
Dumped the Alpha, Mated to the Lycan
Ivy is the last heir of the fallen Highmoor Pack. At sixteen, she entered Silvercrest Pack by a blood contract and became the partner of Alpha heir Julian. For three years, she was loyal and silent, but never loved.
In a crisis, Julian abandoned her and chose Selena. Heartbroken, Ivy insisted on ending the contract. She refused Julian's gifts and threats, determined to regain freedom.
When Ivy was attacked, silver-eyed Silas Blackwood saved her. He is the powerful Lycan King, above all Alphas.
Ivy's wolf awakened and recognized Silas as her real fated mate.
Escaping Julian's control, Ivy broke free from her painful past. Protected by the Lycan King, she regained dignity and strength.
The abandoned Luna finally rises, embracing her true destiny and love.
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Chapter 2
Ivy POV
I don't answer her.
Selena pulls the chair close and sits down like she's done it before. Her color is good. No bruising, no stiffness. Julian got her out in time.
Of course he did.
"I've been so worried," she says. "I kept telling Julian, someone needs to go check on her. But after an attack everyone's running around and no one's actually thinking."
I look at her and wait.
She asks if the pack doctor's been attentive. She asks if I'm in pain. She talks about how unsettled the pack has been, how she woke up twice reaching for Julian. She says it like she's confiding in me. Her voice stays soft and her eyes stay on my face the whole time.
I sit with my hands flat on the blanket and wait for what she actually came here to say.
"Can I be honest with you?" she says. "I think you deserve honesty more than politeness right now."
There it is.
"Before you came to this pack," she says, "My aunt was already arranging our bonding ceremony. I don't know if anyone told you that. I'm not saying it to hurt you. I'm saying it because I think you should know what you're actually holding on to." She pauses. "The Severance option exists. It's clean, it's formal. You'd walk out of here with your name intact."
She meets my eyes. "Julian didn't come back for you in that fight. You were there. You know what that means."
I say nothing.
She stands. "Think about what I said. That's all I'm asking."
The door closes.
I sit with it.
She's not wrong. That's the part that doesn't land the way she wanted it to. She came in here with true things and wrapped them up like a favor, and I unwrapped them and looked, and none of it is new. I already knew about the ceremony. I already knew what the clearing meant.
What I didn't know until five minutes ago is how long she's been waiting for me to figure it out on my own.
'She wants it to be my idea,' I think. 'If I file, she gets what she wants and her hands stay clean.'
Selena wants me to file for Severance quietly, disappear quietly, never make anyone feel responsible for what they did to me.
I look at the ceiling.
My ribs pull when I breathe too deep. The pack doctor said two more days. Rest, warmth, stay off the ankle.
I reach for my clothes.
No one stops me.
I get dressed, pick up my bag, and walk out of the medical wing, and no one is watching for me to do something as unremarkable as leave. The pack house is quieter than the doctor's hall. My ankle holds as long as I don't rush.
I stop twice on the way back. By the time I get the door open I'm steady enough.
I sit on the edge of the bed and look at the room.
Three years I woke up here. Every morning the same room, the same math, building my day around someone who was building his around someone else. I don't feel angry about it. I don't feel much of anything right now, and I've stopped mistaking that for peace. It's not peace. It's what's left after something runs out.
I think about my father's voice in his last letter. Try. That was all he said. Just try.
I tried. All of it, for nothing. I don't think that's what he meant, but I did it anyway, and now I know exactly what it got me, which is a bruise on my jaw and no feeling in my hands and a pack doctor's room I left early because there was no point staying.
I'm going to file for Severance. Not because she told me to. Because it's time and I know it's time and the only thing left is to choose when and how.
Julian gets home late.
I hear the front door. I stay sitting.
Every time I heard that sound I got up. Tonight I don't move.
He comes in and sees me still sitting. Looks at me once, then away. "You discharged yourself."
"Yes."
"The pack doctor said two more days."
