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After My Alpha Died, His Son Took Control of Me Novel Cover

After My Alpha Died, His Son Took Control of Me

Andrew Collins died the way he lived — performing strength he no longer had. It happened during the shift. Three senior pack members were there. They said it was quick. They said it with the careful, neutral faces of people who had already decided what version of events the pack would receive. By the time the news reached me, it had already been shaped into something dignified: the Alpha had passed during a ceremonial shift, his wolf at peace, his legacy intact. I stood at the funeral rites in the dress a Luna is supposed to wear. I kept my hands folded. I kept my face arranged. I had been practicing that face for two years — the composed, grateful, quietly grieving widow.
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Chapter 1

Andrew Collins died the way he lived — performing strength he no longer had.

It happened during the shift. Three senior pack members were there. They said it was quick. They said it with the careful, neutral faces of people who had already decided what version of events the pack would receive. By the time the news reached me, it had already been shaped into something dignified: the Alpha had passed during a ceremonial shift, his wolf at peace, his legacy intact.

I stood at the funeral rites in the dress a Luna is supposed to wear. I kept my hands folded. I kept my face arranged. I had been practicing that face for two years — the composed, grateful, quietly grieving widow. I was good at it by now.

What I was actually doing, the entire time, was counting.

The vault. Eight digits. My grandmother's name on a transplant waiting list at St. Mercy's, with a bill attached to it that I had been watching climb for twenty-four months. Andrew had promised me the healer's treatment in exchange for the mark. The healer's treatment had kept her stable. But stable was not the same as saved, and the human hospital's transplant program required funding I did not have and could not reach — not without the vault.

Andrew had never given me the code. He had never needed to. The code was the last leash, and he had known exactly what it was worth.

I told myself: after the rites. After the mourning period. Then I go to the vault, I present the account documentation he gave me when I accepted his mark, and I walk out of Ironveil with enough to give my grandmother her life back.

I had been waiting two years for this moment. I could wait three more days.

---

The morning after the rites concluded, I went to the vault room in the lower level of the pack house.

It was a plain room. Stone walls, a single overhead light, a panel set into the far wall that looked almost like a hotel safe if you didn't know what was behind it. I had been in this room once before, when Andrew showed it to me as a demonstration of what I was being given access to. He had not given me the code that day either. He had just wanted me to see it.

I set the account documentation on the administrator's desk. The administrator — a middle-aged wolf named Corrin who had always been careful to look slightly past me rather than at me — reviewed the papers without touching them.

"The panel requires Alpha bloodline authorization," he said.

I already knew that. "Andrew authorized my access when he marked me. It's in the documentation."

"Alpha Andrew's authorization terminated at his death." Corrin's voice was professionally flat. "The system recognizes only living bloodline. There is currently one living Collins."

The room was very quiet.

"Alpha Zayne," I said.

"All treasury access belongs solely to Alpha Zayne, yes." He paused. "I'm sorry, Luna Kendall."

He called me Luna. Out of habit, probably. Or pity. I wasn't sure which was worse.

I stood in front of the locked panel for a moment. The metal was cold and smooth and completely indifferent. I pressed my thumbnail into the center of my palm — a habit I'd developed somewhere in the second year of Andrew's marriage, a small private pressure to keep the surface of my face from doing anything I'd regret — and then I picked up my documentation and walked out.

---

I requested a formal audience with Zayne that same afternoon.

He granted it three days later. Alpha suite. His time, his terms. Of course.

I had met Zayne Collins exactly eleven times in two years. He had been at pack events, at formal dinners, at the two occasions when Andrew had required his son's presence for political optics. Each time, Zayne had looked at me with an expression I had never been able to fully read — not contempt, exactly, but something colder and more deliberate. Like a man who had already made a decision about you and was simply waiting for you to catch up.

I had told myself it was contempt. It was easier that way.

I dressed carefully for the meeting. Not to impress him. To remind myself that I was walking into a negotiation, not a confrontation, and that I needed to stay transactional. I had a number. I had documentation. I had a grandmother whose name was still on that list. That was all that mattered.

The Alpha suite door was open when I arrived. I stepped through it.

And then the air changed.

It hit me before I had taken three steps into the room — a scent I had never encountered before, something dark and clean, like cedar and cold stone after rain. My wolf, who had been silent for so long I had almost stopped believing she was there, lurched awake so suddenly that I lost half a step.

Across the room, Zayne went very still.

He was standing near the window, and the afternoon light was behind him, and he just — stopped. Like something had reached into his chest and grabbed. He breathed once, slowly, through his nose. Then he looked at me from a slightly different angle, the way you reorient yourself when the ground has shifted under your feet.

Neither of us said anything for a moment.

I knew what it was. My wolf knew what it was. The mate bond doesn't announce itself politely — it detonates, and then it sits in the room with you, enormous and undeniable, and waits to see what you'll do.

I pressed my thumbnail into my palm and walked to the chair across from his desk.

"Alpha Zayne," I said. "Thank you for seeing me."

His expression settled back into that unreadable cold. He sat down. "Luna Kendall."

I laid out my case the way I had rehearsed it. The account documentation. The asset entitlements Andrew had formalized when he marked me. The vault code, which I was owed as his marked Luna. My grandmother's situation at St. Mercy's — the transplant program, the outstanding balance, the timeline. I did not use the word please. I stated facts and I waited.

Zayne listened without moving. His Alpha aura was a low, steady pressure in the room, the kind that doesn't announce itself loudly but makes the air feel slightly heavier. I had lived under Andrew's aura for two years. I knew how to breathe through it.

This was different. Andrew's aura had always felt like a hand on the back of my neck. Zayne's felt like weather — something vast and impersonal that didn't need to push because it was simply everywhere.

When I finished, he was quiet for a moment.

Then he refused the formal asset settlement. He refused the partial release. He refused the healer's continued treatment arrangement — the one I had offered as an alternative, thinking it might be easier for him to authorize than a cash transfer.

Each refusal was delivered in the same even tone. Not cruel. Just final.

I had prepared for resistance. I had not prepared for the complete absence of any door.

"Then what," I said carefully, "are you willing to offer?"

He looked at me for a long moment. The mate-bond scent was still in the room — I could feel it at the edges of my awareness, white jasmine and winter rain, which I realized with a distant shock was coming from me. My own scent, reflected back through whatever the bond was doing to the air between us.

"Eight encounters," Zayne said. "One digit per encounter. You'll have the full code when it's done."

The room was very quiet.

I understood what he was saying. Every word of it. I sat with it for exactly one second — one second where something in my chest cracked open and the cold came in — and then I pressed my thumbnail hard into my palm and I looked at him and I said:

"Agreed."

Something moved across his face. It was gone before I could name it.

I stood up, gathered my documentation, and walked to the door. My hands were steady. I had made sure of that.

Behind me, I heard him breathe — once, slow, through his nose.

I did not look back.

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