
After My Alpha Mate Chose Her Over Me
Chapter 1
I should have kept a closer eye on Matheo.
That's the thought that hits me first — not the sleek black SUV, not the long white scratch running down its passenger door, not the small crowd of people in Silverpine's town square already turning to look. Just that one thought, flat and familiar: I should have been watching.
But I'd been distracted. The market vendor had shortchanged me again, and I was standing there recounting my bills with one hand while holding a canvas bag of groceries in the other, and Matheo had drifted three steps to my left the way he always does when something catches his eye. He's like that — drawn to shiny things, moving things, anything that glitters in afternoon light. The SUV's chrome trim must have caught the sun just right.
He didn't mean to scratch it. He was reaching for his own reflection.
"Mattie." I say his name quietly, setting down the groceries. He looks up at me with that open, guileless expression he always has — no guilt, no fear, just curiosity — and points at the door.
"Pretty," he says.
"Yeah." I crouch down and take his hand. "Come here, baby."
That's when the SUV's door opens.
I smell him before I see him.
Wild honeysuckle. Rain-soaked cedar. My own scent, twisted and thrown back at me from somewhere deep in my chest — because that's how the mate bond works, that's what no one warns you about. You don't just smell your mate. You smell yourself in them, and it's the most disorienting, most devastating thing in the world.
I haven't smelled it in five years.
My knees go soft. I lock them. I press my thumbnail into my palm, hard, and I breathe through my nose slowly, the way I taught myself to do when the grief got too big to carry standing up. The pain is small and clean and it gives me something to focus on that isn't him.
Kaden Carter steps out of the vehicle.
He's taller than I remember, or maybe I just forgot how much space he takes up without trying. Dark coat, no tie, jaw set like he's already decided how this goes. His eyes move over the scratch on the door first — just a flicker — and then they find me.
For one second, something crosses his face. Something that isn't anger.
Then it's gone.
"Whose kid?" he says.
His voice is the same. Low. Absolute. The kind of voice that doesn't need to get louder to get heavier.
I straighten up slowly. Matheo is still holding my hand, and I squeeze his fingers once — our signal for stay close, stay quiet.
"My brother," I say. "He didn't mean to. I'll cover the damage."
Kaden looks at Matheo for a moment. Something moves through his eyes that I can't read and don't want to. Then he looks back at me, and whatever it was is gone, replaced by something colder and more familiar.
The Alpha aura hits before he even speaks.
It's like pressure behind the eyes, like the air getting thicker and heavier all at once, like something in your spine recognizing a command your brain hasn't processed yet. I've felt it before — from other Alphas, in other territories — but not like this. Not from him. Because underneath the dominance and the cold fury, underneath all of it, is the mate bond pulling in the opposite direction, and the two forces together are almost enough to take my legs out.
Almost.
I press my thumbnail deeper into my palm.
"On your knees."
His Alpha tone lands like a stone dropped into still water. Around us, the square has gone quiet. I can feel people watching — a vendor pausing mid-transaction, two women frozen near the fountain, a man with a coffee cup halfway to his mouth.
Matheo makes a small confused sound beside me. He doesn't understand pack hierarchy. He doesn't understand Alpha tones. He just knows that the air feels wrong and his sister has gone very still.
That's the thing that decides it for me.
I let go of his hand, touch his shoulder once — it's okay, stay there — and I go to my knees on the cobblestones.
The stone is cold through my jeans. I keep my eyes down and my spine straight, because I will give him the posture but I will not give him the collapse. I will not let him see what this costs.
"I apologize," I say. My voice comes out level. I'm proud of that. "For the damage to your vehicle. I take full responsibility."
Silence.
I can feel him looking at me. I can feel his wolf — even from here, even through five years and a marked bond and a dying connection — pressing against the inside of whatever cage he's built for it. Frantic. Desperate. Clawing.
His voice, when it comes, is very quiet.
"Look at me."
I look up.
Kaden's face is unreadable. But his jaw is tight in a way that has nothing to do with the scratch on his car, and his hands — I notice his hands — are still at his sides with a deliberateness that means they want to be doing something else.
"Lily Perkins," he says, like he's confirming something he already knew. Like he came here knowing.
My stomach drops.
"Alpha Carter," I say.
Something moves through his eyes. Fast. Gone.
"The apology's accepted," he says. "For now." He looks at the scratch one more time, then back at me. "But we both know a scratch isn't all you owe me."
He gets back in the SUV.
The door closes. The engine starts. The aura lifts like a hand releasing a throat.
I stay on my knees for three full seconds after he drives away, because my legs need the time. Then I get up, pick up the groceries, and take Matheo's hand again.
"Lily?" he says. He's looking at me with that perceptive, wordless concern he gets sometimes. He can't name what he sees, but he sees it.
"I'm fine," I tell him.
I press my thumbnail into my palm one more time, feel the small bright sting of it, and I start walking.
He found me.
After five years, Kaden Carter found me — and from the way he said those last words, low and certain and without a flicker of doubt, I know this isn't over.
It's just starting.
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