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After My Alpha Framed Me, I Took Back Everything Novel Cover

After My Alpha Framed Me, I Took Back Everything

The jet lag hit me the moment I crossed into Moonstone territory, but I pushed through it. Five years as Luna had taught me to function on fumes when necessary. The London negotiations with the Ironclaw Pack had gone better than expected—three new trade routes secured, two defense contracts signed. I'd wrapped everything up a day early, eager to surprise Cooper with the good news. My wolf, Sera, stirred restlessly as we approached the Pack House. Something's wrong. I knew it the second I stepped through the front doors. The scent hit me like a physical blow—cloying vanilla mixed with cheap musk, artificial and suffocating. It was everywhere, coating the walls, the furniture, drowning out the cedarwood aroma that had been my father's signature scent for decades. The staff scattered when they saw me.
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Chapter 2

They locked me in a guest room on the third floor. Not my room. Not the Luna's quarters. A guest room, like I was some visiting dignitary who'd overstayed her welcome.

The rejection pain hadn't faded. If anything, it had settled into my bones, a constant ache that made breathing feel like dragging glass through my lungs. Sera was silent, retreating so deep I could barely feel her presence. The mate bond's absence left a hollow space in my chest that nothing could fill.

I waited until the guard's footsteps faded down the hall. Then I moved.

The backup laptop was exactly where I'd hidden it two years ago, taped to the underside of the dresser drawer. Cooper had never known about it. He'd never bothered to learn my contingency plans, too busy enjoying the fruits of my labor to care about the roots.

My hands shook as I powered it on. The screen's glow felt too bright in the darkened room, exposing every crack in my composure.

Pack treasury access: REVOKED.

My personal accounts: Empty. Every single one.

I stared at the zeros, my mind struggling to process what I was seeing. Five years of diplomatic fees, consultation payments, strategic planning bonuses—gone. Cooper had cleaned me out completely.

Then I opened the jewelry tracker app.

The heirloom Luna pieces—my grandmother's moonstone collar, my mother's ceremonial cuffs, the Harper family signet ring that had been passed down for six generations—all showed the same location. Razor's Pawn, deep in the Neutral Zone where pack law didn't reach and questions weren't asked.

He'd pawned my family's legacy like it was costume jewelry.

Something cold and sharp crystallized in my chest, pushing past the rejection pain. This wasn't just betrayal. This was systematic destruction.

I had to get out of this room.

The lock was standard issue, nothing sophisticated. I'd picked worse during my father's security training exercises. Thirty seconds with a hairpin, and the door clicked open.

The Pack House felt different as I moved through it. Hostile. The walls that had sheltered generations of my family now seemed to close in, suffocating. I could hear voices from the main hall—pack members gathering, their tones uncertain and afraid.

I needed the elders. They'd known my father, had sworn oaths to protect the Harper bloodline. They would listen.

But when I reached the council chamber, I found them huddled around a projection screen, their faces illuminated by flickering images. Gamma Jase Kelley stood at the front, his expression grave.

"As you can see," he was saying, "Luna Marceline's training methods have always been... excessive."

The screen showed me during a combat drill, my voice sharp as I corrected a young Delta's stance. But the audio was wrong, edited. My instructions sounded like threats. My corrections looked like abuse.

Another clip. Me demonstrating a takedown on a recruit who'd volunteered. But they'd cut out his consent, his laughter afterward. Now it just looked like violence.

"She's unstable," Elder Morrison said, his voice heavy. "I never wanted to believe it, but—"

"You know me." I stepped into the room, and they all flinched. Actually flinched, like I might attack them. "You've known me since I was a child. You know this is fabricated."

Jase's hand moved to his phone. "Luna Marceline, you should return to your room. The Alpha has ordered—"

"The Alpha is a liar and a thief." My voice came out steady, cold. "And you're helping him destroy everything my father built."

Elder Morrison wouldn't meet my eyes. "The mate bond rejection... it's affected your judgment. Perhaps some time away from pack duties—"

"Time away?" I laughed, and the sound was bitter even to my own ears. "Is that what we're calling exile now?"

None of them would look at me. These wolves who'd eaten at my father's table, who'd sworn loyalty to the Harper line, now turned their backs like I was already a rogue.

I left before they could see me break.

My father's study was on the second floor, tucked away in the east wing. I'd avoided it since his death, unable to face the space without him in it. Now I had no choice.

The door was unlocked. That should have been my first warning.

Inside, everything looked normal. His desk, his books, his reading chair by the window. But the air felt wrong, disturbed. Someone had been here recently.

I went straight to the safe hidden behind his collection of pack histories. My fingers knew the combination by heart—my birthday, my mother's birthday, the date he became Alpha.

The safe door swung open.

Empty.

The Skyline Defense blueprints were gone. My father's life work, the strategic formation that had kept Moonstone safe from larger, more aggressive packs for twenty years. The plans he'd made me swear to protect, to never let fall into enemy hands.

Gone.

I sank into my father's chair, the leather still holding a ghost of his cedarwood scent. The rejection pain, the financial ruin, the smear campaign—I could have survived all of that. But this?

This was treason.

Cooper hadn't just betrayed me. He'd betrayed every wolf in this pack, sold out our defenses to the highest bidder. And when the enemy came—because they would come, armed with our own strategies—the blood would be on his hands.

I pulled out my phone with shaking fingers. There was only one person I could call now, one connection Cooper couldn't have anticipated.

The line rang twice before a familiar voice answered.

"Marceline? It's three in the morning. What's wrong?"

Callan Fox. Childhood friend. Council Enforcer. My last hope.

"I need your help," I said, and my voice finally cracked. "Cooper's committed treason, and I'm about to become a rogue."

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