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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 3

He told me to come at ten.

Not a request. Just a time, delivered through Cole that morning with the same flat efficiency as a meeting notice. I spent the hours between then and now doing ordinary things — folding laundry, reviewing the St. Mercy's payment portal on my phone, eating half a bowl of rice I didn't taste. Practical things. Things that kept my hands busy and my mind from running ahead of me.

At nine fifty-eight, I walked to the Alpha suite.

The door was open. He was standing near the desk, jacket off, sleeves rolled to the elbow. The room smelled like cedar and cold stone and something underneath that I was already learning to recognize as specifically, devastatingly him. My wolf pressed forward the moment I crossed the threshold. I pressed back.

"Close the door," Zayne said.

I did.

The silence that followed was not uncomfortable exactly. It was loaded — the kind of silence that knows what it's waiting for. He looked at me with that expression I still couldn't fully name. Not contempt. Not hunger, though there was something in the vicinity of hunger. Something more deliberate than either.

I had decided, on the walk over, that I would treat this the way I had treated everything in the last two years. As a transaction. As a thing to be completed and filed away. I was good at that. I had built a whole life out of it.

I reached up and began to unpin my hair.

He crossed the room slowly. Not rushing. Like a man who had already decided the pace and saw no reason to deviate from it. When he stopped in front of me, close enough that the bond scent hit me in a wave — white jasmine and winter rain, mine, and cedar and stone, his, tangled together in a way that made my wolf go very quiet and very still — he lifted one hand and tucked a strand of hair back from my face.

The touch was so careful it almost undid me.

I kept my face arranged. I kept my breathing even. I was good at this.

What I was not prepared for was the moment my dress slipped from my shoulders.

Zayne went completely still.

I felt it before I saw it — the quality of the air changed, the way it changes before a storm when the pressure drops and everything holds its breath. I turned my head slightly and caught his reflection in the dark window glass. He was staring at my back. His jaw was set. His hands, which had been moving with that careful deliberateness, had stopped.

The scars are not dramatic. That's the thing about cigarette burns — they're small. Precise. Clustered in patterns that only make sense when you understand they were placed where clothing would always cover them. Andrew had been methodical about that. He was methodical about most things.

Zayne's eyes shifted. Not a metaphor — I mean his eyes actually changed, the pupils bleeding dark and wide the way a wolf's do when the animal is taking over from the man. His hands came up and braced flat against the wall on either side of me, and I heard him exhale — one long, controlled breath through his nose — and then another, and then a third, each one a little steadier than the last.

Through the bond — the incomplete, half-formed thing that lived in the space between us — I felt the echo of what was moving through him. Not pity. I would have known pity. I had received pity before and it always felt like being looked down at from a height. This was something lower and hotter and more violent than pity. This was the feeling of something that wanted to break things.

His wolf was trying to surface. I could feel it.

"Don't," I said.

He looked at me.

"I don't want your anger on my behalf." My voice came out flat and even. Good. "That's not what this is. I want the first digit. That's what this is."

Something moved across his face. It was gone before I could name it, the same way it had been gone before in every room we'd shared. He breathed once more. His eyes shifted back — the wolf receding, the man reasserting, though the effort of it was visible in the set of his shoulders in a way I had never seen on him before.

He was not as controlled as he wanted me to think. That was new information. I filed it.

What followed was — I don't have clean language for it. It was not what I had steeled myself for. He was not rough. He was not transactional. He was devastatingly, almost unbearably careful, in a way that made the transaction harder to hold onto, not easier. And when he understood — when the fact of what I was registered in the way his whole body went still for the second time that night — he said nothing. Not a word. He just looked at me with an expression that restructured itself in real time, like a man revising a calculation he thought he'd already solved.

I watched him understand that his father had never touched me. Not once. That the two years I had spent under Andrew's mark had been two years of a hollow brand and nothing else.

I watched him understand what that meant.

I didn't know what to do with the way he looked at me after that. It wasn't the look of a man who had gotten what he bargained for. It was the look of a man who had just realized the bargain was built on a lie he hadn't known was there.

I sat up. I reached for my dress.

"The digit," I said.

He told me. Four. His voice was the steadiest thing in the room.

I repeated it to myself twice, committing it. Then I stood, and I walked to the door, and I left.

---

The covered tray appeared outside my quarters the next evening.

No note. No knock. Just a tray with a plate of food — something warm, something that had clearly come from the pack kitchen rather than a reheated pack meal — sitting outside my door when I opened it at seven.

I stood in the doorway and looked at it for a long moment.

Then I picked it up and brought it inside and ate every bite, because I was practical and I was hungry and sentiment was a luxury I had never been able to afford.

But I noticed. I noticed the tray, and I noticed the next night when it appeared again, and I noticed — three days after the first encounter — that the patrol wolves who passed my wing after dark were different. Quieter. More deliberate. The kind of wolves a man assigns when he trusts them specifically, not just generally.

I did not thank him. I did not acknowledge it. I did not let myself think too carefully about what it meant that the man who had engineered every door closed against me was now, quietly and without announcement, standing outside the one I slept behind.

I had one digit. I needed seven more.

I pressed my thumbnail into my palm and I kept counting.

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