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I Exposed the She-Wolf Who Stole My Alpha Novel Cover

I Exposed the She-Wolf Who Stole My Alpha

I had been waiting eight years for tonight. That sounds dramatic. Maybe it is. But when you spend eight years being the she-wolf who stays — who manages the pack calendar, smooths the territorial disputes, absorbs every small crisis before it reaches the Alpha's desk — you stop noticing the waiting. It becomes the shape of your days. You tell yourself that tonight is different. Tonight, the waiting ends. The ceremonial hall smelled of white cedar and melted wax. Someone had woven moonflowers through the archway above the altar — my idea, actually, though I hadn't told anyone that. The moonstone pendant sat in its velvet box at the center of the table, catching the candlelight.
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Chapter 4

I told Silas I was coming in for the ribs.

That part was even true. Three broken, possibly four — I hadn't let anyone properly assess them since I'd walked out of the infirmary two days ago, and the grinding sensation under my left arm when I breathed too deeply was becoming difficult to ignore. So I made the appointment through the standard pack-house system, listed the reason as post-injury follow-up, and arrived at the Healer's wing at nine in the morning with my jacket buttoned and my face arranged into something neutral.

Silas was waiting in the examination room. He looked like he hadn't slept.

He probably hadn't.

I sat on the examination table and let him run his hands along my ribcage, pressing carefully at the points of greatest damage while I breathed in measured counts and looked at the far wall. He worked quietly. He had always been a precise healer, technically — whatever else he was, whatever he had done, his hands knew their work.

"Three broken," he confirmed. "One cracked. You need to be resting."

"I know," I said.

I looked at him then. Not aggressively. Not with the particular heat that Dara would have brought to this room, that Conrad would have flinched from. Just steadily, the way you look at a medical record that contains a number that cannot be right.

"Four years ago," I said, "the donor scroll for Kendrick Coleman's life-force transfusion was registered under the Sanchez bloodline."

Silas set down the instrument he was holding. Slowly. Carefully.

"The timing of that scroll," I continued, "places the donation three hours after Maisie Sanchez was documented at an inter-pack summit two territories east of here. A summit with sign-in records. I have a copy." I paused. "The biological markers on the transfusion itself — the trace residue, which I understand you archived per standard protocol — are consistent with a wolf whose baseline life-force levels are, and I'm quoting your own assessment from two nights ago, unusually high." Another pause. "I also have footage of Maisie Sanchez running the eastern ridge in full wolf form yesterday afternoon. Full sprint. Under four seconds to shift."

The room was very quiet.

"I am going to present these findings at the Harvest Moon Banquet," I said. "In front of every Alpha in the region. With or without your participation." I kept my voice even. Unhurried. "Pack law distinguishes between a confession given voluntarily and one extracted under Alpha authority. The distinction matters for what happens after." I folded my hands in my lap. "I'm not here to threaten you, Silas. I'm here to give you the choice you didn't give me."

For a long moment he didn't move.

Then his hands began to shake.

Not visibly, not in a way that anyone looking in from the doorway would have noticed — but I was three feet from him and I saw it. The fine tremor of an old man who has been holding something too tight for too long and has just been told he can set it down.

"Parchment," he said. His voice was barely audible. "I'll need parchment."

I reached into my bag and put a clean sheet on the examination table beside him.

---

While he wrote, I worked.

The Healer archive occupied the small room adjacent to the examination wing — rows of bound record books and sealed scroll-cases organized by year, by patient, by procedure. I had standing access as someone who had assisted in pack medical administration for six years. Nobody questioned my presence.

I cross-referenced Maisie's current Healer file against the archive's baseline medical records, working backward from her stated symptoms. It took me forty minutes.

I found three fabrications.

The first was a treatment notation for lunar iron deficiency — a condition that, in wolves with Maisie's documented bloodline markers, triggers a rejection response within forty-eight hours. The notation showed six weeks of continuous treatment with no rejection event recorded. Biologically impossible.

The second was a life-force depletion rating listed at thirty-two percent — a severity level that, in clinical presentation, produces visible aura-fading observable by any wolf within twenty feet. I had been within ten feet of Maisie Sanchez in my own cabin two days ago. Her aura was undiminished. Steady and warm and entirely, irritatingly intact.

The third was a symptom cluster attributed to post-rejection shock syndrome — which Maisie's records stated had begun eleven months ago. But the encrypted mind-link communications I found routed through Crescent Hollow's outer border nodes told a different story.

Two rogue identities. Two separate neighboring territories. A pattern of contact going back fourteen months, maintained with enough encryption that it had read as background traffic to the pack's communication monitors. I traced the routing signatures carefully and I archived everything — timestamps, frequency patterns, the specific border node signatures that placed Maisie as the point of origin.

She had two lovers operating out of rogue territory. Neither one appeared to know about the other.

I sat with that information for a moment. Not with satisfaction — it was too clean for satisfaction, too geometrically precise in the way that a particularly ugly truth sometimes is. Just with the quiet, clarifying sensation of a number that finally reconciles.

I sealed the archive copies, labeled them, and put them in my bag alongside Silas's confession, which he had slid under the examination room door twenty minutes earlier without knocking.

I didn't open it there. I would read it at home, in good light, without anyone watching my face.

---

Dara was sitting on my porch steps when I got back.

She had her arms wrapped around her knees and her chin tilted up against the cold, and she had the particular look she gets when she has been running an argument in her head long enough that she has already won it twice and is now just waiting for the other party to show up.

"I'm not here to fight," she said immediately.

"I know," I said. I unlocked the door. "Come in."

She followed me inside and stood in the middle of the front room while I put my bag down and filled the kettle. I could feel her watching me. Dara has always watched me the way people watch a structure they think might be load-bearing — trying to calculate what would fall if it gave way.

"Eight years," she said finally. The words came out of her with the pressure of something that had been sealed for a long time. "Eight years I watched you run his pack. Manage his disputes. Sit with his wolves at two in the morning when they were falling apart. Cancel your own plans so you could be present for whatever he needed that week." Her voice wasn't loud. It was the opposite of loud — concentrated, precise, the way emotion gets when it's been compressed by patience into something very dense. "And he looked through you, Sloane. That's not — I don't say that to hurt you. I say it because it was true and I saw it and you wouldn't let me say it and I'm saying it now."

I kept my back to her. I watched the kettle.

"I told you in the second year," she continued. "I said, he's never going to mark you. He's comfortable. He has everything he wants from a mate without having to commit to one. And you told me I was wrong about him. That I didn't understand what was between you." A beat. "I knew I wasn't wrong. I just couldn't prove it fast enough to matter."

The kettle began to steam.

I turned around.

Dara was looking at me with something in her face that was not quite anger and not quite grief but occupied the exact territory between them — the expression of someone who was right in a way they never wanted to be.

I looked at my sister. I thought about eight years of choosing a particular quality of patience and calling it love. I thought about the ceremonial hall, and the moonstone pendant, and the word postponed hanging in a mind-link like a door swinging shut. I thought about a sealed donor scroll in a Healer's archive, my name buried under four years of someone else's claim.

"You weren't wrong," I said.

It was the first time I had said it aloud.

The words were smaller than I expected. Just four syllables. But Dara's shoulders dropped about two inches when I said them, and I understood that she had been carrying the weight of being right and unheard for almost as long as I had been carrying the wrong belief that made her that way.

She crossed the room and sat down at my kitchen table. Not leaving. Not making me ask.

I made the tea. She stayed.

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