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I Walked Away When My Alpha Wouldn’t Mark Me Novel Cover

I Walked Away When My Alpha Wouldn’t Mark Me

Three years ago, I bought a dress for a ceremony that kept not happening. It was deep blue silk, simple, the kind of thing that hung in the back of my closet through three different seasons of excuses. Pack duties. Training cycles. Bad timing. I took it out tonight because Colby had asked me to. He had set the dining table at the Alpha house himself, no staff, no Beta hovering in the doorway, no Gamma's daughter wandering through with a fake question. Just two place settings, two candles, and a small bowl of white roses he must have picked up in town. For the first hour, I almost let myself believe it. "You look beautiful, Nat," Colby said.
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Chapter 2

The first thing I learned about being on the other side of the bond was that the bond doesn't fully agree to die just because you tell it to.

I crossed the line at dawn and kept walking. By the second night I was in a motel two states over, lying on a stiff mattress in a room that smelled like detergent and old smoke. My phone was off. The bag was on the floor. I had not unpacked a single thing.

Sometime past midnight, I felt it.

Not a sound. Not exactly. Something that pressed on the inside of my ribs and then let go. Like a hand reaching for me through a door I had already locked. I knew what it was. Somewhere across three state lines and a territory I would never set foot in again, a wolf was howling for a mate he had not bothered to mark.

I rolled onto my side. I did not cry. I had not cried yet, and I was starting to think I was not going to.

The next night, the same. And the night after that.

By the end of the first week, I stopped flinching at it. The body learns. The wolf inside me, she had learned faster than I had. She turned her face away every time it came, the way you might turn away from a man calling your name in a crowd you were trying to leave.

I drove northwest, slow, taking back roads. I paid in cash. I stopped at diners and ate at the counter and listened to truckers talk about weather and routes. I had never been alone like this. Not once in my whole life. It should have felt frightening. It felt like air.

Twice, in the second week, I caught a scent at the edge of a parking lot that did not belong. Rogue. Male. Carrying the faint sour signature of a wolf who has been paid to be somewhere he should not be. The first time, I saw a shadow shift behind a gas pump and disappear before I could meet his eyes. The second time, in a town outside Boulder, I stood very still in front of my car door and let him watch me lock it. I wanted him to take that picture back to whoever was paying him. I wanted Colby to see it. My hand on the handle. My back straight. My face turned away from the direction he would want me to come from.

I did not know yet how many rogues there would be. I would find out.

I found the neutral territory council the way you find water if you are thirsty enough. By walking until I smelled it. Their offices were in a low stone building tucked into a town that did not appear on most maps, the kind of place where wolves and humans and a few quieter things had agreed, decades ago, not to ask each other inconvenient questions. I went in on a Tuesday with my hair pulled back and my mother's pendant under my shirt and asked if they were hiring.

The wolf at the front desk looked up, sniffed once, and went very still.

"Through there," she said. "Last door on the left."

The man behind the last door was old. Gray at the temples, gray in his eyes, the kind of senior council wolf who had probably watched three generations of Alphas come and go and remembered every single one of them by their mistakes. He looked at me for a long time before he spoke.

"Sit down, Miss—"

"Hughes."

"Hughes." He tapped a pen against a folder I had not handed him. "Tell me what you can do."

I told him. Inter-pack communications. Treaty language. Mediation between rival territories. The kind of administrative diplomacy I had been running quietly inside Silverfang for years, in a Luna's job without a Luna's title, while Colby was off being charmed into another emergency. I did not say any of that part. I did not need to.

He listened without interrupting. When I finished, he nodded once.

"You'll start Monday," he said. "Salary's on the back of that sheet. Don't try to negotiate it. It is what it is."

I was halfway out the door when he spoke again, quieter.

"Miss Hughes. May I ask something."

I turned.

"You carry yourself like a Luna who's never been given the title." He said it with no inflection at all. Not a question. Not a probe. A statement, set down on the desk between us like a stone. "Forgive an old wolf his observations."

I held his eyes. I did not correct him.

"Monday," I said.

I walked out into the sunshine and stood on the steps for a minute with my hand pressed flat against the warm stone wall, and for the first time in a very long time, my breathing came easy.

The shelter was on the edge of town, a converted barn with chain link runs and a hand-painted sign. I had not been planning to go in. I was driving past on my way back from grocery shopping when something inside me said pull over, the way the wolf says things sometimes when she has decided before you have.

I pulled over.

He was in the last run. Big, even for a wolf-dog. Gray and rust, with a torn ear and a long pale scar running down his right shoulder where the fur had grown back wrong. He had his head down on his paws when I came up, and he did not lift it for any of the women working there. He lifted it for me.

He did not bark. He did not wag. He stood up, walked to the gate, sat down on the other side of it, and looked at me the way a soldier looks at a returning officer.

"He doesn't usually—" the woman with the clipboard started.

"I'll take him," I said.

She blinked. "We need to do an interview. There's paperwork—"

"I'll fill it out. I'll take him today."

She filled out the paperwork. I named him Buster on the drive home, because he had the look of a wolf who had survived something he was not supposed to survive, and the name suited him. He sat in the passenger seat of my car like he had been waiting for that seat his whole life. He did not whine. He did not pace. He watched the road with the same focused stillness I had once been told was my own.

That night, at Black Moon Lodge, where I had taken a long-term suite while I figured out where I actually wanted to live, Buster lay down across the doorway of my bedroom without being asked. He put his head on his paws, his eyes on the dark hallway outside, and he breathed out once, long and slow, the way a guard exhales when he has finally been relieved.

I lay in bed and listened to him breathe.

I did not feel the bond pull at me that night.

Maybe Colby had finally fallen asleep. Maybe my wolf had simply learned to stop listening. Or maybe, and this was the thought I held onto as I drifted off, maybe the body on the other side of my bedroom door had taken up the space where a fated mate's protection should have been, and the absence had finally stopped being able to find me.

In the morning, when I got up, Buster was already awake. He had not moved.

He followed me into the kitchen.

He has been following me ever since.

I did not know, then, that somewhere far away, three state lines and a fractured pack between us, another wolf had already caught my new scent on a council memo and was waiting, very patiently, for the right moment to walk through a door I had not yet learned to open.

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