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After My Alpha Replaced Me with His Rogue Mate Novel Cover

After My Alpha Replaced Me with His Rogue Mate

I have always been good at reading Ryker Palmer. Not because I am his mate — though I am, or I was, or I will be for a few more hours yet. But because I have spent three years watching him the way you watch weather when you live somewhere that floods. You learn the signs. The way his jaw sets a half-second before he issues a command. The way his silver wolf pushes close to the surface when something threatens the pack, making the air around him feel heavier, charged. The way he goes very, very still when he has already made a decision he knows is wrong. I see that stillness from across the great hall, and my stomach drops. The Thanksgiving feast is everything it is supposed to be. Long tables crowded with pack members, the smell of roasted meat and pine smoke and the particular warmth of a hundred wolves gathered under one roof.
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Chapter 1

I have always been good at reading Ryker Palmer.

Not because I am his mate — though I am, or I was, or I will be for a few more hours yet. But because I have spent three years watching him the way you watch weather when you live somewhere that floods. You learn the signs. The way his jaw sets a half-second before he issues a command. The way his silver wolf pushes close to the surface when something threatens the pack, making the air around him feel heavier, charged. The way he goes very, very still when he has already made a decision he knows is wrong.

I see that stillness from across the great hall, and my stomach drops.

The Thanksgiving feast is everything it is supposed to be. Long tables crowded with pack members, the smell of roasted meat and pine smoke and the particular warmth of a hundred wolves gathered under one roof. Children chasing each other between the chairs. The Deltas laughing too loud at something near the far wall. Old Maren, our eldest Omega, already asleep in her chair with a half-eaten roll in her hand. I have moved through this room a hundred times as Luna, and I know every face in it. I know who needs a word of reassurance and who needs to be left alone. I know which of the younger she-wolves are watching me to learn how to carry themselves, and I try to be worth watching.

Tonight I am wearing the deep green dress Ryker said made my eyes look like the forest in October. My mark is visible at my neck — his mark, the one he pressed into my skin on the night of our bonding ceremony while his wolf rumbled with something so deep and certain it felt like the earth settling. The white jasmine scent that is mine alone threads through the warm air of the hall, and I feel, as I always feel in this room, like I belong here.

Then I look up and find Ryker across the crowd.

He is standing near the head table, a glass in his hand that he has not touched. He is watching me with an expression I have never seen on him before — something that sits between grief and resolve, which is a terrible combination on a man with his kind of power. And then he goes still. That specific, total stillness. The kind that means the decision is already made.

He tilts his head toward the corridor that leads to our private quarters.

I press my thumbnail hard against the side of my index finger. Once. Then I set down my own glass, smile at something Beta Cole is saying to the woman beside him, and follow my mate out of the hall.

The noise of the feast fades behind the closed door.

Our quarters are the same as they were this morning — the low lamp on the side table, the book I left face-down on the arm of the chair, the faint smell of him that lives in every room we share. Cedar and woodsmoke. I have loved that smell for three years. I stand in the middle of the room and watch him turn to face me, and I think: whatever this is, I will not fall apart in front of him.

"Colette Gomez is back," he says.

The name lands like a stone dropped into still water. I know the name. Every Luna in the East Coast pack network knows the name, the way you know the names of old storms. A she-wolf from his past. Omega-ranked. Expelled from Crescent Ridge Academy years ago. Exiled. I never asked Ryker for the full story because he carried it like something he was still deciding whether to put down, and I had trusted that he would tell me when he was ready.

I understand now that he was never going to be ready.

"She has a pup," he continues. His voice is controlled. Careful. The voice he uses in pack meetings when he is delivering news that cannot be softened. "A boy. Five years old. His name is Jackson, and he carries the Palmer Alpha bloodline scent."

The room is very quiet.

"Ryker." My own voice surprises me — how steady it is. "Tell me what you are saying."

