
Beyond His Lies, Her Alpha's Love
Aliana braved a heavy storm, carrying a warm stew for her fiancé, Ivan, just as she always put his needs before her own. This ingrained habit, a survival mechanism from a cold childhood, was about to shatter into a million pieces. Tonight, everything she believed was a lie.
The iron gates of Ivan's private villa flashed red, denying her entry, and a guard mumbled lies. Ignoring him, she pushed past, a strange orchid perfume leading her to Ivan's car, where a tube of crimson lipstick lay on the passenger seat. Through a window, she saw him with another woman and a small child, an image that felt like jagged glass twisting in her heart.
Then his words cut through the storm, cold and cruel:
"Aliana is just a placeholder."
He was marrying her for her multi-billion-dollar patent, a secret deal made with her own parents, who had sold her for a kickback to buy this very house. Her family, her love, her future-all were a calculated lie.
Her inner wolf, usually fierce, fell terrifyingly silent, replaced by a chilling resolve. The burning acid in her throat wasn't just bile; it was the taste of her shattered devotion.
She didn't want his apologies or his guilt. She wanted his ruin, and as Ivan walked in with a fake smile the next morning, Aliana was ready to deliver it.
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Chapter 4
Aliana POV:
I stared at the word 'Baby' on the glowing screen.
I didn't cry. There was no lump in my throat, no stinging behind my eyes. Ten years of grueling medical training had taught me how to compartmentalize trauma. When a patient was bleeding out on the table, panic meant death. My brain simply severed the connection to my emotional center, plunging me into a state of absolute, surgical logic.
I locked my phone and slid it back into my wet pocket.
I stood up slowly, my joints stiff from the cold. I looked through the gap in the curtains one last time. Ivan had lifted Kiera off the sofa. Her legs were wrapped tightly around his waist as he carried her toward the stairs.
In my mind, the white wolf kept her eyes closed. She wasn't dead. She was waiting.
I looked down at my left hand. I was still gripping the handle of the thermos. The metal was lukewarm now. I thought about the three hours I spent simmering the deer meat, carefully balancing the herbs to soothe the tension in his shoulders. It was pathetic.
I didn't throw it. I didn't scream and smash it against the glass. A confrontation right now would only end with me looking like a hysterical, discarded woman. I didn't want his apologies. I didn't want his guilt.
I wanted his ruin.
I walked away from the window, my boots squelching in the mud. I stopped beneath the massive, sprawling branches of the old oak tree in the center of the yard. I crouched down and placed the thermos carefully against the thick roots. It stood perfectly upright, a silent, mocking monument to my dead devotion.
I turned and walked back down the driveway. I didn't open my umbrella. I let the freezing rain beat down on my head, plastering my hair to my face, washing the weakness out of me.
I slipped past the guardhouse. The guard was staring at his phone, completely oblivious.
I climbed into my car. The engine roared to life. I cranked the heat, holding my numb, blue fingers in front of the vents until they stopped shaking.
I put the car in drive. I didn't go straight home. I merged onto the interstate and drove in a massive, sweeping loop around the city perimeter. I watched my rearview mirror constantly, tracking the headlights behind me. Only when I was absolutely certain I hadn't picked up a tail did I take the exit toward the city center.
I pulled into the underground garage of the penthouse I shared with Ivan.
I rode the private elevator up. The doors slid open to complete darkness. The air in the apartment smelled like expensive vanilla diffusers and polished wood. It smelled like a lie.
I stripped off my ruined trench coat right in the foyer and dropped it directly into the trash can.
I walked into the master bathroom and turned the shower on. I didn't touch the hot water dial. I stepped under the freezing spray fully naked.
The ice-cold water hit my scalp like needles. I grabbed a rough loofah and scrubbed my skin until it was bright red, violently erasing the ghost of that synthetic orchid perfume from my pores. I stayed under the water until my teeth started chattering and my core temperature plummeted.
I stepped out, drying off with mechanical efficiency. I put on a pair of long, white silk pajamas.
I walked into the living room and sat down on the center of the plush velvet sofa. I didn't turn on a single lamp. I sat in the pitch black, perfectly still, like a marble statue blending into the shadows.
The hours ticked by. The rain outside slowed to a drizzle, and the sky beyond the floor-to-ceiling windows began to bleed into a bruised, pale gray.
While I waited, my mind categorized everything. I mapped out the location of every physical deed, every encrypted drive, and every patent document in this apartment.
At exactly 7:00 AM, the elevator chimed.
I heard the faint scrape of a key sliding into the heavy brass lock.
I adjusted my posture, letting my shoulders slump. I closed my eyes and let out a soft, ragged breath, letting the exhaustion of the night wash over my face.
The heavy door clicked open.
Ivan stepped inside. A blast of chilly morning air followed him. He was carrying a brown paper bag from the artisan bakery down the street—his pathetic prop for his 'long night at the border.'
He reached out and flicked the switch for the foyer lights.
The sudden illumination spilled into the living room, catching me on the sofa. Ivan froze. The paper bag crinkled loudly in his grip. His red eyes widened in a split second of genuine panic.
But Ivan was a master of the mask. In the blink of an eye, the panic vanished, replaced by a look of deep, overwhelming affection.
He dropped the bag on the console table and strode across the room, his boots heavy on the hardwood. He dropped to his knees in front of the sofa, reaching out to cup my cheek.
"Baby, why did you fall asleep on the couch? Aren't you cold?"
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9.3
Born into privilege, Eleanor never imagined her life could shatter in a single night. Then her father disappeared with his mistress, her mother fell from a building and slipped into a coma, and everything she once owned turned to dust.
Determined not to ruin Jonathan's future with her family's disgrace, she ended their relationship and became the bride of a man trapped in a vegetative state.
She believed that was the last time their paths would cross. But two years later, Jonathan pinned her in the dark and whispered, "Long time no see, my sister-in-law."

