Follow
Chapters
Share
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.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 4

She arrived on a Thursday.

Two days after I had stood in the east wing with my palm flat against the wall, listening to Dominick's voice go warm on the other side. Two days of knowing, in the part of me that had always known, what was coming.

Marcus came to find me in the corridor outside the kitchen. He said, "She's here," and he said it to a point somewhere past my left shoulder, because he couldn't look at my face. Marcus, who had been Dominick's Beta for eight years. Marcus, who had sat across from me at a hundred pack dinners and called me Luna without hesitation.

He couldn't look at me.

I filed that away too.

"The sitting room?" I asked.

"Yes."

"Thank you, Marcus."

He walked away fast. I stood in the corridor for a moment and pressed my palm flat against the wall — the wall I had replastered in year six, a hairline crack running from floor to ceiling that I had filled and sanded and painted over until you couldn't see it anymore — and I breathed.

Then I went in.

---

The Luna's sitting room was mine in every way a room can belong to a person. I had chosen the light fixtures — low, warm, the kind that made people look like themselves instead of like versions of themselves under interrogation. I had chosen the chairs: two deep armchairs facing each other across a low table, upholstered in a gray-green that picked up the color of the trees through the south window. I had chosen the window itself, had argued with the contractor about the angle for two weeks because I wanted the afternoon light to come in at exactly the right degree.

Aura Fisher was sitting in one of my chairs.

She was dressed the way someone dresses when they want you to know they dressed carefully — not overdone, just precise. Everything fitted. Everything chosen. She sat with the ease of a woman who had decided in advance that this room did not intimidate her, and she looked up when I entered with an expression that was almost pleasant.

Almost.

I sat down across from her.

For a moment, neither of us spoke. The afternoon light came through the window at exactly the angle I had argued for, and it fell across the table between us, and I thought, absurdly, about the contractor's face when I finally got what I wanted.

Then the scent hit me.

I had been braced for it. I had told myself I was braced for it. I had spent two days constructing a version of this moment in my head in which I was calm and controlled and unmoved.

I was not unmoved.

It was his scent. Dark cedar and rain-soaked earth — the scent that had buckled my knees at seventeen, the scent my wolf had spent thirteen years mapping like territory, like home. It was on her. Layered into her skin, deep and settled, the way a scent gets when it has been there long enough to stop being a visitor. And underneath it, threaded through it, the marking — unmistakable, the particular resonance of a bond that had been deliberately, physically sealed.

My wolf recoiled.

Not a flinch. A full-body recoil, the kind that starts in the chest and moves outward, and I felt my hands grip the arms of my chair before I had decided to grip them. The fabric was soft under my fingers. I had chosen this fabric. I held onto it.

"Leanna," Aura said. Her voice was exactly what I had expected — polished, unhurried, the voice of someone who had rehearsed this and was now performing the rehearsal so smoothly it was supposed to look like spontaneity. "Thank you for agreeing to meet."

I didn't say you're welcome.

She took my silence as an invitation to continue, which it wasn't, but she was going to continue regardless.

"I know this is painful," she said. "I want you to know I don't take any pleasure in it."

She maintained eye contact as she said it. A fraction of a second longer than natural — just past the point of comfort, just long enough to make it a challenge. I held her gaze.

"He marked you," I said. My voice came out flat. Good.

"During a run through Nightridge territory." She said it simply, as if it were a fact about the weather. "His wolf initiated it. I want to be honest with you about that — it wasn't planned. His wolf recognized something and acted on it."

"His wolf," I repeated.

"The bond between us—" She paused, and the pause was calculated, I could see the calculation in it, the slight tilt of her head that said I am choosing my words carefully out of respect for you. "It's different from what you and he have. What you had. His scent changes when he's with me. Deepens. His wolf howls during our runs in a way that—" Another pause. "I'm not telling you this to hurt you. I'm telling you because you deserve to understand what's happening. What the Moon Goddess intended."

The Moon Goddess intended.

She used those words the way a surgeon uses a scalpel — precisely, knowing exactly where it would go in. Because in our world, those words are not just words. They are the architecture of everything. The mate bond, the marking, the sacred recognition of scent — all of it flows from the Moon Goddess's design. And Aura was sitting in my chair, in my room, wearing my mate's scent on her skin, and telling me that the Moon Goddess had made a correction.