"I owe her a debt I can't repay." He sets his glass down on the table without looking at it. "What happened to her — what I did — it destroyed her life. Her standing. Her pack. She spent years as a rogue because of me. And now she has a son who carries my bloodline, and he deserves—"

"Tell me what you are saying." I say it again, quieter this time. Because I need him to say it out loud. I need him to hear himself.

He meets my eyes. And I see it — the grief, the resolve, and underneath both of them, the guilt that has been living in him like a splinter for years, working its way deeper every day until it finally hit something vital.

"I'm going to formally reject you as my mate," he says. "And as Luna. I'm going to claim Jackson as my heir and give Colette the position she should have had."

My thumbnail is pressing so hard against my finger that I will find a bruise there tomorrow. If I am somewhere that bruises matter tomorrow.

I look at him — really look at him — searching for the man who sat cross-legged on the attic floor last Sunday with Lego pieces spread across the rug between us, laughing at something stupid I said about the instruction manual, his wolf so relaxed and content that the air around him felt like a held breath. The man who found me in a Tuscan forest in the dark, his massive silver wolf pressing against mine until I stopped shaking. The man who said, on the night he marked me, that the Moon Goddess had given him the only thing he had ever wanted without knowing he wanted it.

I cannot find him.

What I find instead is a man who has already decided. Who came to this room not to ask me anything but to inform me. Who is performing honor the way his mother performs warmth — as a function, not a feeling.

"Okay," I say.

He blinks. He expected something else. Tears, maybe. Pleading. An argument he could push back against to feel more certain of his choice.

I give him none of it.

"If that is what you have decided," I say, "then let's not make the pack wait."

I turn and open the door myself.

The great hall goes quiet the moment we walk back in. Pack instinct — they feel the shift in the air before they understand it, the way animals feel a pressure change before a storm. I watch faces turn toward us. I watch the confusion settle into something colder as Ryker moves to the center of the room and the pack elders arrange themselves without being asked, because they already know. Someone told them. This was already arranged.

Of course it was.

Ryker turns to face me. His jaw is set. His eyes are silver-bright, which means his wolf is close to the surface — howling, maybe, in the place where I cannot hear it anymore. The bond between us hums with a terrible tension, like a wire pulled too tight.

He speaks.

"I, Ryker Palmer, Alpha of Silverfang Pack, reject you, Madilyn Shaw, as my mate and Luna."

The bond does not break cleanly. That is the thing no one tells you. It tears. It tears the way fabric tears when you pull it apart by hand — slowly at first, then all at once, and the sound of it is inside your body, not outside it. My wolf screams. I feel it in my sternum, in my spine, in the mark on my neck that goes from warm to burning to nothing in the space of three seconds. Every wolf in the room flinches. I see it move through them like a wave — heads dropping, hands pressing to chests, a collective wince at the shockwave of a sacred bond being severed in front of witnesses.

I do not make a sound.

I breathe in through my nose. I breathe out through my mouth. I press my thumbnail against my finger one last time, and then I let go of that too.

I open my eyes and look directly at Ryker Palmer.

His face has gone the color of ash.

Good.

The paperwork is already prepared — of course it is, of course it was, this was never a conversation it was a notification — and I sign my Luna title over in a voice that does not waver once. I divide our shared assets with the same precision I once used to manage pack alliances and territory negotiations, because I am very good at my job and I will be very good at it until the last possible second. The pack watches in a silence so complete I can hear the fire in the hearth.

When it is done, I pick up my coat from the chair near the door.

I do not look at Ryker again. I do not look at the long tables where the feast has gone cold, or at the faces of the pack members who watched me build something here for three years and are now watching me carry it out the door in pieces. I do not look at the portrait of Mrs. Palmer in the main hall as I pass it, though I feel her eyes on me from somewhere in the room.

I walk out of the pack house under my own power.

The night air hits me like cold water — sharp and clean and indifferent. My wolf is very quiet inside me. Not gone. Just quiet, the way something goes quiet when it is conserving everything it has left.

I do not look back once.

I keep walking.

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