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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 5

The communal water route ran between the cabin cluster and the pack house — a packed-dirt path the pack used in the mornings to collect from the spring-fed reservoir at the ridge base. I went early. The light was still gray and the frost crunched under my boots and my ribs hurt with every breath, but I needed the walk and I needed the water and I needed the small, ordinary rhythm of doing something I had done a thousand mornings before.

I heard him before I saw him.

Not footsteps. Aura.

Kendrick's presence used to enter a space the way weather does — atmospheric, undeniable, a pressure you adjusted to before you registered what you were adjusting to. This morning it arrived differently. There was a fray at the edges of it, a thinness I had never felt before, as if the shape of him was holding but the substance underneath had begun, somewhere I could not see, to slip.

I kept walking.

He came up the path from the direction of the pack house and stopped six feet in front of me. His jacket was unbuttoned. He had not shaved. His eyes had the particular hollowed quality of a man who had spent the night doing something other than sleeping and was no longer entirely sure what it had been.

"Sloane."

I stopped because he was in my path. Not for any other reason.

"I need to explain." His voice was low. And then, because his body had been trained for thirty-two years to reach for it whenever a situation slipped out of his grip, the Alpha tone slid in underneath the words — that specific weighted register that used to make my shoulders drop and my chin lift at the same time. "Sloane. Look at me."

I did look at him.

I looked at him the way I would look at any other wolf on the path. And the tone — the tone that had organized eight years of my interior life, the tone that I had folded myself around without ever quite naming what I was doing — landed somewhere in the air between us and did not find anything to hold onto.

I watched him feel it not work.

His throat moved. Once.

"I deserve a conversation," he said. Quieter now. The Alpha tone gone, replaced by something more dangerous to both of us — the lower register, the unguarded one, the voice I had only ever heard in the dark.

"You deserve," I said, "exactly what you have earned."

His hand came up. Not aggressively — the opposite. The slow, careful reach of a man trying to touch the sleeve of my jacket the way he used to touch my wrist when he wanted me to stay in a room a little longer.

I stepped back. Once. Clean.

The distance that opened between us was not measured in feet. It was measured in something else, and he felt that too. His hand stopped in the air halfway to where I had been, and stayed there a moment, and then lowered.

"You should be more careful," I said, "which she-wolves you choose to bleed."

He blinked.

The sentence did not land for him. I had not expected it to. I had said it for myself, the way you set a stone down at a crossroads so you remember later which direction you chose.

I stepped around him and continued up the path toward the reservoir. I did not look back. I heard him stay exactly where he was — no footsteps following, no second attempt. Just the silence of an Alpha standing on a frosted path at dawn with his hand still half-raised toward a place where I was no longer standing.

My ribs hurt. I kept walking.

---

Barnaby came at dusk.

I was at my kitchen table archiving the rogue-lover communications — sorting the encrypted routing signatures into a sequence that could be projected cleanly, indexing each timestamp against Maisie's documented locations — when I heard the soft scratching at my door. Not a knock. Not a paw striking wood for attention. The careful, tentative scrape of an animal who was not certain he was still welcome anywhere.

I opened the door.

He was on my porch in half-shift form — the shape he took when he was small and uncertain, somewhere between pup and wolf, his fur dusted with the cold and his eyes huge and questioning. He looked up at me. He did not move.

"Barnaby," I said.

He came across the threshold in one quick lunge and pressed his face into my knees and made a small high sound that was not quite a whine.

I closed the door.

I sat down on the floor of the front room — slowly, because of my ribs — and he climbed into my lap the way he had when he was eight weeks old and convinced that my sternum was the safest topography in the world. He was much bigger now. He fit anyway. He always fit. He had decided, very early, that he would fit, and reality had simply arranged itself around the decision.

I held him against my chest. I felt his ribs move with his breathing and I felt my own ribs ache around the shape of him and I let both things be true.

"I know," I said into his fur. "I know."

He made the small sound again. Quieter this time. Settling.

I reached up to the table and pulled my laptop down to the floor beside us. I kept one hand on his back and I worked with the other. Routing signature. Timestamp. Border node. Cross-reference. Seal. The encrypted threads laid themselves out under my fingers in a neat, damning lattice, and Barnaby's breathing slowed against my chest, and somewhere in the second hour his body went heavy with sleep.

I did not tell him I was leaving.

I looked down at the top of his head — the small whorl of fur between his ears that Kendrick used to rub with his thumb without thinking about it — and I did not tell him. The telling would come. Not tonight.

Tonight I held him.

---

Later — much later, long after I had moved Barnaby to the rug by the fire and pulled a blanket over him and returned to my work at the table — Elle's mind-link relay arrived with a small additional packet attached to the day's standard update.

It was a transcript.

An Ironcrest contact embedded in Crescent Hollow's communications layer had captured the audio of an emergency session convened in the pack house an hour ago. Kendrick. Conrad Walsh. Three Gamma officers. The transcript was clean.

I read it twice.

The junior warriors had filed reports — three of them, independently — describing strange activity on the eastern ridge the night of my so-called accident. A second wolf. Scent unfamiliar. Movement patterns inconsistent with a rogue incursion.

Conrad had buried all three. Reframed the incident in the official record as an opportunistic rogue strike. Instructed the Gammas not to escalate the warriors' statements to inter-pack channels.

I read the line where he said it. *We don't need outside packs in our internal grief, gentlemen. Let's keep this clean.*

Clean.

I saved the transcript to the banquet dossier and labeled the file in my own handwriting and closed the laptop.

The fire was burning low. Barnaby made a small sound in his sleep — a half-formed howl, swallowed before it could fully shape itself — and I crossed the room and lay down on the rug beside him and put my hand on his back and watched the embers until the cold edges of my ribs stopped aching enough to let me close my eyes.

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