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After My Alpha Marked Another, I Planned His Ruin Novel Cover

After My Alpha Marked Another, I Planned His Ruin

I was measuring the training hall when Marcus found me. Not measuring, exactly. I had the blueprints spread across the folding table, a pencil tucked behind my ear, and I was thinking about whether the east-facing windows needed to be wider. More light in the mornings. The warriors trained hard and they deserved good light. That was the kind of thing I thought about on a Tuesday. Marcus appeared in the doorway at nine-fifteen. His face was the careful, neutral kind — the face he wore when he was delivering something he didn't want to deliver. "The Alpha would like to see you," he said. "His office." That was all.
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Chapter 1

I was measuring the training hall when Marcus found me.

Not measuring, exactly. I had the blueprints spread across the folding table, a pencil tucked behind my ear, and I was thinking about whether the east-facing windows needed to be wider. More light in the mornings. The warriors trained hard and they deserved good light. That was the kind of thing I thought about on a Tuesday.

Marcus appeared in the doorway at nine-fifteen. His face was the careful, neutral kind — the face he wore when he was delivering something he didn't want to deliver.

"The Alpha would like to see you," he said. "His office."

That was all. No reason. No context. Just the summons, delivered in the flat tone of a man doing his job.

I set down my pencil. "Now?"

"Yes, Luna."

I rolled up the blueprints and left them on the table. I told myself it was pack business. Budget review, maybe, or the alliance meeting we had coming up next month. Dominick called me to his office for those things all the time. This was normal. This was Tuesday.

I pressed my palm against the corridor wall as I walked.

I always did that. Thirteen years of it. The pack house had been a crumbling estate when we first moved in — drafty windows, water-stained ceilings, floors that groaned like they were tired. I had renovated it room by room, year by year, until it became something the whole alliance admired. I knew every wall. I knew which ones I'd replastered myself, which ones I'd chosen the paint for, which ones still held the ghost of the old stone underneath the drywall. When I pressed my palm flat against them, I could feel all of it.

I didn't know, walking down that corridor, that it was the last time I would do it without grief.

---

Dominic was standing behind his desk when I came in.

He didn't look up right away. That should have told me something. In thirteen years, he had always looked up when I walked into a room. It was one of those small things I had collected without realizing — the way his eyes found me automatically, the way his wolf recognized mine. I had taken it for granted the way you take breathing for granted.

The door clicked shut behind me.

Then I heard the lock.

It was a small sound. A single mechanical click. But it landed in my chest before my brain had time to process it, some animal part of me going very still, the way prey goes still when it hears something move in the dark.

Dominic looked up.

His eyes were flat. Not cold exactly — just empty of the thirteen years that should have been in them.

"Leanna."

He said my name the way you say a word you've been rehearsing. Careful. Placed.

And then, without preamble, without sitting down, without giving me anything to hold onto, he spoke.

"I, Dominick Wagner, Alpha of the Shadowvale Pack, reject you, Leanna Miller, as my mate and Luna."

The bond cracked.

That's the only word for it. Cracked. Like something structural giving way — not a clean break but a fracture that ran from my sternum outward, branching, and my wolf screamed inside my skull so loud I couldn't hear anything else for a moment. Just that sound. Just that pain. The physical, bone-deep reality of a fated bond being severed by the one person with the power to sever it.

I grabbed the back of the chair in front of his desk. My knuckles went white.

"There's someone else," he said. His voice was even. Measured. The voice he used in alliance negotiations. "Her name is Aura Fisher. She's from the Nightridge Pack. Her scent—" He paused, just briefly. "It's different. I can't explain it in a way that will make sense to you. But I need you to understand that this is not something I'm uncertain about."

I stared at him.

Thirteen years. I had been seventeen years old, standing at a bonfire, when my wolf first caught his scent — dark cedar and rain-soaked earth — and my knees had buckled before I even saw his face. I had not chosen him. I had recognized him, the way you recognize gravity. The way you recognize your own name.

And he was standing behind his desk telling me about someone else's scent.

"Take the night," he said. "Process it. The paperwork will be on your nightstand."

He unlocked the door. He held it open.

I stood in the doorway of my own pack house — the building I had rebuilt with my own hands, the walls I had touched a thousand times — and I could not make my legs move.

---

I found Shay in the kitchen an hour later.

I was still in my renovation clothes. Dust on my jeans, pencil mark on my wrist. I hadn't changed because changing would have meant going back to the bedroom, and I couldn't go back to the bedroom yet.

Shay was at the counter with her coffee, and she looked at my face and went very still.

I told her in three sentences. I heard my own voice doing it — flat, factual, like I was reporting something that had happened to someone else.

She didn't gasp. She didn't say she was sorry. She set her mug down slowly, and her expression did something complicated, and I realized with a sick lurch that she wasn't surprised.

That was its own kind of wound.

"I know," she said quietly.

"Shay—"

"I've been watching him for years, Leanna. The way he talks to you when no one's looking. The Omega girl, Petra — what he did to her at that gathering, the way he laughed—" She stopped. Pressed her lips together. "That wasn't an Alpha being hard. That was him showing you who he was. And you looked away."

"I need you to tell me this can be fixed," I said. My voice cracked on the last word. "That's all I need right now. Just tell me it can be fixed."

Shay looked at me for a long moment. Her eyes were sad in a way I had never seen on her before — Shay, who was sharp and fast and never soft.

"I can't tell you that," she said.

I left the kitchen. I couldn't stay in the room with the truth she had put on the table.

---

That night, I sat on the edge of the bed we had shared for thirteen years.

The rejection papers were on the nightstand. A single page, formal and clean, with a line at the bottom waiting for my signature. Dominick had already signed his. His handwriting was steady. Of course it was.

I didn't touch them.

I pressed my palm against the bedroom wall instead — the wall I had painted myself, a warm gray I had chosen because it made the morning light look like something worth waking up for. My wolf was still howling somewhere deep inside me, still pulling toward the bond, because I hadn't spoken the acceptance words and the thread between us was cracked but not severed, and her instinct was to pull and pull and pull until something gave.

I let her pull.

I made a decision, sitting there in the dark with my hand flat against the wall I had built.

I would not sign those papers.

I would not accept.

I would fight.

I told myself that was strength. I told myself that was love.

I didn't understand yet what it would cost me.

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