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My Alpha Chose a Younger Luna Over Me Novel Cover

My Alpha Chose a Younger Luna Over Me

The ink on the trade treaty with the Northern Timber Pack was barely dry. It had taken me six months of grueling negotiations, sleepless nights, and endless strategic maneuvering to secure these borders, but looking at the signature on the final page, I knew it was worth it. This treaty would secure the Silver Crescent Pack’s prosperity for another decade. I smoothed the skirt of my emerald evening gown, the silk cool against my fingertips, and walked down the hallway toward the Alpha’s office. The Unity Gala was already in full swing downstairs; the floorboards vibrated slightly with the bass of the music and the stomping of feet. I wanted to give Hayden the good news before we made our entrance. I wanted to see his eyes light up, to hear him acknowledge that we had done this together. I was a fool. As I reached the heavy mahogany door, my hand raised to knock, a sound stopped me cold. It was laughter.
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Chapter 2

The rain hammered against the windshield of my SUV, blurring the world into streaks of gray and black. My chest still throbbed with a phantom ache, a dull, hollow sensation where the mate bond used to be. I had severed it. I had done the unthinkable. But as I gripped the steering wheel, my knuckles white, I didn't feel regret. I felt lighter.

I slowed as the imposing iron gates of the Obsidian Shadow Pack territory loomed out of the darkness. I was technically a Rogue now—a woman without a pack, trespassing on the lands of Silver Crescent’s greatest rival. Two border patrol wolves emerged from the guardhouse, their flashlights cutting through the downpour. They were tense, hands hovering near their waistbands.

I rolled down the window, letting the freezing rain soak my sleeve. "I am Madeline Scott," I announced, my voice steady despite the cold. "I request an audience with Alpha Lennox."

Before the guard could answer, a shadow detached itself from the darkness behind them. It moved with a predator's fluid grace, tall and broad-shouldered. The guards immediately stepped back, bowing their heads.

Alpha Lennox Carroll stepped into the light. He didn't look like the boy I remembered from the summits years ago. He was harder now, his jawline sharp enough to cut glass, his eyes a piercing shade of amber that seemed to see right through my wet clothes and into my bruised soul.

I braced myself for hostility. I was the Luna of his enemy, after all. Or I had been, until an hour ago.

Instead of ordering me to leave, Lennox did something that made my breath hitch. He flared his aura—not to crush me, but to shield me. The oppressive weight of the storm seemed to vanish, pushed back by the sheer force of his presence. He walked to my door and opened it, ignoring the rain soaking his expensive suit.

"Luna Madeline," he said, his voice a low rumble that vibrated in my chest. He dipped his head—a bow. A sign of respect given to equals, not refugees.

"I'm not a Luna anymore, Lennox," I said, stepping out. "I'm just Madeline."

His gaze didn't waver. "Titles are given by packs. Power is inherent to the wolf. You are welcome here."

***

Twenty minutes later, I was sitting in Lennox’s private office. The room smelled of cedar, old paper, and rain. A fire crackled in the hearth, chasing away the chill that had settled in my bones.

Lennox placed a steaming cup of tea in front of me. Earl Grey, two sugars. My favorite. I looked up at him, surprised.

"I remember," he said simply, sitting on the edge of his mahogany desk rather than behind it. He didn't loom over me; he gave me space.

"I didn't come here for charity, Alpha," I said, wrapping my hands around the warm ceramic. "I need sanctuary for tonight. By morning, I will be gone. I have savings. I can—"

"I don't want to give you charity," Lennox interrupted. He slid a thick manila folder across the desk. "I want to give you a job."

I frowned, setting the tea down. I opened the folder. It was an employment contract. The title at the top read: *Head Pack Strategist*.

My eyes widened as I scanned the terms. Full autonomy. A seat at the council table. And a salary that was double the allowance Hayden had begrudgingly given me for running his entire administration.

"You want me to work for you?" I asked, incredulous. "I'm thirty-five, Lennox. According to my former mate, I'm 'washed up.'"

Lennox’s expression darkened, a flash of anger tightening his features. "Hayden is a fool who built a castle on a foundation he didn't understand," he growled softly. "I don't care about your age, Madeline. I care about the mind that negotiated the Northern Timber Treaty. I care about the strategist who managed to keep a pack of hot-headed wolves fed and wealthy for five years. I'm not offering you pity. I'm offering you a place where your brilliance isn't a threat to the Alpha's fragile ego."

I looked at the contract, then back at him. For five years, I had been the invisible hand, the silent partner. Lennox was looking at me and seeing *me*.

I picked up the pen. "When do I start?"

"Tonight," he smiled, and for the first time, the hardness in his eyes melted into something warm.

My phone buzzed violently on the desk, shattering the moment. Then it buzzed again. And again. A continuous stream of notifications.

I glanced at the screen. It was Sarah, the Head Omega of the Silver Crescent pack house. The messages were frantic.

*Luna, please pick up. The kitchen staff just walked out. Avani tried to order the dinner service but she doesn't know the protocols. She screamed at Old Martha.*

*The West Wing pipes just burst. Maintenance isn't answering the Alpha's page.*

*Luna, the sky... it's turning gray. The garden is wilting. It's happening so fast.*

I swiped open the weather app. A localized storm cell had materialized directly over the Silver Crescent territory, while the rest of the state remained clear. The land itself was reacting to the broken bond, rejecting the false mistress Hayden was trying to install. Without a true Luna's blessing, the pack's prosperity was evaporating like mist.

"Trouble in paradise?" Lennox asked, watching me closely.

I turned the phone over, silencing it. The image of Hayden, panic rising in his eyes as his perfect world crumbled around him, brought a cold, satisfied smile to my lips.

"Not my pack," I said softly. "Not my problem."

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