"I know what he said."
He sets his things on the dresser. Then turns. "Selena said the visit didn't go well. She came out of her way to check on you, Ivy. She didn't have to do that."
"I know."
"Then act like it." He crosses his arms. "She handles things without making everything harder than it needs to be. You could learn something from that."
He's waiting for the nod. I know that look. I know exactly what he needs in these moments, the small give, the okay, I hear you, the release valve that means he can walk away clean. It costs me almost nothing to give it to him. That's exactly why he keeps coming in here expecting it.
I look at him and don't give it.
He only waits a few seconds before picking up his phone.
Done. Before I said a word back.
It didn't occur to him to wait for one.
I think about what he said. Learn from her. She doesn't make everything harder than it needs to be. He said it the way you say something obvious, something that shouldn't even need saying. Like the problem here is clearly me and he's being patient about it.
I think about the clearing. His eyes moved from my face to Selena's. The cell floor. Sylvie pacing and me lying to her, telling her someone was coming. Him walking into the doctor's room and giving me a status report on Selena before he looked at me for more than a second.
Three years of the same math. I kept telling myself I must have added wrong.
I didn't add wrong.
Sylvie goes still inside me. Not the frantic stillness from the cell. Something slower. The kind that sets in when the last of something is finally gone.
'Okay,' I tell her.
She doesn't answer. She doesn't need to.
He goes to bed. I sit in the dark and feel nothing much at all, and that's how I know it's done.
*****
Three days later Meredith sends word she'd like to see me.
I go.
Selena is already there when I walk in. Settled into the chair across from Meredith like she arrived first, which she probably did. She looks up when I come in. Same expression she had in the medical wing. Warm. Patient. The kind of pressure that doesn't leave a mark.
Meredith gestures me to a seat. I sit.
I have sat in this room dozens of times. I have brought Meredith her tea the way she likes it. I have remembered which topics she prefers to avoid. I have learned to read the exact shade of silence that means she is displeased and adjusted myself accordingly before she had to say a word. I did all of it without being asked, because I understood that being useful was the only currency I had in this pack, and I spent it carefully.
Meredith asks after my health in the tone she saves for obligations. Selena answers before I open my mouth. Julian stops by every morning. How attentive he's been. How steady through all of it.
I listen and think: three years. Learning this woman's preferences, stepping carefully around her moods, telling myself that if I was patient enough, if I was useful enough, eventually she would look at me as something other than an inconvenience.
She never did.
And here she sits, watching Selena speak, and she does not correct her. She does not say Ivy has also been through something. She does not say anything at all. She just watches, and waits, and lets Selena fill the room.
Then Selena turns to me. "You've been so patient," she says. "Three years. And what do you actually have to show for it?"
I say nothing.
"File for Severance," she says. "Walk out clean. Before this gets worse." She tilts her head. "What are you waiting for?"
"She's right." Meredith doesn't look at me when she says it. "You've had your time here, Ivy. You know how things stand."
Three years I ran myself quiet in this house trying to earn that look, and here it is. Straight at me. Telling me I'm already gone.
Meredith is still weighing. The way she has been weighing me since I was sixteen and walked in here with a blood-sealed document and shaking hands and nowhere left to go. I have spent three years trying to tip those scales. I never could. She decided what I was worth before I finished walking through the door, and nothing I did changed that number.
They both want to see which way I fall.
I look back at Selena.
"I'm here with a signed agreement," I say. "Blood-sealed. Witnessed. Filed with the Lycan Council."
I hold her gaze.
"You have what? If Julian truly loves you, then when Highmoor Pack had nothing, when I had nothing, why didn't he tear up that agreement?"
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9.3
Marissa was the perfect wife. She traded her high powered corporate ladder for home cooked meals and a designer sanctuary, all to support her husband, Ethan.
But when Ethan confesses to a four month affair not out of guilt, but because his mistress is extorting him for $300 million...Marissa's world turns to ash.Ethan's solution is as twisted as his heart.
