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My Alpha Abandoned Me for the Pack’s New Luna Novel Cover

My Alpha Abandoned Me for the Pack’s New Luna

I heard the first explosion at 2 a.m. I was already awake — I'd been awake for an hour, lying in the dark with Weston's side of the bed cold beside me, listening to the silence that had become the loudest thing in our room. When the blast shook the walls, I was on my feet before the echo died. The pack house was chaos. Smoke poured through the east corridor, thick and black, and I could hear warriors shouting somewhere above me. I pulled on my boots and ran toward the sound — toward the basement stairwell, where two of our younger Deltas were trying to drag a jammed door open. The rogue raid had hit the supply wing first. Smart. Cut the weapons cache, collapse the structure, drive everyone into the open. I'd helped design our raid response protocols.
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Chapter 2

I told myself I only needed ten minutes inside.

The pack house still smelled like smoke. Three days after the fire, and it had soaked into the walls, into the curtains, into the grain of the wooden floors. I moved through the east corridor with my head down and my bandaged arm held close to my body, and I did not look at the framed alliance treaties on the wall. I had negotiated every single one of them. I knew the date on each frame without reading them.

I just needed the ledger. A few things from the room I'd kept before the mating. Then I would be gone.

Mckenzie was waiting in the hallway outside the storage room.

I knew the moment I saw her that Weston wasn't in the house. She had a different quality when he wasn't nearby — a stillness that had nothing soft in it, like a held breath before something strikes. The dying-flower act was gone. Her eyes were clear and flat and entirely focused on me.

"You came back," she said.

I didn't answer. I moved to step around her.

She had the bucket ready. I didn't see it until she lifted it.

The water hit my left arm first — the bad one, the one where the skin was still raw and weeping under the bandages — and then my side, and the cold was almost a relief for exactly one second before the wolfsbane hit the open wounds and the world went white.

I have a high pain tolerance. Ten years as a Luna in a pack that trained hard and fought harder will do that. I have set my own dislocated shoulder. I have run on a fractured ankle for six hours during a border patrol because we were short-staffed and I didn't want to pull a warrior from position.

I screamed.

It came out of me before I could stop it — a raw, tearing sound that I didn't recognize as my own voice. My knees hit the floor. The wolfsbane was moving through the damaged skin like acid finding a path, and my wolf, already weakened and grieving, convulsed inside me with a pain that was entirely separate from the physical.

I heard the bucket hit the floor. I heard Mckenzie's breathing change — quick, practiced, the inhale of a woman preparing a performance.

By the time Weston's boots appeared in my field of vision, she was crying.

"She came at me," Mckenzie was saying, her voice gone soft and broken and breathless. "I was just standing here and she — I don't know what she wanted, I don't know why she —"

"I can see the bottle," I said. My voice came out strange. Flat. "Weston. The wolfsbane bottle is on the floor behind her."

He didn't look at it.

I watched him not look at it. I watched him look at Mckenzie's face instead — at the tears, at the hand she'd pressed to her collarbone, at the performance she'd been rehearsing since the moment she decided I was in her way. I watched him make his choice in real time, the same way I'd felt him make it through the mind-link three nights ago in the basement.

His hand closed around my arm. The unburned one, at least. Small mercies.

"You need to leave," he said.

"Weston —"

"Now."

He used the Alpha tone. On me. His marked Luna, kneeling on the floor of the house I had run for a decade, wolfsbane burning through my open wounds, and he used the Alpha tone to make me stop talking.

I stopped talking.

He dragged me through the east corridor. Past the warriors I had trained — I saw Dex, who I had personally coached through his first solo patrol, and he looked at the floor. Past the framed treaties. Past the kitchen where I had spent six hours every Sunday for three years reviewing the pack's supply ledgers because Weston hated administrative work and someone had to do it.

The territory border was a line of old oak trees at the edge of the north road. Weston had always said it was the most defensible natural boundary in the region. I had agreed with him. I had helped him negotiate the buffer zone with the Greywood Pack that kept that boundary clean.

He threw me past it.

Not gently. My knees hit the dirt road and my burned arm caught the impact wrong and I made a sound I will not describe. I heard him say something — exiled, rogue, do not come back — but the words were coming from a distance, through a ringing in my ears that had started when the wolfsbane hit and hadn't stopped.

I looked up once.

Mckenzie was standing in the doorway of the pack house. Weston had already turned away from me, walking back toward her, and she was watching him come. And in the moment before he reached her — in the half-second when his back was to her and she thought no one was looking — the softness left her face like a mask slipping.

What was underneath it was not grief. It was not love. It was something cold and satisfied and entirely without warmth.

Then Weston turned to look at her and it was gone, and she was fragile and trembling again, and he put his arm around her, and the pack house door closed.

I sat on the dirt road outside the Silverfang border and I did not move for a long time.

The wolfsbane was still working through my system. My wolf had gone very quiet — not gone, just conserving, the way an animal goes still when it is badly hurt and needs everything it has just to keep breathing. The night was cold. I hadn't brought a jacket. I had the ledger, at least — I'd grabbed it before Mckenzie appeared, tucked it under my good arm on instinct, and I was still holding it now, pressed against my ribs like something worth protecting.

I don't know how many hours passed.

The headlights came from the south.

I heard the truck before I saw it — the particular rattle of an engine that had been driven hard and long and refused to quit. The headlights swept across the tree line and then found me, and the truck stopped so fast the tires skidded on the gravel.

The door opened. Boots hit the road.

"Harper." Sloan's voice. Just my name, nothing else, but the way she said it — the specific quality of it, stripped of her usual brisk efficiency, carrying something underneath that she would never call tenderness but was — made my throat close.

She crouched in front of me. She looked at my arm. She looked at my face. She did not say anything for a moment, and Sloan not saying anything was its own kind of language.

"Can you stand?"

"Yes."

She helped me anyway. Her hand under my good arm, steady and matter-of-fact, not making a production of it. She got me to the passenger side and got the door open and got me in, and then she went around to the driver's side and got in and started the engine.

We were a mile down the road before she spoke again.

"The moment your name dropped off the Silverfang registry, I got in the truck."

I looked at the ledger in my lap. The cover was worn smooth at the corners from years of handling. I had written the first entry in it the week after Weston's marking ceremony, sitting at the desk in the Luna's office, feeling like I was building something that would last.

"How bad is the arm?" Sloan asked.

"Wolfsbane," I said. "On top of the burns."

Her hands tightened on the wheel. Just for a second. Then she nodded, once, and pressed the accelerator down.

The Silverfang border disappeared behind us in the dark. I watched it go in the side mirror until the trees swallowed it entirely.

I did not look back after that.

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