
After My Alpha Scented Another, I Walked Away
Chapter 2
Three days. That’s how long it takes for a person’s scent to fully evaporate from a house.
I sat on the floor of my new apartment, a cramped studio in neutral territory that smelled of lemon floor cleaner and old radiator steam. It was a far cry from the Ironveil pack house, with its vaulted ceilings and the constant, overwhelming aroma of pine and storm. Here, the air was thin and quiet. It didn’t demand anything from me.
I closed my eyes and reached for the place in my mind where the bond used to hum. The brick wall I’d built was still there, thick and cold. But on the other side, something was scratching. It wasn’t a knock. It was the sound of a trapped animal clawing at a door until its nails bled.
Atticus’s wolf was losing his mind.
I could feel the faint, jagged pulses of his panic through the gaps in the masonry. He was an Alpha; he wasn’t used to silence. He was used to knowing exactly where I was, what I was doing, and how much starch was in his collars. To him, I wasn’t a person who had left—I was a utility that had stopped working.
A sharp knock at the door made me flinch. My hand instinctively went to my throat, looking for a mark that wasn’t there.
“Lyra? It’s me. Open up before I kick this cheap wood in.”
Denver.
I exhaled and unlocked the three deadbolts I’d installed the first night. Denver stood there with two oversized coffees and a paper bag that smelled like greasy bacon and hope. She didn't wait for an invitation. She kicked the door shut behind her and scanned the room.
“You look like you haven’t slept since the Obama administration,” she said, shoving a coffee into my hand.
“I’m fine, Den.” My voice sounded raspy, like I’d swallowed sand.
“You’re not fine. You’re vibrating,” she countered, sitting cross-legged on my only piece of furniture—a thrifted velvet armchair. She pulled a carton of eggs and a loaf of bread from the bag. “I brought supplies. Eat.”
I looked at the groceries. I didn't move to cook them. For seven years, my life had been a series of 'to-do' lists for other people. Breakfast for the Alpha. Lunch for the council. Tea for the visiting dignitaries. Now, looking at a simple egg, I felt paralyzed.
“I don’t have to make these for anyone,” I whispered.
Denver’s expression softened, the sharp edges of her Gamma-daughter persona melting for a second. “No. You don’t. You can let them rot for all I care. But you need fuel if you’re going to keep that wall up, Lyra. I hear things back at the pack house.”
I took a slow sip of the coffee. The heat burned my tongue, grounding me. “What things?”
“Atticus is a statue,” Denver said, her voice dropping. “Marcus told my dad that he’s barely spoken a word. He just stands there. At five this morning, Marcus found him in the kitchen. Just standing in the dark, staring at the empty counter where your coffee mug usually sits. He didn't even acknowledge Marcus was there. His jaw was so tight Marcus thought it might crack.”
I pictured it. Atticus, the invincible Alpha King, undone by a missing ceramic cup. It didn't make me feel powerful. It just made me feel tired.
“He’s not mourning me,” I said, looking out the window at the gray street below. “He’s mourning his routine. He’s mourning the fact that something he owned walked away.”
“Maybe,” Denver said. “But his wolf doesn't know the difference. The bond is fraying, Lyra. It’s getting ugly.”
As if on cue, the 'scratching' in my head intensified. A wave of cold, possessive fury slammed against my mental wall. Atticus was close. Not at my door, but close enough for the Alpha aura to bleed through the neutral territory's borders.
Ten minutes later, there was another knock. This one was heavy, rhythmic, and professional.
I didn't need my wolf to tell me who it was. I opened the door to find Marcus Reid, Atticus’s Beta. He looked exhausted. His suit was wrinkled, and his eyes were bloodshot. He looked at me with a mixture of relief and deep, uncomfortable pity.
“Lyra,” he said.
“Marcus.” I didn't step back to let him in. I stood in the doorway, my frame blocking his view of the room.
He sighed and reached into his inner pocket, pulling out a heavy, cream-colored envelope. It bore the Ironveil seal—the embossed wolf’s head I used to polish on the front door every Sunday.
“The Alpha wants you to read this,” Marcus said.
I took the envelope. It felt heavy, like it was filled with lead rather than paper. “Is he okay?”
Marcus hesitated. “He’s… functional. But he’s not himself. He’s refusing to shift. He’s refusing to eat. He wants you home, Lyra. He says this ‘episode’ has gone on long enough.”
‘Episode.’ The word tasted like ash.
“Tell him I’m not having an episode,” I said, my voice steady. “Tell him I’m having a life.”
I closed the door before he could respond. I walked back to the kitchen counter and tore the envelope open. It wasn't a letter. It wasn't an apology. It was a formal Alpha’s Summons. A legalistic command for a pack member to return to the territory for 'administrative review.'
He couldn't even ask me to come back as a woman. He had to order me back as a subordinate.
I looked at the empty blue plastic bowl I’d bought yesterday at the grocery store. It was sitting on the floor by the fridge, waiting for a dog that wasn't here yet. I’d promised Buster I’d come back for him. That promise was the only thing keeping me from running even further away.
I took the expensive, cream-colored summons and folded it in half. Then I folded it again. I walked over to the dog bowl and tucked the paper inside, lining the bottom of the plastic. It was the perfect size to catch the crumbs of the kibble I hadn't bought yet.
“What was in it?” Denver asked from the chair.
“Orders,” I said. “He’s telling the pack I’m taking ‘personal time.’ Like I’m on a spa retreat instead of leaving his ass.”
Denver snorted. “That’s not all they’re saying. Caleb Voss is telling anyone who will listen that you finally realized you weren't Luna material. He’s saying you ran away because you couldn't handle the pressure of the title he never even gave you.”
I felt a spark of heat in my chest—the first real emotion other than exhaustion. Caleb had been the loudest whisperer for years. The leader of the 'Placeholder' choir.
“Let them talk,” I said, though my fingernails dug into my palms. “Let them rewrite the story however they want. It doesn't change the fact that the kitchen is empty and his bed is cold.”
I looked at the door. I knew Marcus was still out there, probably sitting in a black SUV, waiting for me to break. They all expected me to break. They were waiting for the seven years of habit to kick in—waiting for me to realize I didn't know how to exist without a King to serve.
But as I looked at that Alpha’s Summons sitting in a cheap plastic dog bowl, I felt the scratching in my head go silent for a moment. My wolf wasn't smiling yet, but she was watching.
Atticus thought he was letting me throw a tantrum. He thought he was being patient by sending a letter instead of a leash. He didn't realize that every hour I spent in this quiet, ugly apartment was another brick in the wall he would never be able to climb.
“Denver,” I said, turning back to my friend.
“Yeah?”
“Help me make those eggs. I’m starving.”
I didn't look at the door again. I didn't look at the bond. I just picked up a spatula and started to learn how to feed myself.
You may also like





