Follow
Chapters
Share
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.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

The inter-pack network moved faster than grief.

Within two days of Andrew's death, the condolence letters started arriving — thick cream envelopes sealed with pack crests, delivered by Betas and Gammas who stood too straight and looked around too carefully for men who were only here to pay respects. I recognized the pattern. I had watched Andrew receive delegations like this for two years. The words said sorrow. The eyes said opportunity.

Zayne received them in the Alpha suite.

I was not invited to the first three audiences. I heard about them secondhand — fragments from the pack house staff, the careful hush that falls over a hallway when an Alpha from another territory is walking through it. The Blackridge Pack sent their Beta with a letter and a case of aged whiskey. The Thornwall Pack sent their Gamma and a proposal to renegotiate border patrol schedules. The Silverfang Pack sent nothing yet, which was its own kind of message.

On the fourth day, Zayne's Beta — a steady, unreadable wolf named Cole whose face never gave you anything you hadn't earned — appeared at my door.

"Alpha Zayne requests your presence at the formal reception for the Ashwood delegation. Two o'clock."

Requests. Not asks. Not invites.

"In what capacity?" I said.

Cole looked at me with the particular blankness of a man who had already been told the answer and did not intend to elaborate. "As Luna."

The dead mark on my neck pulsed faintly. Not with warmth — it hadn't carried warmth in two years — but with a dull, heavy awareness, like scar tissue remembering the knife.

I dressed in a fitted charcoal dress that covered my collarbones and the back of my neck. I pinned my hair up. I looked in the mirror and saw exactly what the Ashwood delegation was supposed to see: a composed, appropriate Luna standing beside her pack's new Alpha during a period of transition. A signal of continuity. A prop.

I had been a prop before. I knew how to hold still.

The Ashwood Alpha was a broad-shouldered man in his forties named Harlan, with a handshake that lasted one beat too long and eyes that catalogued everything in the room before settling on Zayne. His Beta stood slightly behind him, hands clasped, watching me with the polite curiosity of someone trying to calculate my relevance.

I stood at Zayne's right side. The traditional Luna position. Close enough that the scent hit me like walking into a wall.

Cedar and cold stone after rain.

My wolf stirred — not the violent lurch from the first time, but something slower and more dangerous. A leaning. Like she was pressing herself toward the surface of my skin, trying to get closer to the source.

I kept my face arranged. I kept my hands still. I did not look at Zayne.

He did not look at me either. But I felt the moment his breathing changed — one slow inhale through his nose, controlled and deliberate, the way you breathe when you are managing something that does not want to be managed.

Harlan offered his condolences with the practiced gravity of a man who had rehearsed them in the car. He spoke about Andrew's legacy, the strength of the Ironveil territory, the importance of stability during transitions of power. Standard language. Every word a probe.

"Alpha Andrew built something remarkable," Harlan said, his gaze shifting briefly to me. "And Luna Kendall's presence here speaks to the continuity of that vision."

I smiled the Luna smile. "Thank you, Alpha Harlan. Ironveil's strength has always been its people."

A nothing sentence. A perfect sentence. Andrew would have approved.

Beside me, Zayne's aura shifted — not visibly, not in any way Harlan would have registered, but I felt it. A tightening. Like the air around him had drawn half an inch closer to his body.

The reception lasted forty minutes. I stood. I smiled. I said the right things at the right moments. And the entire time, the mate-bond scent sat between Zayne and me like a third person in the room — enormous, undeniable, and completely ignored.

When Harlan left, I turned toward the door without waiting to be dismissed.

"Kendall."

I stopped. Not because of the Alpha tone — he hadn't used it. Just my name, spoken in that flat, even register that gave you nothing.

I turned back. He was standing by the window again, the way he had been the first time. Afternoon light behind him. His face unreadable.

"The Silverfang delegation arrives Friday," he said. "You'll be present for that as well."

Not a question.

"Fine," I said.

I walked out. I did not press my thumbnail into my palm until I was in the hallway and the door was closed behind me.

---

That night, I sat on the bed in the Luna quarters — Andrew's quarters, technically, though I had moved his things into storage the morning after the funeral with a calm efficiency that surprised even me — and I opened the velvet case I kept in the bottom drawer of the dresser.

Diamonds. A sapphire pendant. Two sets of earrings, one ruby, one emerald. A platinum bracelet with a clasp shaped like a crescent moon. All gifts from Andrew, presented at pack events with the careful public tenderness of a man who wanted witnesses to his generosity.

I had never worn any of them by choice. They were currency. That was all they had ever been.

