quiet.

Not the laughing quiet. The other kind. The held-breath kind, when everyone is watching to see if the thing they threw lands.

I felt it land. I won't pretend I didn't. Three years of devotion, three years of making myself smaller and quieter and less, three years of the ghost-mark pressing its ache into my neck every morning when I woke up — and underneath all of it, the question I had never let myself ask out loud: *what if he's right? What if the Moon Goddess made a mistake and the mistake was me?*

Aleyna was watching my face. Waiting for the collapse she had been engineering for weeks.

I heard the door.

Not a knock. Not a voice. Just the soft sound of it opening, and the particular weight of footsteps I had learned to recognize in corridors.

Cassian stood in the doorway.

He took in the room. Aleyna, close enough to me that I could feel her breath. Petra, still standing at my shoulder. The circle arranged around me like a frame. The ghost-mark exposed on my neck.

He understood what he was looking at. I could see it in his face — the quick, comprehensive read of the scene, the Alpha's instinct for the shape of a situation.

He did nothing.

He didn't speak. He didn't move. He stood in the doorway with his arms loose at his sides and he watched, and his silence settled over the room like a verdict.

That was the answer. That was the final, definitive answer to every question I had spent three years asking. Not the rejection at the banquet — that had been public, formal, a ritual with words and witnesses. This was quieter and worse. This was him seeing it and choosing to let it continue.

I looked at him for a long moment.

Then I looked at the healer's counter.

The silver-edged blade was on the tray beside the herb jars. Small. Practical. Used for cutting medicinal roots and dried stems, its edge kept sharp because a clean cut mattered in a healer's work. The handle was plain. The blade caught the light.

My hand moved before I had finished deciding.

The room registered it before anyone spoke. I heard Aleyna's breath change — a small, involuntary catch — and the circle shifted, that collective flinch of people who have been watching a performance and suddenly understand it has become something else.

I held the blade.

I looked at Cassian.

Not at Aleyna. Not at Petra. Not at the circle. At him, standing in the doorway, who had watched and said nothing, who had chosen and said nothing, who had stood there while they pulled down my collar and passed commentary on the mark his absence had carved into my skin.

I raised the blade to my neck.

To the ghost-mark. That pale, aching line of three years of devotion poured into nothing.

Aleyna said my name. I didn't hear it as a word.

I pressed the edge to my skin and I dragged it across the ghost-mark in one clean, deliberate motion.

The silver parted my skin with a sound like tearing silk.

The pain was immediate and total and I had expected it and it didn't matter. What I had not expected was the other thing — the sensation beneath the pain, deeper than the physical, the spiritual tether of the fated bond pulling taut as the blade cut through the mark that had anchored it. I felt it the way you feel a tooth being pulled: the resistance, the moment of held tension, and then the give.

The bond snapped.

The sound it made was not loud. It was the sound of a string pulled too taut finally giving way — a single, clean note that seemed to come from inside my chest rather than from the room around me.

Blood poured down my neck. Soaked into my collar. Pooled in the hollow of my collarbone, warm and immediate and real.

The ghost-mark split open and the bond died.

And then — nothing.

Not grief. Not relief. Not the hollow nausea of bond-sickness or the ache of three years of unanswered devotion. Nothing. A clean, absolute absence where the pain had lived for so long I had forgotten what it felt like to not have it.

I was free.

Cassian made a sound.

It came out of him before he could stop it — something broken and animal, the sound of a wolf losing its anchor, escaping his throat in a way that had nothing to do with choice. He lunged forward from the doorway.

I looked at him across the room.

His face was a thing I had never seen on him before. Not the cold authority. Not the contempt. Something raw and desperate and too late, the expression of a man who has just understood the weight of what he destroyed in the exact moment it became impossible to recover.

He reached for me.

The bond was already gone.

I felt nothing when he touched my arm. Not the old pull. Not the ghost-mark's familiar ache. Not even anger. I looked at his hand on my arm and I felt nothing at all, and I think that was the moment he understood — not the blade, not the blood, but the look on my face when he finally reached me.

Empty.

The door to the healing wing burst open.

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