
After My Alpha Chose the Rogue’s Daughter Over Me
Chapter 2
I was not Mae anymore.
I knew it the moment I opened my eyes in the pack infirmary and felt the difference — the absence of that soft, aching warmth that had lived in my chest for as long as I could remember. Mae's warmth. Mae's hope. Gone, like a candle snuffed between two fingers.
What remained was something colder. Cleaner.
Me.
I sat up slowly, taking inventory. The body was bruised, the ribs tender, the left ankle wrapped tight. Manageable. I rolled my neck once, felt the vertebrae settle, and folded my hands in my lap just as the infirmary door swung open.
Finnley.
He walked in with Silas at his shoulder, the Beta hovering half a step behind the way he always did — useful, obedient, invisible. Finnley's gaze swept the room with the practiced authority of a man who expected the world to rearrange itself around his arrival. When it landed on me, something flickered across his face. Surprise, maybe. He'd been expecting tears.
'Mae.' His voice carried that particular weight Alphas used when they wanted you to feel small. 'I'm glad you're awake. I wanted to speak with you about your position in the pack going forward.'
I said nothing. I let the silence stretch — three beats, four — and watched him fill it with discomfort.
'Given the circumstances,' he continued, jaw tightening, 'I'm prepared to allow you to remain in Moonveil as a mid-rank member. It's more than most would offer.'
More than most would offer. I turned the phrase over once, the way you'd examine something you found on the ground before deciding it wasn't worth picking up.
'Mae is gone,' I said.
My voice came out flat. Even. Not cold the way grief is cold, but cold the way stone is cold — indifferent to temperature entirely.
Finnley blinked. 'What?'
'The she-wolf you rejected.' I held his gaze without effort. 'The one who spent three years shoring up your crumbling leadership, who exposed Petra Voss when she tried to crawl into your bed, who folded your Luna gown and left it exactly where she found it because she still had more dignity than you deserved.' I paused. 'She's gone. You should be grateful. She would have forgiven you eventually. I won't.'
The silence that followed was a different kind. Heavier.
Silas had gone very still. Finnley's expression cycled through something I didn't bother to name before settling into the familiar architecture of his arrogance.
'This is another performance,' he said. 'Another manipulation. You've always been good at this, Mae — reinventing yourself when the last version stopped working.'
I smiled. It didn't reach my eyes. I knew it didn't, because I felt nothing behind it.
'Believe whatever helps you sleep,' I said, and swung my legs off the cot.
---
I was out of the infirmary within the hour.
The Alpha quarters were at the top of the east wing, all dark wood and high ceilings and the particular smell of Finnley's authority soaked into every surface. I had lived in the adjacent suite for two years. I walked through it now like I was walking through a building I'd never owned.
I packed with mechanical precision. Clothes, documents, the small locked box that held Mae's personal records. Nothing decorative. Nothing sentimental. The framed photograph of the pack's eastern border at dawn — Mae's favorite — I left on the dresser without looking at it twice.
Pack members clustered in the hallway as I moved through it, a rolling murmur of whispers trailing behind me like smoke.
'She's lost it.'
'Did you see her face? Nothing there.'
'Good riddance.'
I didn't slow down. Their words landed and slid off, finding no purchase.
The room I claimed was in the farthest wing of the pack house — small, neutral, smelling of nothing. A bed, a desk, a window facing north. It was perfect. I set my bag down, sat at the desk, and opened Mae's financial files.
---
I worked through the night.
Mae had always known this pack's numbers better than anyone — better than Finnley, better than his Beta, better than the pack treasurer who'd been cooking the secondary accounts for two years and thought no one had noticed. She'd never used that knowledge. She'd been saving it, the way you save something precious, for a moment that never came.
The moment had come.
By the time the sky outside my north-facing window began to lighten, I had the full picture. Total assets. Liquid holdings. Territory valuations. The offshore accounts Kamari had been quietly bleeding for eighteen months. All of it, mapped and calculated and reduced to a single, precise number.
Forty-nine percent.
Not fifty. Fifty would destroy the pack, and I had no interest in destruction for its own sake. Forty-nine would cripple Finnley's operations just enough that he would feel every single consequence of what he'd done — every morning, every budget meeting, every decision — for years.
I wanted him to live with it.
I set down my pen, flexed my fingers once, and looked at the contract I'd drafted.
Clean. Bulletproof. Devastating.
Finnley Lynch had no idea what was coming for him.
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