
I Exposed the She-Wolf Who Stole My Alpha
Chapter 3
The warrior Kendrick sent was barely nineteen. He had the look of someone who had drawn the shortest straw — shoulders tight, eyes anywhere but mine, standing on my cabin porch like he was delivering news to a house that had already burned down.
"Alpha Coleman requests your presence at the pack house," he said. "To discuss the situation."
I looked at him for a moment. He was a good kid. Not his fault.
"Tell him there is nothing," I said, and I closed the door.
I stood with my back against it and listened to his footsteps retreat down the gravel path. My ribs ached. I pressed two fingers against my side and breathed slowly until the sharpest edge of it receded.
The mind-link had been quiet all morning. Kendrick had tried it twice — I felt the shape of his reach, that particular Alpha-weight that used to feel like shelter. I let it land and I did not answer. Not because I had severed the connection. Not yet. I just had nothing to say that wouldn't cost me something I was no longer willing to spend.
I imagined him in his office. Receiving the three words. Rubbing the back of his neck the way he always does when there is something he knows he should say and can't find the architecture for.
I hoped it felt like standing in a ceremonial hall for fifty-three minutes.
I turned back to my kitchen and finished sorting.
---
She arrived at half past two.
I heard the wheels on the gravel first — a sound I had not expected — and then the soft exchange of voices at my door, Maisie's low and careful, and the Omega pushing her chair, silent and obliging the way Omegas learn to be around people who expect it.
I opened the door before she knocked.
Maisie Sanchez in daylight was precisely what she had been designed to be. Her dark hair was loose, slightly undone in the way that suggests effort applied to looking effortless. The blanket across her lap was a soft heather grey. Her eyes, when they found mine, arranged themselves immediately into something sorrowful and tentative — wide, a little wet at the edges, the expression of a woman who has rehearsed sincerity until it fits like a second skin.
"Sloane." Her voice was barely above a breath. "I know I have no right to be here."
I stepped back from the door.
"Come in," I said. "I'll make tea."
I put the kettle on and I listened to the Omega wheel her through the front room while I moved around my kitchen with my back to them both. I was aware, with the particular precision that half-shift sharpens in me, of every sound she made. The small, practiced catch of breath when the chair rolled over the threshold. The way her voice dipped lower when she began to speak.
"I never wanted it to go this far." She paused. Another careful breath. "I only wanted to come home. I was — I had nowhere else to go. Ricky —" She let his name sit there a moment, a prop she knew how to use. "What happened to you at the border, I swear to you, I didn't plan that."
I poured boiling water over the leaves and said nothing.
"I know what you must think of me," she continued. "And I won't pretend I haven't made mistakes. But Kendrick — he's carrying this. My health, what it costs him to watch. If you could find it in yourself to reconsider — it wouldn't be for me. It would be for him. You love him. I know you do."
I turned and set the mug on the side table within her reach.
She smiled at me. Soft. Grateful. Exhausted.
I sat in the chair across from her and folded my hands in my lap and looked at her the way I look at a Healer report when something in the numbers doesn't reconcile.
Her hands rested on the wheelchair armrests. Left hand, right hand. I noted the knuckles. No tension. The hands of a woman resting, not the hands of a woman holding herself upright against pain. I noted the angle of her hips — weight centered, not shifted the way it shifts when sitting hurts. I noted the hem of the blanket and the stillness of her legs beneath it. A stillness that was chosen, not imposed.
She talked for another ten minutes. I offered nothing that could be used. No anger, no grief, no opening. When she finished, I thanked her for coming. I walked her to the door. I watched the Omega wheel her down the path and through the gate, and I watched Maisie's hands the entire time — still loose, still easy, not the grip of a woman who needed that chair to exist.
I closed the door.
I poured her untouched tea down the drain and I rinsed the mug.
---
Elle's relay came twenty minutes later.
It arrived the way Elle does everything — clean, precise, no preamble. A sealed mind-link packet from an Ironcrest scout who had been positioned near the eastern ridge since yesterday morning. My request. My arrangement.
I sat at my kitchen table and I opened it.
The footage was clear.
Maisie in wolf form. Eastern ridge, roughly four hundred meters from my cabin's back perimeter. The shift itself was fast — under four seconds, the transition of a wolf who knows her own body, who has done this ten thousand times without hesitation. And then she ran.
Not a limping trot. Not the careful, braced movement of an animal managing pain. She ran at full combat speed along the ridge line, her form fluid and powerful, paws hitting the frozen ground with the confident rhythm of something healthy and practiced and entirely unimpaired. Her coat was dark grey. The same grey as the wolf that had come off the ridge above me two nights ago.
I watched it twice.
The second time, I paused it at the four-second mark — the exact moment the shift completed — and I looked at the line of her spine, the set of her shoulders, the way her head was already orienting forward before her body had fully settled into wolf form.
Combat-trained. Fast. Healthy.
I saved the footage to a sealed archive and I set my phone face-down on the table.
Outside, the ridge pines moved in the wind. Somewhere across the pack grounds, distant and thin, I could just make out the sound of Barnaby howling at something he didn't have words for.
I pressed my thumb against the inside of my wrist.
Then I let go of it.
I reached for a clean sheet of paper and I began to write.
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