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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 3

I went to the roof because of the rain.

Not to fall. Not yet. I want to be clear about that, because later I would not be able to say it clearly, and the distinction mattered to me even if it mattered to no one else. I went up there because the rain was loud, and I needed something louder than the bond.

It had been three days.

Three days of sleeping on my side of the bed and not sleeping. Three days of walking the corridors with my hand at my side, not touching the walls. Three days of the rejection papers sitting on the nightstand, his signature steady and clean at the bottom, the line for mine still blank.

The roof access was through the east stairwell, a door I had re-hung myself in year four because the original had warped in the winter damp. I knew the weight of it. I knew the exact angle you had to push to get it open without it catching.

I pushed it open and stepped out into the rain.

It hit me all at once — cold, hard, the kind of rain that doesn't fall so much as arrive. The pack house roof was flat in the center and sloped at the edges, and I walked to the parapet and stood there with my face turned up and let it soak through my clothes and into my skin.

My wolf went quiet.

Not the desperate, pulling quiet of the last three days. Something older. Something that remembered.

The first night my wolf recognized Dominick's scent had been a rainy night. The Come of Age Ceremony, the bonfire fighting the weather, the smell of wet earth and cedar smoke and then — underneath all of it — him. Dark cedar and rain-soaked earth, so close to the smell of the night itself that for a moment I thought I had imagined it. And then my knees buckled and I knew I hadn't.

My body still knew that night. Seventeen years old, newly shifted, the bond hitting me like a physical law of nature. You don't forget the first time gravity introduces itself.

I stood in the rain and let my wolf remember it, because remembering hurt less than the present, and the present was unbearable.

I don't know how long I stood there.

Long enough for the cold to settle into my bones. Long enough for the roof to feel like the only honest place left in the building — no walls I had painted, no floors I had refinished, no rooms full of choices I had made for a life that was apparently already over. Just rain and wind and the edge of something.

Then I heard the door.

I didn't turn around. I knew his footsteps. Thirteen years of knowing his footsteps.

He stopped a few feet behind me. I could feel him there — not the bond, not anymore, just the physical fact of him, the way you feel a cold front moving in before it arrives.

"Leanna." His voice was flat. "Come inside."

I kept my face turned toward the rain.

"Marcus saw you from the grounds." A pause. "Come inside before you embarrass the pack."

I turned around then.

He was standing in the doorway, one hand on the frame, not quite stepping out into the rain. His expression was the same one he'd worn in his office three days ago — not cold exactly, just empty of anything that had ever been warm. He was dry. Of course he was dry. He had stopped at the threshold.

Before you embarrass the pack.

Not before you get hurt. Not before something happens to you. Before you embarrass the pack.

I heard it. I filed it away in some part of me that was still taking notes even when the rest of me was drowning.

"Okay," I said.

I walked back across the roof. I walked past him through the doorway. I didn't look at his face as I passed, but I felt him step back to make room, and I noticed that too — the careful, deliberate distance he kept, as if proximity to me was something to be managed.

I went downstairs and changed my clothes and sat on the edge of the bed and stared at the wall until the rain stopped.

---

I found him the next morning.

He was in his office, which was where he always was now, as if the desk were a position he was holding. I knocked this time. I waited for him to say come in.

"I want to meet her," I said.

He looked up.

"Aura Fisher." I kept my voice even. I had gotten better at that. "I want to meet her face to face. I want to see her. Smell her. Understand what the Moon Goddess supposedly intended." I paused. "That's my condition. Before I consider signing anything, I need to meet the woman."

Something moved in his expression. Not hesitation — calculation. He was deciding whether this was useful to him.

It took him about four seconds.

"Fine," he said.

Just that. Fine. No acknowledgment that what I was asking for was painful, or reasonable, or both. He had already decided the meeting would make me surrender faster, I could see it in the way he settled back in his chair — the slight ease of a man who has just identified the shortest route to the outcome he wants.

"I'll contact her today," he said, and looked back down at his desk.

I left.

I went to the east wing and sat in the window seat I had built into the renovation — a deep ledge with cushions, south-facing, good light — and I told myself I had done something. I had set a condition. I had made a demand. That was not nothing.

I sat there for two hours.

At some point in the early evening, I heard his voice through the wall.

The pack house walls were thick — I had insulated them myself, good work, solid work — but sound carried in certain corridors, and his office shared a wall with the east wing sitting room, and I heard him.

Not the words. Just the tone.

Warm. Easy. The particular warmth of someone talking to a person they are glad to hear from — a looseness in the voice, a rhythm that had nothing careful in it. I had not heard that tone from him in months. Maybe longer. I had been so busy not noticing its absence that I hadn't registered when it left.

My wolf went very still inside me.

Not the pulling stillness. Not the desperate, straining quiet of the last three days. Something colder. Something that was starting, slowly and against my will, to understand.

I pressed my palm flat against the wall between us.

I could feel the insulation I had packed into it. The work of my own hands, solid and careful, built to last.

His voice continued on the other side, warm and unhurried, and I stood there with my palm flat against everything I had built and listened to the sound of him talking to her, and something in me that had been pulling and pulling and pulling went very, very quiet.

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