That I was the error being corrected.

My wolf writhed.

I felt her — desperate, furious, the bond pulling and pulling even now, even with the evidence of it sitting three feet away from me in a perfectly fitted jacket. The scent confirmation was a physical thing. There is no rational thought that reaches the part of a wolf that processes scent. You can know something with your mind and your body will still respond to what it smells, and what I smelled was Dominick's marking on another she-wolf, and my body was responding to it the way a body responds to a wound.

For one terrible moment, I felt it — the edge of breaking. The place where the grief and the fury and the bond all converged into something that had no shape, no direction, just pressure.

Then something else surfaced.

It came up slowly, from somewhere underneath the grief, from the part of me that had been taking notes for three days. The part that had heard before you embarrass the pack and filed it away. The part that had stood in the east wing and listened to his voice go warm through the wall I had built.

Fury. Cold and clarifying, the way cold water clarifies things.

"Release him to his true mate," Aura said. Gently. The voice of someone delivering an unfortunate truth for your own good. "That's all I'm asking. Let him go, Leanna. Let the Moon Goddess's will—"

"Get out of my house."

The words came out quiet. Quieter than I expected. Not a shout — something worse than a shout. The voice of a woman who has just located the floor beneath the falling.

Aura blinked. Just once.

Then she smiled. Not triumphant — that would have been easier to bear. Just satisfied. The smile of someone whose plan is proceeding on schedule.

She stood without hurrying. She smoothed her jacket. She walked to the door with the unhurried ease of a woman who had gotten what she came for, and she left.

I sat alone in the room I had designed.

The afternoon light came through the window at exactly the angle I had wanted. The chair was soft under my hands. Everything in this room was a choice I had made, a thing I had built, a version of care made physical.

And none of it had been enough.

I sat there for a long time. Long enough for the light to shift. Long enough for the fury to stop being hot and start being something else — something harder, something that had edges.

Begging would not save me. I had known that since the corridor, since the roof, since the moment I heard his voice go warm through the wall. Begging was just giving him more of what he had already taken.

I needed a different weapon.

I pressed my palm flat against the arm of my chair and thought about the Pack Banquet. Three weeks away. Every allied Alpha and Luna in the region, gathered in the hall I had renovated, eating food I had planned, in a building that existed because of my hands.

I thought about Aura Fisher's smile.

I thought about what it would look like, that smile, in front of all of them.

Something settled in me. Not peace — nothing like peace. But direction. The particular stillness of a wolf who has stopped running and started hunting.

I stood up.

I smoothed my own jacket.

I walked out of the room.

