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Alpha's Cruel Deception Novel Cover

Alpha's Cruel Deception

The familiar scent of pine and earth filled my lungs as I approached the territory I once called home. Six years. Six years of exile, of surviving in rogue lands with nothing but my wits and fierce determination to protect the precious life I carried. Now, as I walked up the stone path leading to the Moonstone Pack house, my daughter Presley's small hand clutched tightly in mine, every step felt like walking through a minefield of memories. The pack house stood exactly as I remembered—imposing gray stone walls covered in ivy, tall windows that once welcomed me with warm light, and the heavy oak door that had opened to me countless times as Luna. But now, everything felt different. Colder. Foreign. "Mama, is this really where you used to live?" Presley whispered, her wide eyes taking in the grandeur she'd only heard about in my carefully edited bedtime stories. Her voice carried that mix of wonder and wariness that had kept us alive in rogue territory.
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Chapter 2

The servant quarters in the basement felt like a tomb. The narrow stone corridor echoed with our footsteps as Kingston's Beta led us down into the bowels of the pack house—a place I'd never set foot in during my years as Luna. The air was thick with dampness and the lingering scent of cleaning supplies mixed with something sour that made my nose wrinkle.

"These will be your accommodations," Beta Marcus said without meeting my eyes, his voice carefully neutral. He pushed open a heavy wooden door to reveal a cramped room with a single small window near the ceiling that barely let in any natural light. Two narrow cots sat against opposite walls, separated by a rickety wooden table that had seen better decades.

Presley pressed closer to my side, her small fingers digging into my palm. "Mama," she whispered, "why is it so dark?"

The question pierced through my chest like a blade. How could I explain to a six-year-old that her father—the Alpha she'd dreamed about meeting—had relegated us to quarters typically reserved for the lowest-ranking pack members? That we were being treated worse than the omega staff who at least had rooms on the main floors?

"It's just temporary, little wolf," I murmured, though the words tasted like ash in my mouth.

Beta Marcus shifted uncomfortably. "Meals are served in the main dining hall at seven, noon, and six. You're... expected to help with kitchen duties to earn your keep." He paused, his loyalty to Kingston warring with whatever decency remained in him. "I'm sorry, Adelaide. This isn't—"

"Thank you, Marcus," I cut him off gently. There was no point in making him voice what we both knew—that this was a deliberate humiliation designed to break whatever remained of my spirit.

After he left, I sank onto one of the cots, pulling Presley onto my lap. The mattress was thin and lumpy, nothing like the luxurious bed I'd once shared with Kingston upstairs. Everything about this placement was meant to remind me that I was no longer Luna—I was barely even considered pack.

The whispers started the next morning. As Presley and I made our way to the dining hall, conversations died mid-sentence only to resume in hushed, urgent tones once we passed. I caught fragments—"disgraced former Luna," "rogue-born child," "abandoned her duties"—each word a poison dart aimed at what little remained of my reputation.

Presley noticed too. She walked closer to me, her usual curious chatter replaced by watchful silence. My heart ached seeing her bright spirit dimmed by the hostility surrounding us.

"Look who decided to grace us with her presence," Karina's voice cut through the dining hall chatter like a knife. She sat at the head table beside Kingston's empty chair, playing the perfect lady of the house. "How refreshing to see you embracing your new station with such... enthusiasm."

Several pack members snickered, their eyes sliding away when I met their gazes directly. These were wolves I'd once protected, whose children I'd helped raise, whose problems I'd listened to with patience and care. Now they looked at me like I was something distasteful they'd found on their shoes.

I guided Presley to an empty table at the far corner, away from the worst of the stares. She picked at her oatmeal, her appetite clearly affected by the oppressive atmosphere.

"Mama," she said quietly, "why don't they like us?"

Before I could answer, the dining hall doors burst open with Alpha authority. Kingston strode in, commanding attention without saying a word. His presence filled the space, making every wolf in the room straighten unconsciously. But when his eyes swept over our corner, they passed right through us as if we were invisible.

That's when Presley did something that stopped my heart.

She slipped from her chair and walked across the dining hall with the fearless curiosity of a child who didn't yet understand rejection. Every conversation ceased. Every eye followed her small form as she approached the head table where Kingston now sat reviewing pack documents.

"Alpha Daddy?"

The words rang out in the sudden silence like a bell tolling. I rose from my seat, panic flooding my system, but it was too late. Presley stood beside Kingston's chair, looking up at him with the hopeful expression of a daughter meeting her father for the first time.

Kingston's entire body went rigid. His green eyes, so much like hers, flickered with something—shock, recognition, pain—before hardening into glacial coldness.

"Alpha Daddy, why don't you live with us?" Presley continued, oblivious to the tension crackling through the room. "Mama told me stories about you, and I drew you pictures, but you weren't there when I woke up."

The silence stretched like a taut wire ready to snap. I could see Karina's lips curving into a satisfied smile, could feel the collective held breath of fifty pack members watching this moment unfold.

Kingston stood slowly, his full Alpha presence bearing down on my innocent daughter. When he spoke, his voice carried the cold authority that could make grown wolves submit.

"I am not your daddy," he said, each word deliberate and cutting. "You are nothing to me. A mistake. A burden your mother brought to my territory uninvited."

Presley recoiled as if he'd struck her, her small face crumpling in confusion and hurt. The sound that escaped her—a whimper of pure bewilderment—shattered something fundamental inside my chest.

Kingston turned his back on our daughter and addressed the room. "Let this be clear to everyone. This child means nothing to me. She is not pack. She is not family. She is merely another mouth we're forced to feed out of obligation."

The cruelty in his words, delivered in front of the entire pack, was breathtaking in its calculated malice. I watched my brave little girl—who had survived rogue territory, who had never complained about our hardships, who had dreamed of meeting her father—crumble under the weight of his rejection.

That's when I understood the true depth of Kingston's betrayal. It wasn't just me he'd destroyed—it was our innocent daughter who had done nothing but exist.

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