8.7
For eighteen years, I lived as the lowest Omega in the Silver Moon Pack, surviving only because Alpha Gideon took me under his wing.
But the moment his coffin was lowered into the ground, his wife and the new Alpha son immediately turned on me.
"Her presence has brought a curse upon us!"
Luna Lyra pointed a trembling finger at me in the freezing rain, blaming me for Gideon's sudden death.
She stripped me of my pack ties and permanently exiled me into the deadly wilderness with nothing but a wooden toy.
The entire pack watched with cold contempt as I was thrown out like garbage.
To make matters worse, the new Alpha later hunted me down in the woods, threatening to kill me just to steal the only thing Gideon had secretly left behind for me—an ancient, unreadable book.
I didn't understand why they hated me so deeply, or what terrifying secret this blank book held that made my own pack want me dead.
But the moment my foot crossed the pack boundary, an ancient, immense power I never knew I had snapped free inside my veins.
I was no longer their weak Omega.
And when I escaped deeper into the forest and crashed straight into the arms of a wounded Rogue, my destiny completely rewrote itself.
Because he wasn't just a Rogue, but the legendary Northern Alpha King.
And as his glowing golden eyes locked onto mine, our inner wolves roared the exact same word:
"Mate!"

9.2
When Alma's father stood in front of the bulldozers to protest, the energy company's thugs beat him half to death in the mud.
Instead of arresting the attackers, the police handcuffed her bleeding father and threw him into a cruiser.
"Stay back, kid," the officer barked, shoving Alma away.
Her father was denied bail and framed for assaulting an officer. The corrupt mayor just smiled and told her not to cause a scene. Meanwhile, the company mailed her weeping mother a severance check that barely covered a month of groceries.
Alma was forced to watch her family be completely destroyed by men with money and power.
Kneeling in the cold dirt where her father's blood had spilled, she didn't shed a single tear. The panic in her chest died, replaced by a cold, absolute hatred.
She realized that crying wouldn't do anything. In this world, justice didn't exist for the weak.
Years later, Alma stepped onto a prestigious Ivy League campus, her cheap backpack slung over her shoulder.
She was surrounded by the arrogant children of the very executives who ruined her life.
She lowered her head, hiding her dead eyes, and put on the perfect mask of a timid, helpless charity case.
Undergrad was just a training ground, and these elite kids were just her practice dummies. The hunt was officially on.