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Open the Official Website

You may also like

After My Alpha Betrayed Me, I Found the Lycan King Novel Cover
7.9
The Moon Goddess Festival always made my heart race—not from fear, but from pure, electric anticipation. Tonight was no different. I stood on the launch platform, my fingers steady on the ignition switch despite the adrenaline singing through my veins. Below me, the entire Silver Moon Pack had gathered in the ceremonial clearing, their faces turned upward like flowers seeking the sun. This was my moment. My art. I'd spent three months perfecting this finale. Every fuse timed to the second. Every burst choreographed to paint the night sky in silver and gold—the Moon Goddess's colors. As the pack's Delta and head fireworks coordinator, I took pride in making our most sacred night unforgettable.
Claimed by the Alpha’s Lies Novel Cover
7.9
"Mom, the ten-year agreement is almost over. Can you finally tell me where Gregory is?" Laura Mitchell, the former Luna of the Mitchell Pack, hesitated on the other end before letting out a sigh. "Maisie, after all these years, you still haven’t let him go? I thought with Cayden in your life, you might have moved on from the past." Maisie Robertson, the former Luna of the Mitchell Pack, forced a bitter smile. How could she let go of such a profound love? Gregory Scott, a Gamma warrior from the Scott Pack, had been her mate in every way but the bond. His untimely death had left a void that even her arranged marriage to Quinn Mitchell, the Alpha of the Mitchell Pack, couldn’t fill. "Mom, we agreed on this a long time ago..." Noticing Maisie’s resolve, Laura decided not to push further. "Gregory’s ashes are buried in the Alps, near the border of the Scott Pack’s territory." Finally receiving the information she’d longed for, Maisie felt a flood of joy, her excitement evident. "Thank you, Mom." Laura added, "Have you talked to the Alpha about it?" Thinking of Quinn’s indifferent attitude, she chuckled softly.
I Walked Away After My Alpha Betrayed Me Novel Cover
9.3
The roar of the river gorge was deafening. Shadowveil and Ironridge warriors were running joint drills along the rocky banks, but I kept my eyes fixed on the rushing water. I hated the river. Years locked in the Moonhaven Pack's basement meant I had never been taught to swim. I was always the expendable blood-born daughter. Then, the flash flood hit. It came out of nowhere. A massive wall of muddy, violent water tore down the ravine with a terrifying crack. It slammed into the banks, washing away the solid ground beneath my feet. The cold was instant and brutal.
Marked for Ruin, Chosen for Rebirth Novel Cover
8.7
In a world ruled by packs and sacred bonds, Raelyn thought her life as Luna of the Silver Moon Pack would bring her love and belonging. Instead, it left her trapped in a hollow marriage to Alpha Kieran, her fated mate who betrayed her for another—the cunning and ruthless Selene, daughter of the North Wind Alpha. On the night of their fifth anniversary, Raelyn endures public humiliation, false accusations, and a devastating loss—her unborn child poisoned by Selene's schemes. Broken and discarded, she realizes her life has been a lie, her bond to Kieran nothing more than a shackle forged in grief. But when the Blood Moon rises, Raelyn sees a chance for freedom. With the ancient lore offering a way to sever the mate bond, she must summon her strength and risk everything to reclaim her life, her dignity, and a future for herself. This is a story of betrayal, resilience, and revenge—a tale of a woman rising from the ashes to confront her destiny under the blood-red sky.
Reborn Luna: Rewriting My Tragic Fate Novel Cover
9.6
I was the devoted Luna of the Blackwood Pack, bound to my fated mate, Alpha Ryker. But he coldly rejected our sacred bond for a pure-blooded she-wolf, tossing me aside like garbage. That was when a cold voice in my head revealed the horrifying truth. "Your fate is to be rejected, a tragic footnote in their epic love story." My entire life was a scripted prophecy controlled by a twisted entity. According to the script, I was supposed to be locked away, my inner wolf withering from the broken bond until I died in agony. The entity even confessed to orchestrating the murder of Alpha Gideon, the only father figure I ever had, just to keep our bloodline enslaved to this sick narrative. I refused to be a ghost in someone else's happily ever after. Why should my family die and my soul be erased just to serve a predetermined fate? Instead of crying like the prophecy demanded, I tore my own soul apart to shatter the ancient Scroll of Fate, destroying the entity itself. Opening my eyes again, I was back to being a ten-year-old child. It was the exact day my lifelong trauma began. "Do as I say, Elara. Do not make any more trouble for me." My mother was trying to force me to take the blame for a bully, just to save her own reputation. This time, I am writing the script.
Rejected Mate, Rising Alpha Novel Cover
9.1
I found a condom in the trash can, paired with lace panties that were definitely not mine. Mathias, the Alpha of the Silver Moon Pack, and I hadn’t been close for a year, and owning such underwear was never my style. Just as I was about to call him, I stumbled upon a post from his so-called "adopted sister," Vanessa, a Gamma from the Crimson Fang Pack, on Facebook. There he was, head bowed, planting an affectionate kiss on her foot. My wolf stirred faintly in the back of my mind, a low growl of betrayal rippling through me. I turned off my phone, choosing not to cry or throw a fit, and continued with my life. Eventually, Mathias noticed something was off. He looked at me with bloodshot eyes, his Alpha aura pressing down on me like a weight, and asked, "Why aren’t you upset that I’m involved with someone else?" --- While tidying up in the bathroom, I stopped in my tracks at the sight of the trash can. Draped over it were a sultry pair of black lace panties, and next to them, a used condom. Mathias and I hadn’t been intimate for a year.