"Cheat back. Get even. Stay married."Driven by a cocktail of rage and Revenge, Marissa decides to take him up on his offer. She heads into the night looking for a single moment of rebellion to wash away the scent of Ethan's lies.
She finds it in the arms of a cold, devastatingly masked handsome stranger who makes her forget everything.Broken and fueled by the betrayal, Marissa decides to take the ultimate risk. She slips into an exclusive, members only masquerade club...a place where names don't exist and only desires matter.
Behind a lace mask, she meets him....a man who smells of expensive bourbon and cold command.He is the first person in years to see the fire in her, not just the wife she became.They share a night of scorched....earth passion that leaves Marissa breathless and "even." She leaves before the sun rises, intending for the stranger to remain a ghost of her revenge.
But some ghosts have a name.When the masks come off and the corporate world demands her return, Marissa comes face to face with the man from the club. He isn't just anyone. He is Xavier Sterling....the ruthless billionaire CEO she once worked for, and the man Ethan calls his "best friend."Xavier knows her scent. He knows her touch. And most dangerously, he knows exactly what Ethan did to her.
Now, Marissa has to navigate a world where her husband wants her to stay, the mistress wants her dead, and the CEO wants to own the one woman he was never supposed to touch.
Now, Marissa is caught in a lethal triangle. Xavier wants to own her, Ethan wants to keep her to save his reputation, and the $300 million debt is threatening to drown them all. In a world of billionaire power plays, Marissa is about to learn that revenge is a dish best served... in the CEO's bed.

8.4
Elia was an orphan from the rust belt, taken in by the wealthy Chapman family in New York.
To them, she was just a shameful charity case.
The parents shoved her into a dusty storage closet, treating their other daughter Geri like a delicate princess, and mocked Elia as uneducated trash.
When Elia secured her own admission to Manhattan Elite Prep, Geri's jealousy turned vicious.
Geri orchestrated a massive smear campaign, posting anonymously on the school forum that Elia was a violent dropout who sold her body to a sugar daddy to pay tuition.
In the cafeteria, the school's elite dumped dirty milk on Elia's food.
They called her a whore and told her to go back to the streets, while Geri watched from afar with a victorious, innocent smile.
They thought she was just a helpless stray dog who would easily break under their high-society cruelty.
They had no idea she was actually "L", the dark web's most feared hacker, and "The Surgeon", a genius medical anomaly.
They also didn't know she was currently tracking a dying Wall Street billionaire who had stolen her only necklace in a dark alley.
What made these arrogant rich kids think they could destroy a girl who played with international firewalls for fun?
Instead of crying, Elia calmly pulled out her phone.
Within seconds, she breached the school's server, locking every screen in the building onto a blood-red skull.
As Geri's own recorded voice plotting the fake rumors blasted through the PA system, Elia grabbed her bag, stepping back into the shadows to reclaim what was hers.

7.0
Erika was a disgraced ex-wife, struggling to survive in a freezing Brooklyn slum to raise her five-year-old son.
But her billionaire ex-husband, Doyle Morgan, wasn't done destroying her. He orchestrated a cruel trap, forcing her to deliver a custom sapphire brooch to his new mistress, just to watch her get humiliated and severely burned by scalding coffee.
When Erika fought back and refused to beg, Doyle's punishment was swift. He demoted her to scrubbing executive toilets with raw, bleeding hands. Starved, exhausted, and pushed to the absolute brink of organ failure, she finally collapsed lifelessly in front of him in Central Park.
For five years, she had endured his relentless torment and the world's mockery just to keep her child safe. Doyle despised her, convinced her son was the filthy proof of her cheating with another man.
He didn't know the boy was actually the child of his deceased older brother, conceived in a dark, drugged hotel room. Why couldn't he just leave them alone to suffer in peace?
