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My Alpha Begged Me to Return After Choosing Another Novel Cover

My Alpha Begged Me to Return After Choosing Another

I knew it was coming. I had known for three months. That is the thing no one tells you about surviving — you do not survive by accident. You survive by watching, by counting, by preparing the exit before anyone knows you are planning to leave. When Lily's convoy crossed into Silvercrest territory that morning, I was already dressed. My bag was already packed. The severance agreement I had drafted and quietly slipped into Marcus Hale's files six weeks ago was already signed, already binding under pack law. I had done the math. I had done all of it. I just had not done the part where I stood in the great hall and let Lukas Voss say the words out loud.
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Chapter 3

The Come of Age Ceremony was held on neutral ground — a wide valley belonging to the Thornfield Pack, far enough from any major territory that no single Alpha could claim the air felt like his. Torches lined the clearing's edge. Long tables. Families. Young wolves about to run for the first time in front of witnesses, their inner wolves surfacing under the full moon while the adults watched and the pack bonds hummed.

I had been invited as an independent wolf. No pack designation. No rank. The invitation had come through Dorian, who had quietly vouched for me with the Thornfield Alpha, a steady older wolf named Crest who ran his pack like a man who had stopped caring what anyone thought of him twenty years ago and was better for it.

I arrived alone.

No herbal tonic. No borrowed mannerisms. No careful calibration of how much of myself to let show.

Just me. Just Sable, who had been waiting a very long time for this.

I stood at the edge of the clearing while the ceremony opened, watching the young wolves line up — thirteen, fourteen, fifteen years old, nervous and bright-eyed, their wolves pressing against the surface for the first time in front of an audience. I remembered being that age. I remembered waiting for my own awakening ceremony, the one Tobias had quietly cancelled the week after Vivienne moved into the pack house. I had waited two more years before I understood it was never coming.

Sable had surfaced anyway. She always did, eventually. She was not the kind of wolf who waited for permission.

The ceremonial run began at moonrise. The young wolves shifted first, one by one, their forms tumbling out into the clearing to scattered applause and the low, approving rumble of their Alphas. Then the adults — a tradition at Thornfield, the older wolves running alongside the young ones, a show of solidarity that I had always thought was one of the better things the pack world had managed to get right.

I stepped into the tree line.

I had not shifted in front of anyone since before Silvercrest. For a year, I had kept Sable locked down so completely that even I had half-forgotten what she felt like at full strength. The suppressants had muffled her the way heavy curtains muffle sound — you know the noise is still there, but you stop hearing it after a while.

I let her go.

It was not gradual. It was not careful. Sable came up like a tide that had been held back too long, and when I shifted, the aura came with her — a wave of Alpha authority that rolled out across the clearing before I had fully found my footing in wolf form.

I heard the conversations stop.

Not one or two. All of them.

I stepped out of the tree line.

Sable was silver — not grey, not pale, but true silver, the kind that catches moonlight and throws it back brighter than it came. She was large for a she-wolf, larger than most of the male Deltas in the clearing, and the aura she carried was not the ambient warmth of a pack bond. It was something older and sharper. The kind of aura that makes wolves instinctively check where the exits are.

I crossed the clearing at a steady pace. I did not hurry. I did not perform.

I felt every eye in the space track me.

And then I caught it — the exact moment Lukas Voss registered my scent.

He was standing at the far edge of the clearing with two of his ranked wolves, a cup in his hand, his posture carrying the particular ease of an Alpha who has never had to work for a room. I had not known he would be here. I had not planned for him. But I had spent a year learning to read his body language from across a room, and I knew the exact quality of stillness that meant his wolf had just done something his conscious mind had not caught up to yet.

He went very still.

The cup stopped halfway to his mouth.

I kept walking. I did not look at him directly. I did not need to. I could feel his wolf from thirty feet away — a surge of something violent and confused, pressing hard against his control, and underneath it the bond-ache flaring like a wound that had just been touched.

Wild jasmine and thunderstorm. My real scent, the one I had spent a year burying under herbal tonics and borrowed identity. It was out now, fully and completely, and there was nowhere for it to go except everywhere.

I completed the run. Sable moved through the clearing like she owned the ground under her paws, which she did not, but she had never been particularly interested in that distinction. When I shifted back at the tree line and walked out in human form, the Thornfield Alpha was waiting.

Crest looked at me for a long moment. He had the expression of a man recalculating something.

"Ashford," he said.

"Crest."

"That's Alpha blood."

"Yes."

He nodded slowly, like he was filing something away. "Tobias stripped your rank."

"He tried."

Crest almost smiled. It did not quite make it to his face, but it got close. He handed me a cup of water from the table beside him and said nothing else, which was the most respectful thing anyone had done for me in a long time.

I did not look back across the clearing to where Lukas was standing. I already knew he had not moved.

---

The gossip started before I reached the trading post road.

I heard it in fragments — a word here, a lowered voice there, the particular frequency of pack social networks processing something they did not have a category for yet. By the time I was an hour out of Thornfield territory, I could reconstruct the shape of it without needing to hear the specifics.

Packless climber. Rogue opportunist. Tobias Ashford's disgraced Omega, playing at Alpha blood. Silvercrest's discarded substitute, making a scene at a neutral ceremony. The story was already being written, and none of the people writing it had asked me a single question.

I let it spread.

I had learned, during my year at Silvercrest, that narrative is a territorial resource just like land or supply lines. You can fight for it directly, which costs energy and rarely works, or you can let it run where it wants to run and position yourself at the place it inevitably arrives. Notoriety is attention. Attention is contact. And contact, with the right wolves, is leverage.

I was back at the safe house by midnight. Senna's latest dead drop was waiting at the split oak — more detail on the archive, the Beta's key schedule, a note about a second entrance she had found behind a storage rack that the overnight guard did not check. I read it, memorized it, burned it.

Then I sat at the table with my maps and waited.

The first contact came four days later. A wolf named Petra Cole, Alpha of a thirty-wolf pack in the inland hill territory, who had heard about the silver she-wolf at Thornfield and wanted a meeting. Her message was blunt: *I don't care about your reputation. I care that you apparently know things about Silvercrest's deployment patterns that Silvercrest doesn't know you know. Talk to me.*

The second came two days after that. An Alpha named Bram Solis, coastal territory, younger than I expected, with the kind of ambition that had not yet learned to disguise itself. His message was less blunt and more revealing for it: *Everyone's saying you're a packless climber. I've been a packless climber my whole career. Let's have coffee.*

I had not contacted either of them. They had found me.

I identified every exit in both meeting locations before I confirmed the times.

I thought about Lukas, standing frozen at the edge of the Thornfield clearing with his cup halfway to his mouth and his wolf tearing at his control. I thought about the bond-ache that was his now, permanent and worsening, the supernatural consequence of a choice he had made in thirty seconds in front of his assembled pack.

I did not feel sorry for him. I had spent too long feeling things on his behalf that he had never once felt on mine.

But I filed it away — the way he had gone still, the way his wolf had surged — because information is information, and I had learned a long time ago that the most useful data is the kind your enemies generate without meaning to.

Sable settled quietly in my chest, silver and steady, finally breathing open air.

We had work to do.

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