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After Three Alphas Tried to Claim Me Novel Cover

After Three Alphas Tried to Claim Me

The contract was two pages long. I laid it on the table in front of Bryce Mason and uncapped my fountain pen. Heavy cream paper, clean black ink, every clause I had written myself over three years of building this business from nothing. He glanced at it the way powerful men glance at things they have already decided to sign — a performance of consideration, nothing more. I signed my name at the bottom. Alayna Riley. Neat, unhurried, final. "The booking runs from seven to midnight," I said. "No scent-marking. No physical contact beyond what the social situation requires.
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Chapter 2

The Silverfang Pack's territory smelled like pine and river water and something faintly metallic — the particular scent of a pack that trained hard and trained often. I noted it the way I noted everything: filed, catalogued, useful.

Chase Weaver was waiting at the trailhead.

He was exactly what his reputation promised. Tall, easy in his body, with the kind of smile that had probably been getting him out of trouble since he was twelve years old. His wolf was already close to the surface — I could see it in the slight dilation of his pupils, the way his nostrils flared once, almost imperceptibly, the moment I stepped out of the car.

Then the smile widened, and the performance began.

"Alayna." He said my name like he'd been practicing it. "You're exactly on time."

"I always am." I shook his hand. Firm, brief, professional. "Shall we?"

The trail wound through old-growth forest, the kind of trees that had been standing since before the tri-pack alliance existed. Chase fell into step beside me and started talking — stories about the territory, a joke about his Gamma's terrible sense of direction, a self-deprecating anecdote about a pack run that had gone sideways last spring. He was good at it. I could see why crowds responded to him. There was a warmth to him that felt almost genuine, the way a very good actor's warmth feels almost genuine.

I gave him a smile at the right moments. Not too much. Just enough.

His wolf was losing its mind.

I could feel it in the way he kept drifting slightly closer as we walked, closing the distance by inches without seeming to notice he was doing it. His hand came up toward my shoulder — casual, the gesture of a man reaching for something that should already belong to him.

I stepped left without breaking stride.

"Section four, paragraph two," I said pleasantly. "No physical contact beyond what the social situation requires. A private run doesn't qualify."

Chase lowered his hand. He laughed, but it was a beat too late. "Right. The contract."

"The contract," I confirmed.

He was quiet for a moment. The trees moved around us, and somewhere above us a bird called once and went silent. I kept my scent at a steady, low projection — warm, present, just out of reach. I had calibrated it for open air. For movement. For exactly this.

Chase exhaled through his nose. "You know, most placeholders don't actually memorize the clauses."

"Most placeholders aren't me."

He looked at me sideways. Something shifted in his expression — the performance thinned for just a second, and underneath it was something rawer. Hungrier. His wolf pressing against the inside of his eyes.

"No," he said quietly. "They're not."

I looked back at the trail ahead and said nothing.

---

The pack dinner was held in the Silverfang main hall — less formal than the Ironveil banquet, louder, with the easy energy of a pack that liked itself. Chase seated me to his right and spent the meal doing what he did best: performing.

He was brilliant at it, I'd give him that. He had the table laughing within ten minutes. He drew me into conversations with the light touch of a man who wanted to show off his guest without making it obvious he was showing off. He remembered details I had mentioned in passing during the run — a small thing, the kind of thing that was meant to feel like intimacy.

I gave him my attention in careful, measured doses. Enough to keep his wolf engaged. Never enough to satisfy it.

Across the table, his Gamma — Ryan Weaver, I had done my research — watched us with the particular stillness of a man who was calculating something. He had the look of pack-politics opportunist written into the set of his jaw. I filed him away for later.

At exactly midnight, I set down my glass and stood.

"Thank you for the evening, Alpha Weaver." I kept my voice warm, professional, final. "The booking was a pleasure."

Chase stood too, reflexively, the way his wolf wouldn't let him stay seated while I was leaving. Something flickered across his face — the smile still there, but thinner now, stretched over something that looked almost like panic.

"I'll walk you out."

"That's not necessary."

He walked me out anyway. At the door, he stopped me with a question that wasn't really a question.

"When are you available next?"

I looked at him for a moment. Let the silence sit.

"My booking calendar is on the contract documentation," I said. "Good night."

I didn't look back. But I heard him standing there in the doorway as I walked to my car, and I knew without turning around that he was already reaching for his phone.

---

The café was in neutral territory, halfway between Silverfang and Nighthollow lands — the kind of place that existed specifically because werewolves from different packs occasionally needed to be somewhere that belonged to neither of them. I came here between bookings sometimes. The coffee was decent and no one asked questions.

I was on my second cup, annotating my schedule in the margins of a printed contract, when the door opened.

I didn't look up immediately. I heard the pause — that specific, weighted pause of someone who has just walked into a room and found something that stopped them.

Then I smelled him. Dark earth and iron, with something colder underneath. Nighthollow Pack.

I looked up.

Lucas Gibson was standing just inside the doorway, and he was staring at me with an expression I recognized — not because I knew him, but because I had seen it on Bryce's face in the water, on Chase's face at the trailhead. The wolf-recognition look. The look of a man whose instincts had just told him something his mind hadn't caught up to yet.

But there was something else in it. Something that made the back of my neck go very still.

He looked like a man who had heard a sound from a room he thought was empty.

His eyes moved to the cup in my hand. To the contract pages on the table. Back to my face. And I watched him breathe in — slow, deliberate — the way a wolf scents something it is trying to place.

Cotton candy and vanilla.

I held his gaze and waited.

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