But when Erika woke up in the VIP hospital ward, the nightmare took a terrifying turn. Doyle pinned her weak wrists to the mattress, his eyes burning with a dark, possessive obsession. He had figured out the truth about the boy's bloodline.
"He's a Morgan. He has my family's blood in his veins, and I will not allow my nephew to be raised in a slum. If you can't care for him, I will. From this moment on, you and that boy belong to me. And you are never leaving my sight again."

7.6
My father raised seven brilliant orphans to be my potential husbands. For years, I only had eyes for one of them, the cold and distant Damien Paul, believing his distance was a wall I just had to break through.
That belief shattered last night when I found him in the garden, kissing his foster sister, Eve—the fragile girl my family took in at his request, the one I had treated like my own sister.
But the true horror came when I overheard the other six Fellows talking in the library.
They weren't competing for me. They were working together, orchestrating "accidents" and mocking my "stupid, blind" devotion to keep me away from Damien.
Their loyalty wasn't to me, the heiress who held their futures in her hands. It was to Eve.
I wasn't a woman to be won. I was a foolish burden to be managed. The seven men I grew up with, the men who owed my family everything, were a cult, and she was their queen.
This morning, I walked into my father's study to make a decision that would burn their world to the ground. He smiled, asking if I'd finally won Damien over.
"No, Dad," I said, my voice firm. "I'm marrying Hunter Beach."

9.7
For three years, I played the role of a devoted, naive wife to billionaire Conrad Whitney. I hid my true identity and foolishly believed in our fairy tale.
Then he handed me a harsh divorce agreement, ordering me to sign and walk away with absolutely nothing. He was leaving me to marry Cindy, the fragile woman he claimed had saved him from a fire.
He expected me to cry and beg. Instead, he watched coldly as Cindy and her family illegally transferred my father's trust fund. When I confronted them at the hospital, Conrad shielded her, calling me a greedy, toxic viper. He mocked me, completely blind to the fact that Cindy was a fraud. He truly believed I was just a pathetic, useless housewife who would be utterly destroyed without his money and status.
I looked at the man I had actually dragged out of that burning debris with my own soot-covered hands. My trauma, my sacrifices, and my love had all been reduced to a joke by his sheer arrogance and a few fake tears from a manipulative liar.
I didn't shed a single tear. I calmly signed the papers, drugged his wine, and left a crumpled one-dollar bill on his unconscious chest with a sticky note mocking his terrible service.
Then, I picked up my encrypted phone. It was time for the world's top surgeon, Dr. Hades, to return, and for Conrad to finally see the god he had just thrown away.

8.0
Aliya woke up in a dingy, freezing apartment with a throbbing headache, only to realize a horrifying truth.
She had transmigrated into the American romance novel she read just last night, becoming the ultimate vicious supporting character. The exhausted man walking through the front door was Cyrus Pace, an amnesiac billionaire currently living under the delusion that he was a broke laborer.
The original owner had trapped him with fabricated memories of being childhood sweethearts. Worse, she relentlessly abused him. Her phone was filled with toxic texts calling him a useless loser, and she had just staged a psychotic hunger strike to force him to buy a designer bag. Cyrus already looked at her with bone-deep, visceral disgust. In the original plot, the moment he regained his memory, his ruthless revenge would send her straight to a maximum-security prison for the rest of her life.
"Are you done playing your hunger strike game?"
Hearing his cold, mocking voice, the sheer terror made Aliya's blood run cold. How was she supposed to survive living with a future tyrant who already despised her? Every time his massive shadow fell over their cramped, shared mattress, her heart stopped. A single wrong move—even a microscopic mistake like accidentally crossing a physical line—would completely seal her doom.
Staring at the torn box of condoms hidden under the bed, Aliya made a desperate, life-or-death decision.
She had to completely rewrite her toxic persona, secretly hustle a high-commission real estate job, and save enough money to flee the country before the billionaire remembered exactly who he was.