7.1
The captain is dead to the world. And I'm the only one holding the kill switch.
Ethan Carter, the "Glacier of Silvercrest," was the most feared Alpha to ever step onto the ice. Now, he's nothing but a shell-a broken, comatose legend trapped in his own body.
My life? It was supposed to be simple. Graduate, survive the pack's bottom-tier status, and pay off my father's ruinous blood-debts. Instead, the pack elders handed me a contract soaked in cold, hard malice: I am the designated "Stabilizer." My only job is to touch him, scent him, and keep his wolf from flatlining.
I thought I was just a glorified nurse. I didn't realize the Alpha was listening.
When Ethan finally wakes, he isn't the hero the Kingdom of Valeria remembers. He's a starving predator with amber eyes that burn holes through my defenses and a temperament that makes the frost in the mansion seem warm. He hates the bargain, he hates the pack, and-most dangerously-he hates the way his scent turns wild whenever I'm near.
He wants me out of his sight. I want to be out of his reach.
But in a pack built on secrets, someone is still trying to finish the job they started on his life. Now, the man who wants me gone is the only one who can protect me. And as the rink turns into a battlefield, I'm realizing the most dangerous thing about the Alpha isn't his temper... it's the fact that once he claims a mate, he doesn't know how to let go.
Frozen hearts are meant to shatter. But in the fire of this pack, we're both going to burn.

7.2
I am a top-tier Alpha from another universe, but a spatial jump error dropped me straight into a high-security military isolation chamber.
Right in front of me was a terrifying, silver-haired wolf-beastman Admiral, completely losing his mind to a lethal biological heat cycle.
To survive in this strange dimension where my powers were restricted, I had to pretend to be a helpless, terrified girl.
Surprisingly, my mere presence and scent instantly cured his incurable madness.
But this backfired horribly. He became obsessively possessive, treating me like a fragile, priceless treasure.
When I managed to sneak out to the city's lawless slums to gather intel and accidentally saved a dying panther boy, the Admiral went completely feral.
He brought an entire war fleet, blotting out the sky, just to "rescue" me.
He nearly slaughtered the boy out of blind jealousy, forcing me to throw myself into his arms and cry fake tears to stop the bloodshed.
"I'm taking you home. No one will ever hurt you again."
He brought me to his flagship's secret medical bay and ordered the Empire's chief doctor to run a full genetic classification test on me.
I panicked. If they discovered my true identity as an off-world Alpha, I would be dissected or executed.
I immediately commanded my AI system to fake my blood data, aiming for a perfectly average, forgettable Omega result.
But as the machine processed my blood, the alarms blared, and the system overloaded.
The old doctor fell to his knees in absolute worship, and the terrifying Admiral looked at me with wild, starving eyes.
My system had overcompensated. I wasn't registered as average. I was just classified as the only SSSSS-grade Omega in the history of the universe.

9.2
I woke up suffocating in the dark, only to find my mind trapped inside a tiny, plump, and entirely uncoordinated body.
A cold, mechanical voice echoed in my brain, announcing that I was dead in my original world and had transmigrated into a corporate revenge novel as the six-month-old illegitimate daughter of Edward McClure, the story's ruthless villain.
The system mercilessly outlined my doomed fate. Tonight, my cold-blooded father would abandon me to a state orphanage. By age two, he would officially sign my rights away, leaving me to die miserably at the hands of human traffickers. Outside my nursery, I could hear his terrifying footsteps approaching, his voice devoid of any human warmth as he debated throwing me out like garbage. I was completely helpless, trapped in a baby's body, staring up at a man who looked at me with pure, visceral disgust.
Why did I have to be reborn as the tragic cannon fodder of a tyrant destined to put a bullet in his own head? How was I supposed to win over a severe germaphobe when my unequipped infant reflexes made me literally pee and vomit all over his pristine Tom Ford suits?
"Your ultimate mission is to prevent Edward McClure's self-destruction. Step one: Survive tonight's abandonment crisis."
Hearing the system's terrifying ultimatum, I swallowed my adult panic, forced a pool of pitiful tears into my large eyes, and reached my chubby little hands toward the monster.