I picked up my phone and called Margot Sable, a broker who operated out of the Cedarfall Pack territory. She dealt in high-end jewelry and luxury goods, discreet transactions, no questions about provenance. I had found her name through a contact at a human consignment shop six months ago and saved it for exactly this moment.

Margot answered on the third ring. I described the pieces. I sent photographs. She was quiet for a moment, then quoted a preliminary range that would have covered four months of my grandmother's treatment.

"I can have them appraised by Thursday," she said. "Bring them to the Cedarfall border crossing. I'll send coordinates."

I exhaled. "Thursday works."

On Wednesday, Margot called back.

"I'm sorry," she said. Her voice had changed — tighter, more careful. "I'm not able to take this on right now. Scheduling conflict."

"You said Thursday."

"I know. I'm sorry. I'd recommend trying someone else."

She hung up before I could ask anything else.

I called Oren Drake, a buyer in the Thornwall territory who specialized in estate pieces. He had a reputation for fast, clean deals.

Oren didn't answer. I left a message. Two hours later, I received a text: Not taking new clients at this time.

I called a third contact — a human-adjacent dealer named Suki who operated near the Blackridge border and had no formal pack affiliation. She listened to my description, asked for photos, and said she'd get back to me within the hour.

She got back to me in twenty minutes.

"I can't help you," Suki said. No apology. No explanation. Just the flat finality of someone who had been told, not asked.

I sat on the edge of the bed with my phone in my hand and the velvet case open beside me. Three contacts. Three territories. Seventy-two hours. Every door closed in the same way — quickly, cleanly, and without a single reason given.

I didn't need a reason. The pattern was the reason.

Zayne had not told me he was doing this. He had not warned me, threatened me, or made any kind of declaration. He had simply reached into the network that connected every pack territory within range and made sure that no one would touch what I was selling.

He hadn't locked me in. He had locked everything else out.

I closed the velvet case. I pressed my thumbnail into my palm until the crescent mark went white. Then I picked up my phone, opened the calculator app, and looked at the number I already knew by heart — the outstanding balance at St. Mercy's, the transplant program timeline, the gap between what I had and what my grandmother needed to survive.

The gap had not changed. The gap was not going to change. Not through jewelry. Not through brokers. Not through any route that did not pass directly through Zayne Collins.

I set the phone down and stared at the wall.

Friday was the Silverfang reception. I would stand at his side again. I would smell cedar and cold stone. I would keep my face arranged and my hands still and my wolf pressed down beneath the surface where she couldn't reach anything that mattered.

And after that — after the delegations and the receptions and the performance of continuity — I would go to him. And the transaction we had agreed to would begin.

I turned off the light and lay on my side, the way I always slept. Not on my back. Never on my back.

The dead mark on my neck throbbed once in the dark, faint and cold, like a door that had been locked from the inside by a man who no longer existed.

Every door. Every single door.

All of them his.

