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My Beta Mate Never Touched Me: He Marked My Half-Sister Instead Novel Cover

My Beta Mate Never Touched Me: He Marked My Half-Sister Instead

"Touching her unawakened flesh makes my skin crawl." Those were the words I found in my husband’s desk on our third anniversary. I stood there clutching his gift, reading his letters to my sister. They weren't just lovers; they were conspirators planning to steal my inheritance and dump me in the rogue lands. I didn't even get the chance to run. That night, under the glare of a thousand spotlights, Gavin didn't just leave me—he executed my soul. He knelt before my pregnant sister, slid my mother’s heirloom ring onto her finger, and sneered at me in front of the entire pack. "You are defective," he laughed, while my father stripped me of my name. "Melody carries my heir. You are nothing but a barren human." Thrown into the mud, bleeding and nameless, I waited to die. Until a black Maybach purred to a stop. The window rolled down, revealing the woman who was supposed to be rotting in a psych ward—my mother. She wasn't sick. She was the secret owner of a fifty-billion-dollar empire. "They think you’re weak because you never shifted," she whispered, pulling me into a world of gold and vengeance. "But I didn't hide your wolf because you were broken, Valerie. I sealed it because you are a Moon Priestess." She pressed an ancient silver dagger to my forehead. "Gavin wanted a weak wife? He just unleashed a goddess."
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Chapter 3

The rain had turned the highway into a river of black asphalt, each droplet striking my face like tiny needles. I stumbled along the shoulder, my designer dress clinging to my skin, the fabric torn and stained with mud from where Richard's security had literally thrown me out of the car.

Three hours. I'd been walking for three hours in this downpour, my bare feet bleeding from the rough pavement. Every car that passed sent a spray of dirty water over me, their headlights illuminating my pathetic figure for mere seconds before disappearing into the night.

I was nothing now. No name, no family, no home. The rejection vow I'd screamed at Gavin had drained something vital from me, leaving me hollow and shaking. But even through the numbness, one thought burned bright: I would not die on this road like some discarded animal.

The sound of an engine approaching made me glance back, expecting another truck to drench me in its wake. Instead, a sleek black Maybach slowed to a stop beside me, its pristine surface untouched by the storm.

The rear window rolled down with a whisper of expensive machinery.

"Miss Crescent," a woman's voice called through the rain. "Please, get in."

I froze. No one had called me by my mother's maiden name in years. Through the tinted glass, I could make out the silhouette of an elegantly dressed woman with silver hair.

"Who are you?" My voice came out as a croak.

"Someone who's been waiting a very long time to bring you home."

The door opened, revealing plush leather seats and the warm glow of interior lighting. After hours in the freezing rain, the promise of warmth was too tempting to resist. I climbed in, water pooling on the immaculate floor.

The woman handed me a soft towel and a thermos of something that smelled like hot chocolate laced with honey. "We have a long drive ahead of us, dear. Try to rest."

"Where are we going?" I asked, my teeth chattering.

"New York. Your mother is waiting."

My heart stopped. "My mother is in a treatment facility. She's been sick for years."

The woman's smile was enigmatic. "Many things are not as they seem, Miss Crescent. You'll understand soon enough."

I must have dozed during the flight—yes, there had been a private jet waiting at a small airfield—because the next thing I knew, we were gliding through the streets of Manhattan. The city sparkled around us like a jewel box, all glass and steel reaching toward the stars.

The Maybach pulled up to a building that seemed to pierce the sky itself. The penthouse elevator required a special key card, and as we rose through floor after floor, my stomach churned with more than just altitude.

The doors opened directly into an apartment that defied belief. Floor-to-ceiling windows offered a panoramic view of Central Park, and the furnishings spoke of wealth that made the Thorne family fortune look like pocket change. Everything was cream and gold, elegant and timeless.

But none of that mattered when I saw the woman standing by the windows.

"Hello, Valerie."

My mother turned, and I nearly collapsed. She wasn't the frail, sickly woman I remembered from my childhood. Eleanor Crescent stood tall and regal, her silver hair swept into an elegant chignon, her eyes sharp and intelligent. She wore a tailored suit that probably cost more than most people's cars, and her presence filled the room like a force of nature.

"Mother?" The word came out strangled. "But you're... you've been..."

"Sick?" Eleanor's smile was sad but knowing. "That was a necessary fiction, darling. Come, sit. We have much to discuss."

I remained frozen by the elevator, my mind struggling to process what I was seeing. "I don't understand. Father said you were in a specialized facility, that your condition was..."

"Richard said many things." Eleanor's voice carried a note of steel. "Most of them lies designed to keep you compliant and isolated. The truth, my dear, is that I've spent the last fifteen years building something that would make even your father's ambitions look quaint."

She gestured to a wall lined with awards and photographs—Eleanor shaking hands with world leaders, cutting ribbons at corporate headquarters, accepting honors I couldn't even pronounce.

"Crescent Industries," she said simply. "Renewable energy, rare earth mining, biotechnology. We're worth approximately fifty billion dollars, and growing."

The number hit me like a physical blow. "Fifty... billion?"

"Your father knows nothing about it. As far as he's concerned, the Crescent family wealth is limited to those mining rights he's been so desperate to steal." Eleanor moved to a bar cart and poured herself a glass of wine with steady hands. "He never bothered to investigate what I was actually doing during my 'treatment.'"

I sank onto a cream-colored sofa, my legs finally giving out. "Why? Why let me believe you were dying? Why let me suffer through..."

"Through a marriage to a man who saw you as nothing more than a bank account with legs?" Eleanor's voice sharpened. "Because, my darling, you needed to learn who your enemies were. And you needed to be strong enough to survive what's coming."

She sat across from me, her gaze intense. "Tell me, Valerie, have you ever wondered why your wolf hasn't awakened? You're twenty-five years old, from one of the most powerful bloodlines in North America. By all rights, you should have shifted years ago."

The question I'd tormented myself with for years hung between us. "The doctors said I might be defective. That sometimes the bloodline just... skips."

"The doctors were paid to say that." Eleanor's words were like ice water in my veins. "There's nothing wrong with you, Valerie. I placed a seal on your abilities when you were seven years old."

"A seal?" I whispered.

"To protect you. The Crescent bloodline carries something far more powerful than a simple wolf spirit. We are descendants of the Moon Priestesses, the original guardians who could command entire packs with a word." Eleanor leaned forward, her eyes glowing with an inner fire. "Richard would have used that power to dominate every pack on the continent. So I hid it, even from you."

The room seemed to tilt around me. "You're saying I'm not defective?"

"My darling girl," Eleanor's voice was gentle now, "you're the most powerful creature that will walk this earth in a thousand years. And tonight, it's time for you to claim your birthright."

She stood and moved to an ornate cabinet, withdrawing what looked like an ancient silver dagger. The blade seemed to pulse with its own light.

"The seal can only be broken by the one who cast it," she said, approaching me with the weapon. "This will hurt, Valerie. The awakening of suppressed power always does. But when it's over, no one will ever be able to hurt you again."

I looked at the dagger, then at my mother's determined face. After everything I'd endured tonight—the betrayal, the humiliation, the rejection—what was a little more pain?

"Do it," I said.

Eleanor's smile was fierce with pride. "That's my daughter."

The blade touched my forehead, and the world exploded into fire.

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