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After My Mate Betrayed Me, The Lycan Prince Stepped In Novel Cover

After My Mate Betrayed Me, The Lycan Prince Stepped In

I had been waiting for this moment my entire life. Not in the vague, hopeful way that most she-wolves wait — I mean I had been counting. Marking time against it. Every birthday that passed without my wolf stirring, every Pack Run where I stood at the edge of the tree line in human form while the others shifted and disappeared into the dark, every careful smile I held in place when someone asked, with that particular brand of Silverfang politeness that is really just cruelty wearing good manners — "Still nothing, Sabrina?" Still nothing. Until tonight. The Come of Age Ceremony was held in the Silverfang great hall, the same way it had been held for every generation before mine. Candles everywhere. The Alpha's dais draped in silver and deep green. Pack members pressed three rows deep along the walls, their faces warm and expectant, because a Come of Age Ceremony is the kind of event that makes everyone feel like something sacred is about to happen. For most of them, it already had.
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Chapter 1

I had been waiting for this moment my entire life.

Not in the vague, hopeful way that most she-wolves wait — I mean I had been counting. Marking time against it. Every birthday that passed without my wolf stirring, every Pack Run where I stood at the edge of the tree line in human form while the others shifted and disappeared into the dark, every careful smile I held in place when someone asked, with that particular brand of Silverfang politeness that is really just cruelty wearing good manners — "Still nothing, Sabrina?"

Still nothing.

Until tonight.

The Come of Age Ceremony was held in the Silverfang great hall, the same way it had been held for every generation before mine. Candles everywhere. The Alpha's dais draped in silver and deep green. Pack members pressed three rows deep along the walls, their faces warm and expectant, because a Come of Age Ceremony is the kind of event that makes everyone feel like something sacred is about to happen.

For most of them, it already had. Years ago.

I stood in the center of the hall in a white dress my stepmother had chosen, and I kept my breathing even, and I did not let myself hope too hard. I had learned not to. Hope, when it goes unanswered long enough, starts to feel like a wound you keep reopening.

And then it hit me.

Warm. Electric. Like the first real breath after being underwater too long. A scent I had never encountered before but recognized instantly, the way you recognize a word in a language you were born knowing — cedar and something bright, something that made the back of my throat ache with wanting.

My wolf stirred.

Not a nudge. Not a whisper. She came up like a tide, sudden and enormous, and the word she gave me was one word, repeated, insistent:

*Him.*

I turned.

Tyler Montgomery was standing twenty feet away, and he was already looking at me.

The pack erupted. I heard it distantly — the gasps, the laughter, someone crying, Conrad Montgomery's booming voice saying something about destiny — but all of it was far away, because Tyler was crossing the room toward me with that slow, certain smile, the one I had known since we were children, and the scent was getting stronger with every step he took, and I felt something I had not felt in years.

I exhaled.

For the first time in years, I just exhaled.

---

The weeks between the Come of Age Ceremony and the Mate Ceremony were supposed to be the happiest of my life. And they were, mostly. They were also the weeks I started paying attention to things I had been choosing not to see.

The autumn Pack Banquet was the first time I understood that Tyler and I had different definitions of the word *ours*.

He brought her as a guest. Dahlia Palmer, from the Greywood Pack — low-ranking, soft-voiced, with wide eyes that moved around a room the way a chess player's do, cataloguing pieces. I would not have thought much of her, except for the cuff.

Leather, fitted to her wrist, with a small fang charm worked into the clasp. Identical to the one Tyler wore on his.

I noticed it the way you notice a splinter — small, specific, impossible to ignore once you have felt it. Pack members noticed too. I watched the whispers move through the room like a current, faces turning toward me with that particular expression people wear when they are waiting to see how you will react.

I did not react. Not there.

I waited until the banquet was winding down, until the music had softened and the crowd had thinned, and then I touched Tyler's arm and said, quietly, "Walk with me."

Outside, the autumn air was cold and sharp. The pack house lights threw long rectangles of gold across the grass. Tyler stood with his hands in his pockets, relaxed, and I looked at him for a moment before I spoke.

"The cuff," I said. "Explain it."

"It's nothing." His voice was easy. "She admired mine. I had one made."

"You had a matching charm made for a she-wolf from another pack," I said, "two weeks before our Mate Ceremony."

"You're reading into it."

"I'm reading exactly what's there." I kept my voice level. "Tyler. I am telling you once, clearly, so there is no confusion later. If you disrespect this bond again — if I have to stand in a room and watch pack members whisper about what you gave another she-wolf — I will reject you publicly. In front of every Alpha in the Northeast if that's what it takes."

He looked at me then. Held my gaze a beat too long, the way he does when he is deciding which version of himself to show me.

"You're imagining things," he said.

I looked at him for one more second. Then I went back inside.

I did not imagine things. I never had. That was always the problem.

---

The night of the Mate Ceremony, I stood on the ceremonial platform in front of six allied packs and told myself it would be fine.

Alphas and Lunas from every major pack in the Northeast filled the hall. The air smelled like candle wax and formal perfume and the particular charged energy of a hundred wolves in their best clothes, waiting for something sacred. I was in ivory silk. My hair was pinned. I had pressed a wildflower flat against my palm before the ceremony started — my mother's favorite, a small private ritual — and then tucked it away.

Tyler was beside me. He smelled like cedar and something bright, and for a moment, standing there with the whole pack watching, I let myself believe it.

Then his eyes went distant.

I knew that look. It is the look of someone receiving a mind-link.

He was gone thirty seconds later. No word to me. No touch. Just gone, moving fast toward the side door, and the hall went very quiet in the way that large rooms do when something has gone wrong and no one wants to be the first to say so.

I reached for him through our incomplete bond.

Once. Twice. I lost count somewhere around ten. The bond was like a line cast into dark water — I could feel it extend, feel it reach, and feel nothing come back.

Twenty-two times. I know because I counted.

The hall was still quiet. Every Alpha in the Northeast was looking at me.

I stood there for a moment, on the ceremonial platform, in my ivory silk, with the candles burning and the bond going nowhere, and I made a decision.

I walked to the mic.

My voice, when I spoke, was steady. I had not planned the words, but they came anyway, the formal cadence of them rising up from somewhere deep and certain:

"I, Sabrina Allen, daughter of Jared Allen of the Silverfang Pack, reject you, Tyler Montgomery, Alpha heir of the Silverfang Pack, as my mate."

The bond snapped.

It felt like something tearing loose from the center of my chest — sharp, physical, real. Somewhere miles away, I knew Tyler had just hit the ground.

I set the mic down. I stepped off the platform. I walked through the hall with my head up and my hands steady, and I did not look back at a single face.

I had given him one warning. I had meant every word of it.

Now it was done.

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