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After My Alpha Chose My Best Friend Over Me Novel Cover

After My Alpha Chose My Best Friend Over Me

The metal door of The Void clanged shut behind me for the last time, and I stood there, blinking against daylight that felt like knives. Three years. One thousand and ninety-five days since I'd seen the sun without silver bars cutting it into pieces. Warden Cass shoved a plastic bag into my hands—everything I owned in the world now reduced to a wrinkled dress, worn sneakers, and thirty-seven dollars in crumpled bills. "Bus ticket's inside," she said, her voice flat. "Don't come back, Stone." I nodded, my throat too dry for words. My wolf—Ember, she used to be called—stirred weakly somewhere deep inside me, a flicker of consciousness so faint I wondered if I'd imagined it. The wolfsbane injections had done their job well. Too well. I walked through the gates, each step feeling like I was dragging chains that weren't there anymore.
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Chapter 3

I woke up drowning in silk.

My hands clawed at the sheets, panic flooding my veins. Not the scratchy prison blanket. Not the basement cot. Silk. Soft and expensive and wrong.

I bolted upright, and pain shot through my ribs. The room spun. Cream walls. Tall windows with actual curtains. A fireplace with embers still glowing.

Where—

The door opened.

I scrambled back against the headboard, my heart hammering. A man stepped inside, broad-shouldered and wearing a Beta's insignia on his collar. His eyes were cautious, hands raised like I was a spooked animal.

"Easy," he said. "You're safe. I'm Beta Marcus. You're in the Obsidian Pack House."

Obsidian Pack. Reed's enemy. I'd crossed into enemy territory and—

The scent hit me. Pine and rain and something that made my broken wolf stir for the first time in years.

Mate.

No. No, no, no.

"I need to leave," I said, my voice cracking. "Please, I'll just go. I won't cause trouble."

"You nearly drowned." Another voice, deeper, carrying weight that pressed against my chest. The man who stepped past Marcus was massive, all controlled power and amber eyes that saw too much. Alpha Dawson Willis. "You've been unconscious for two days."

Two days. I looked down at myself. Someone had changed me into clean clothes. Panic clawed higher.

"We are Fated Mates," Dawson said, and the words landed like stones. "The bond—"

"No." I shook my head so hard it hurt. "I can't. I won't. Please, I'll be a servant, I'll work, just don't—" My voice broke. "I can't do this again."

Something flickered in his eyes. Not anger. Understanding, maybe. Or pity. I hated both.

"I won't force the bond," he said quietly. "But you're not leaving. Not until you're healed. Not until it's safe."

"I'm always safe," I lied.

He just looked at me, and I knew he saw through it. Saw the bruises on my knees from scrubbing floors. Saw the way I flinched when he moved.

"Rest," he said, and left.

I didn't rest. I paced. Three days later, when my legs stopped shaking, I explored.

The Pack House was beautiful in a way Silver Lake never was—functional, strong, honest. I found myself in a study, and my feet stopped moving.

Blueprints covered the desk.

I shouldn't have looked. Shouldn't have cared. But my hands reached for them anyway, my architect's eye catching the problem immediately. The defense wall design—the load-bearing calculations were wrong. The foundation wouldn't hold. In six months, maybe a year, the whole thing would collapse.

I grabbed a red pen from the desk.

My hand moved on instinct, correcting angles, redistributing weight, adding support where it was needed. The numbers flowed like they always had, the only language that never lied to me.

"Interesting."

I dropped the pen. Dawson stood in the doorway, arms crossed, watching me destroy his plans.

"I'm sorry," I said quickly. "I shouldn't have—"

"You just saved my pack from a structural failure that would have killed people." He moved closer, studying my corrections. "Who taught you this?"

"My father. And books. And—" I stopped. "I designed most of Silver Lake's structures. The Pack House. The training grounds. The—" My throat closed. "Reed took credit. But they were mine."

Dawson's eyes sharpened. "Prove it."

So I did. I grabbed a blank sheet and sketched Silver Lake's eastern wing from memory, showing him the flaw in the support columns, the ones I'd noticed the day I came home. I showed him everything I'd built and everything Reed had stolen.

When I finished, Dawson was quiet for a long moment.

"I'm hiring you," he said. "Pack Architect. Salary, benefits, your own workspace. You'll redesign our defenses."

"I'm a criminal," I whispered. "A rogue. I—"

"You're an architect," he said. "And I need one. This isn't charity, Naomi. This is business."

The way he said my name made something crack inside my chest.

Two weeks later, I was wiping down tables at Rosie's Diner on neutral ground, my second job. The money from Dawson was good, but I needed more. I'd found out where Millie had pawned my father's badge. Three hundred dollars to buy it back.

I was almost there.

The bell over the door chimed.

I looked up, and my blood turned to ice.

Reed walked in, Millie on his arm, both of them laughing. They took a booth by the window. I kept my head down, praying they wouldn't notice.

"Well, well," Reed's voice carried across the diner. "Look who's slumming it."

I kept wiping the table.

"Naomi." His Alpha tone made my knees weak, but I stayed standing. "Come here."

I had no choice. I walked over, order pad in hand.

Millie's smile was poison. "Cute uniform. Really suits you."

"What can I get you?" I asked, my voice flat.

Reed leaned back, studying me. "You smell different. Like rogue. Like—" His eyes narrowed. "You're in Obsidian territory."

"I work there," I said.

"For Dawson Willis." Reed's hand shot out, grabbing my wrist hard enough to bruise. "You're spying for him. You're—"

The diner doors exploded open.

The temperature dropped. Every wolf in the room froze, their instincts screaming danger.

Dawson stood in the doorway, and his Alpha Aura crashed over us like a tidal wave. Reed's hand released my wrist. Millie whimpered. The human customers looked confused, feeling something they couldn't name.

Dawson crossed the diner in three strides. He didn't touch me, but he positioned himself between Reed and me, his presence a wall.

"You just touched my employee," Dawson said, his voice soft and deadly. "That's an act of war, Hoffman."

Reed's face went white. "I didn't know—"

"Now you do." Dawson's eyes glowed amber. "Touch her again, and I'll rip your throat out with my bare hands."

He turned to me, his expression softening just slightly. "Your shift's over. Let's go."

I followed him out, my wrist throbbing, my heart racing.

In the parking lot, Dawson finally looked at my wrist. His jaw clenched.

"He's going to pay for that," he said quietly.

And somehow, I believed him.

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