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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 2

The apartment smells like nothing.

That is the first thing I notice when I set my bag down on the floor of the one-bedroom unit above a laundromat on Birch Street. No cedar. No woodsmoke. No trace of any wolf who has ever lived here or passed through or pressed their body against the walls. Just old paint and cleaning solution and the faint chemical sweetness of dryer sheets rising through the floorboards.

It is exactly what I need.

The landlord is a human woman in her sixties who looked at my ID, looked at my face, and asked no questions. She handed me the key and said the hot water takes a minute. I thanked her. She left. I stood in the middle of the empty living room for a long time, listening to the hum of the washing machines below me, and then I sat down on the floor because there was no furniture yet and I did not have the energy to go buy any.

The rejection scar throbs.

It has not stopped since the night of the feast. It sits on my neck where Ryker's mark used to be — where his teeth pressed into my skin three years ago while his wolf rumbled so deep I felt it in my own chest — and now it is just a raised line of scar tissue that pulses with a low, constant ache. Like a second heartbeat. Like something still alive in there, trapped under the skin, trying to get out.

I press my thumbnail against my index finger. The crescent mark from the last time has not faded yet. I press harder.

The first three days are the worst.

I buy a mattress from a discount store and drag it up the stairs myself. I buy sheets, a towel, a coffee maker, a single mug. I eat standing at the kitchen counter because I do not have a table. I go through the motions of setting up a life the way you go through the motions of physical therapy after an injury — mechanical, deliberate, one movement at a time. My wolf is still quiet inside me. Not gone. I can feel her curled tight in the back of my mind, conserving everything, the way an animal conserves heat in winter.

I do not cry where anyone can see me.

I cry in the shower, where the water covers the sound. I sit on the tile floor with my knees pulled up and I let it come — the raw, shaking, airless kind of crying that does not make noise because there is not enough breath for noise. My wolf keens with me, a thin sound that lives somewhere behind my ribs. The scar on my neck burns under the hot water. I press my hand over it and hold it there, as if I can keep something in. As if there is anything left to keep.

Then I turn off the water. I dry my face. I get dressed. I make coffee in my single mug and I stand at the window and watch the human town go about its morning — a woman walking a dog, a man carrying groceries, two teenagers arguing about something on a phone — and none of them know what I am. None of them know what was taken from me. There is a strange comfort in that.

I think about the attic.

I try not to, but I do. The Lego sets spread across the rug. The half-finished Taj Mahal we had been working on for two months because we kept getting distracted arguing about whether to follow the instructions or improvise. Ryker's hands — large, careful, surprisingly patient with the small pieces — and the way he would hold one up to the light and squint at it like it was a territory map instead of a plastic brick. The sound of his laugh in that room. The way his wolf would go so still and content that the air felt soft.

I wonder if he has locked the door.

I know him. He has locked the door. He has probably told the pack it is being renovated. He will not go in there. He will not throw anything away. He will just lock it and walk past it every day and tell himself that is the same as letting go.

It is not.

But that is not my problem anymore.

---

I learn later — through the thin, fading threads of pack gossip that reach me even here — that Colette and Jackson moved into the Silverfang pack house three days after I left.

Three days.

The room they were given is on the second floor. The family wing. I know that wing. I chose the curtains in the hallway. I picked the paint color for the guest room that is now, apparently, a five-year-old boy's bedroom. I wonder if Colette looked at those curtains and knew who chose them. I wonder if she cared.

I also learn — because pack gossip is a living thing with its own circulatory system — that Mrs. Palmer's reaction was not what Ryker expected.

She was furious.

Not on my behalf. I am not foolish enough to believe that. But furious in the way only a former Luna with forty years of bloodline politics behind her can be furious — the cold, architectural kind of fury that does not raise its voice because it does not need to. A rogue-born pup. An Omega she-wolf's son. Positioned as heir to the most powerful pack on the East Coast. Everything she had spent her life building walls against, walking through her front door with a suitcase.

I can picture the conversation. Mrs. Palmer standing in Ryker's study — the study that used to be his father's, the one with the dark wood and the portrait she hung herself — her hands folded, her voice level, every word a scalpel.

"You rejected a Moon Goddess pairing. A true fated bond. For an unverified claim from a she-wolf who spent five years as a rogue." She would not have said Colette's name. She would have said "this woman" or "the Gomez girl," because Mrs. Palmer has always understood that names are a form of recognition, and recognition is a form of power. "How do you intend to explain this to the Ashford Pack? To the Greymoor alliance? To every pack elder who watched you mark Madilyn Shaw and called it the strongest pairing they had seen in a generation?"

Ryker would have gone still. That stillness I know so well. The one that means he has no answer that will survive contact with the question.

But then the pack healer ran the bloodline confirmation.

Jackson's scent carries the Palmer Alpha signature. Not a trace of it, not a suggestion — the full, unmistakable genetic marker that has defined the Silverfang line for six generations. The healer confirmed it in front of the elders. The boy is Ryker's.

And Mrs. Palmer's calculus shifted.

I have watched that woman operate for three years. I have sat beside her at alliance dinners and pack ceremonies and watched her read a room the way a general reads a battlefield — every face a data point, every silence a variable. She does not feel her way through decisions. She computes them. And the math on Jackson was simple: a verified Alpha-blooded heir is an Alpha-blooded heir, regardless of the mother's rank.

She started referring to him as "Jackson Gomez-Palmer" in pack meetings.

Not "the boy." Not "Colette's son." Jackson Gomez-Palmer. Full name. Hyphenated. The Palmer attached like a brand.

The pack understood immediately. They always do. Mrs. Palmer does not make announcements. She makes adjustments, and the world rearranges itself around them.

I think about Ryker watching that reversal. Watching his mother fold Jackson into the bloodline machinery with the same smooth efficiency she once used to fold me in. And I think he must have felt something go very quiet inside him — the realization, landing like a stone in still water, that his mother never cared about me. Not about Madilyn. Not about the woman who built Lego sets with her son in the attic or managed pack alliances with a precision that made the Beta look slow. She cared about what I represented. The right scent. The right bearing. The right public image for the Silverfang brand.

And now Jackson represents something better. A verified bloodline. A legacy secured.

The math changed. So the warmth changed.

I press my thumbnail against my finger. The crescent mark is deeper now.

I stand at my window above the laundromat and watch the human town settle into evening. The streetlights come on one by one. Somewhere below me, a dryer finishes its cycle and goes quiet.

My wolf stirs. Just barely. A flicker of something that is not grief and not anger but something older, something that lives underneath both — the low, stubborn pulse of a creature that has decided, without drama or declaration, that it is going to survive this.

I press my hand to my stomach without thinking about it.

Then I pull it away.

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