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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 4

His name was Wylder Vargas.

I learned it the way you learn most things at a council function—sideways, from someone else's conversation. A senior representative from the western territories said it to the woman beside him while I was refilling my water glass for the second time, and I heard it land in the air between them with a particular weight. The kind of weight a name carries when the person saying it is slightly nervous.

Lycan Prince.

I set the water pitcher down carefully.

I had known he was not a standard Alpha. The aura was wrong for that—too deep, too settled, the way bedrock is settled compared to packed earth. But Lycan royalty was something else entirely. Lycan royalty meant a bloodline that made every Alpha on the eastern seaboard look like a middle manager at a company he did not own.

I picked up my glass and turned back toward the room.

He was already looking at me.

Not the way men look at women at functions like this, the quick inventory, the calculation. He looked at me the way you look at something you have been waiting to see for a long time and are now being careful not to startle. Then he crossed the room.

He moved like he had all the time in the world. He probably did.

"Miss Hughes." His voice was low. Not quiet—low, the way a cello is low, something you feel in the chest before the ears fully process it. "I've read your work on the eastern river clause. The amended language was clean."

I looked at him directly. Up close, the scent was worse. Better. I did not have a word for it. Cedar and depth and that underneath-thing that my wolf had been circling for days like a fire she was not sure she was allowed near.

"Thank you," I said. "The original draft buried the intent in three subordinate clauses. It needed to breathe."

Something shifted in his expression. Not a smile, exactly. More like a door opening a centimeter.

"That's a precise way to describe it."

"It's a precise problem."

He did not fill the silence after that. Most people fill silences. He let it sit between us, comfortable and unhurried, and I found myself recalibrating. I was used to men who talked to fill space. This one talked to say something.

We stood near the window for twenty minutes. He asked me about the inter-pack communication protocols the council was revising—specifically the dispute escalation framework, which was a genuinely complicated piece of work that most visiting officials glazed over inside thirty seconds. He did not glaze over. He asked a follow-up question about the notification timeline that told me he had actually read the draft, not just the summary.

He asked me nothing personal. Not where I was from. Not which pack. Not why a woman with a natural Luna aura was working as a council communications officer in a neutral territory lodge instead of standing beside an Alpha somewhere.

He did not ask, and the not-asking was the most careful thing anyone had done for me in a very long time.

When the function began to wind down, he inclined his head once—a small, precise gesture that managed to convey both courtesy and finality—and moved away toward the senior council table. I watched him go for exactly two seconds. Then I looked back at my water glass.

My wolf was very quiet. Not the quiet of turning away. The quiet of paying close attention.

I went back to my suite. Buster met me at the door, sniffed my coat once, and then sat back and looked at me with his head tilted slightly to one side.

"Don't," I told him.

He lay down across the threshold.

I sat on the edge of the bed and pressed my palms flat against my knees and thought about a man who had read the eastern river clause and asked a follow-up question and not once looked at me like I was something to be recovered or reclaimed or returned to its proper place.

I thought about that for a long time.

---

Three days later, the rogue found Colby.

I did not know this yet. I was in the council offices at the time, working through a stack of border filings, Buster asleep under my desk with his chin on my foot. The afternoon light was coming in flat and gold through the west-facing window. It was a Tuesday. It was ordinary.

I would piece it together later, from things Wylder told me and things I worked out on my own. The rogue had been watching the lodge for two weeks. He had a description of me, a description of the suite, and a description of the man whose scent had been layered over mine in the corridor and the council hall and the half-dozen other places our paths had crossed in the weeks since I arrived.

Deep, the rogue would have said. Territorial. Unlike anything from an Alpha.

I thought about Colby receiving that report. I thought about what his face would have done. I had spent four years learning to read that face—the way his jaw set when he was deciding something, the way his eyes went distant when the pack frequency opened up and pulled him somewhere else. I knew exactly what it would have looked like when the rogue finished speaking.

I knew, because I had watched it happen a hundred times, the moment his wolf took over from the man.

The difference was that every other time, the thing pulling him away had been Kenna's voice on a frequency she had no business using.

This time it was me.

I did not feel him cross the territory lines. The bond was gone—I had made sure of that, standing in a moonlit courtyard with my chin up and my voice steady and my knees locked so I would not fall. What I felt, sometime around midnight on that Tuesday, was something vaguer. A pressure at the edge of my awareness, like weather coming in from a direction I was not facing.

I lay in the dark and listened to Buster breathe.

I did not know yet that an Alpha was driving through the night with no territorial clearance and no plan and nothing left but the desperate, deteriorating instinct of a wolf who had finally understood what he had thrown away.

I did not know yet that Wylder did.

I did not know that he had already been told, that his people had been watching the perimeter since sundown, that somewhere in the quiet machinery of Lycan royal intelligence, a decision had already been made about what to do when a broken Alpha arrived at the edge of a mountain lodge looking for something that no longer belonged to him.

I only knew that the cedar-and-depth scent had been in the corridor again that morning, and that my wolf had lifted her head, and that for the first time in a year, the empty place in my chest had felt less like a wound and more like a room waiting to be filled.

I pressed my palm flat against the mattress.

I closed my eyes.

Outside, the Colorado mountains were very dark and very quiet, and somewhere below the tree line, headlights were moving fast along a road that ended here.

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