You may also like

Alpha's Betrayal, Luna's Vengeance Novel Cover
9.6
On my birthday, Killian, the Alpha of the Black Moon Pack and my mate of six years, gifted me a cheap pair of pajamas worth less than a hundred bucks. Meanwhile, he presented Veronica, his childhood crush, with a set of luxurious gold lingerie. The blatant favoritism ignited a fire within me, and I confronted him immediately. But he dismissed my anger with a sharp command, his alpha tone cutting through the air like a blade. "Veronica’s been struggling lately, and gold wards off misfortune. Stop overreacting, Luna," he snapped before banishing me from my own celebration with a wave of his hand. That night, Veronica flaunted her gift on the pack’s social network, posting a photo of herself in the golden lingerie with the caption: "Fits perfectly—Alpha Killian always knows me best after all these years ~" Six years of our mate bond couldn’t rival their eight-year friendship. Furious and heartbroken, I instructed Marianna, my Beta and most trusted assistant, to draft the dissolution of our mate bond, ensuring Killian would lose everything he held dear. --- When Killian returned to the pack house, he found me shredding one of his prized shirts—a gift from Veronica on his eighteenth birthday. He rushed in, not bothering to remove his shoes, and shoved me aside to salvage the remnants.
Alpha's Betrayal of His Mate Novel Cover
8.3
I felt the familiar warmth of my wolf, Lyra, stirring inside me as I placed a protective hand over my swollen belly. Five months pregnant with James's heir—our miracle, our future. The pack house was quiet tonight, most wolves already retired to their quarters after the full moon celebration. "Something's wrong," Lyra whispered in my mind, her anxiety rippling through our shared consciousness. I frowned, setting down the herbal tea I'd been sipping. "What is it?" "Our car... someone's taken our car." I moved to the window of our Alpha suite, peering out into the moonlit courtyard. The space where my silver SUV should have been parked was empty. A chill ran down my spine that had nothing to do with the night air. "James?" I called through our mate bond, reaching for the comforting presence of my Alpha.
Banished by My Pack, Chosen as the True Luna Novel Cover
9.5
I was supposed to become the Luna of Silver Fang Pack. Instead, my Alpha rejected me in front of everyone. Declared wolf-less. Useless. Unworthy. Humiliated and abandoned, I discovered a secret that changed everything—I was carrying his child. The man who once promised to protect me wanted me hidden away while he prepared to marry another woman. So I ran. I thought I was escaping with nothing. I was wrong. In the northern wilderness, I found a Pack of outcasts led by Alexander—a powerful Alpha who saw value in me when no one else did. As strange abilities awaken inside me, I learn the truth: I was never cursed. I was chosen. Now the Alpha who rejected me wants me back. The woman who stole my place wants me dead. And the Moon Goddess herself has plans for me that could change the future of every wolf alive. They called me a failure. They banished me from my Pack. But soon they'll learn the truth. The Luna they rejected was the one destined to rule them all.
Dropping The Ultrasound On My Alpha's Mating Altar Novel Cover
8.7
She walked into her mate's office with an ultrasound and walked out with nothing — no bond, no pack, no future, just a secret heartbeat she refused to let die. Kaelen Thorne didn't just choose her half-sister. He chose the woman sitting on his desk, the woman carrying his "heir," while Elara's pregnancy stayed crumpled in her fist — the truth she swallowed to survive. She crossed a frozen river to escape. She built a quiet, hidden life around a boy with dark hair and eyes that glow wrong in the dark. She thought she was safe. She wasn't. Five years after the rejection, two men walk through her diner door on the same morning: the Lycan Prince who pulled her from that river and never stopped knowing her secret, and the Alpha who threw her away and just realized what he threw. Elara Vance is done being a dry well. She was never weak — she was just waiting. But now Valerius knows what her son is, Kaelen knows the heir he abandoned, and the black venom that wept from her neck the night her bond broke is finally waking up. The only question is: which of them is more afraid of what she becomes next?
Mated To The Cursed Alpha  Novel Cover
9.7
She thought it was just a wounded animal. Until he turned into the most dangerous man she's ever seen... right in her living room. Dr. Elena Voss was just trying to save a dying dog. She didn't expect him to shift into a scarred, growling Alpha who claims they're fated... and that her touch is the only thing keeping his curse from killing him. He's not just a werewolf. He's the cursed Alpha of a collapsing pack. And she's not just human-she's an Empath, the last of a bloodline so powerful it was wiped out. Now? Everyone wants her dead. Hunters are closing in. Witches want her blood. And Kael-the dark, broken Alpha-wants her in every way imaginable. His body is addicted to her. Her power answers only to him. And every second she spends with him? She's one heartbeat closer to losing herself completely. But breaking his curse might kill her. Loving him definitely will. One touch awakened the bond. One lie could end everything. And the next blood moon? Could be her last.
Reborn To Ruin: The Jilted Heiress's Revenge Novel Cover
8.9
I lay on a mildewed mattress in a run-down motel, my body trembling from withdrawal. Once the most feared "Gossip Queen" in Hollywood, I was now a forty-three-year-old ghost staring at a cracked mirror, waiting for the end. The door clicked open, and Brittany Potts stepped in, looking immaculate in a beige trench coat that cost more than my life. She didn't come to help; she tossed a waiver of marital assets onto my bed and handed me a cup of coffee laced with something that smelled like bitter almonds. She laughed, telling me my husband, Bennet, was already in the Bahamas celebrating my death. I froze when I saw the sapphire pendant around her neck—my mother’s necklace, which had vanished the day she died. As the poison began to burn through my chest, Brittany leaned in and whispered her final secret: she was the one who cut the brake lines on the car that killed my father when we were teenagers. My entire life had been a lie. The pills, the scandal, the bankruptcy—it was all a masterpiece of betrayal orchestrated by the two people I trusted most. I died on that filthy floor, suffocating on my own rage and the taste of chemicals, praying for a single chance to make them pay. But when I opened my eyes, the pain was gone. I was sitting in my old bedroom, the morning sun shining on a calendar that read September 15, 2024. My mother’s voice, warm and alive, called me for breakfast from downstairs. I was eighteen again, back in my senior year at Crestview Academy, and the monsters who destroyed me were still pretending to be my friends. This time, I’m the one who holds the shears.