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My Alpha Chose Her Instead Novel Cover

My Alpha Chose Her Instead

I have lived in the Silverpine Pack my entire life. I know the smell of the pine forests after rain, the sound of the pack house settling at night, the exact weight of Kian Mitchell's hand on the small of my back when he guides me through a crowded room. I know all of it the way you know your own heartbeat — without thinking, without questioning, because it has always been there. Twenty years. That is how long Kian and I have been whatever we are to each other. The pack stopped needing a word for it a long time ago. Everyone simply knew. I am Jocelyn Williamson. I am twenty-six years old, a mid-rank she-wolf of Silverpine, and for as long as I can remember, my place in this pack has been defined by one thing above all else: I am Kian's. I believed that completely.
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Chapter 2

I started running the dawn trails alone.

Waffles kept pace beside me, his paws quiet on the wet pine needles, his breath making small clouds in the cold air. He didn't seem to mind the change. Dogs are good at that — accepting the shape of things without needing an explanation.

I minded.

The trail forks about a mile out from the pack house, a split I have taken a thousand times. Left toward the ridge, where the view opens up over the valley. Right toward the river, where the current runs fast and cold in the mornings. Kian and I always went left. It was never a decision we made out loud. It was just what we did.

I went straight. A third path, narrower, cutting deeper into the trees. I had never taken it before.

Waffles glanced up at me once, then adjusted his stride and followed.

We passed two pack warriors on the way back. They smiled at me — that particular smile, careful and a little too soft, the one people give you when they feel sorry for you but haven't decided whether to say so. I smiled back. I kept moving. I had learned in the past week that the best way to handle that smile was to not give it anywhere to land.

No one said anything. That was the thing about it. No one ever said anything.

The pack saw everything. The empty seat at the Alpha's table, the dawn runs that no longer included me, the mind-link that had gone thin and distant as a bad signal. They saw it the way you see weather coming in — you track it, you adjust, you don't name it out loud because naming it makes it real and real things require a response.

So no one named it. Which meant I couldn't name it either. If I said something, I was the one making it into something. I was the one being difficult.

I ran a little faster. Waffles kept up.

---

Victoria started showing up everywhere.

Not aggressively. That's the thing I kept turning over in my head, trying to find the edge of it, trying to locate the moment I could point to and say — there, that was the line. But there was no single line. There were just a hundred small gravitational shifts, so gradual you almost convinced yourself you were imagining them.

She came to the weekly warrior briefings. Reasonable — she was here for Summit training, after all. She came to the healer's herb inventory on Wednesday afternoons, which had nothing to do with Summit training, but she said she was curious about Silverpine's medicinal practices and Healer Soren seemed pleased by the interest. She started appearing at the evening fire pit gatherings, the informal ones where the pack just sat around and talked and let the day go quiet.

Those had always been mine. Not officially. Not in any way I could defend. But I had been coming to those fires since I was a teenager, and my spot — the flat-topped log to the left of the main pit, close enough to feel the heat — had been my spot for years.

The first time Victoria sat near it, I told myself it was fine. The second time, I shifted a little further down the log. The third time, I found myself sitting on the outer edge of the circle, slightly behind the person in front of me, and I realized I had been moving in increments so small I hadn't noticed until I was already at the margin.

She never pushed me. She never said a word to me that wasn't perfectly pleasant. She just had this way of orienting toward Kian — a question, a small uncertain laugh, a look that said *I don't quite understand, can you explain it again* — and he would lean in, and the circle would close around them, and I would be on the outside of it looking at the fire.

I started talking less at those gatherings. Then I started leaving earlier. Then one evening I just didn't go.

Waffles and I sat on the cabin steps instead and listened to the distant sound of voices and laughter drifting through the trees, and I told myself I was tired.

---

Rhea found me in the training yard on a Friday morning.

She is not a woman who softens things unnecessarily. That is one of the reasons I trust her. She came and stood beside me while I worked through a striking sequence on the practice dummy, and she waited until I stopped before she spoke.

"They gave Victoria a seat at the strategy table."

I hit the dummy one more time. Then I stepped back and unwrapped my hands.

"When?"

"Yesterday. Declan walked her through the warrior deployment files. The battle formation archives too." Rhea's voice was even, but her eyes were doing something careful. Watching me. "Kian framed it as Summit orientation."

I nodded slowly. The deployment files. The formation archives. The inner circle that Kian had never once suggested I join, in twenty years, not even informally, not even as a courtesy.

"Okay," I said.

Rhea looked at me for a long moment. "Joss."

"I heard you."

"I know you heard me. I'm asking if you're—"

"I'm fine." I picked up my water bottle. My hands were steady. I was proud of that. "Thank you for telling me."

She didn't push. That's also why I trust her. She just stood there a moment longer, like she was leaving a door open in case I changed my mind, and then she walked away.

I stood in the training yard and looked at the pack house across the field. The strategy room was on the second floor, corner window. The light was on.

I had never been given a seat at that table. Not once. And I had never asked, because I had told myself it wasn't my place, that Kian had his responsibilities and I had mine, that the pack ran on structure and I respected that structure.

But Victoria had been here three weeks.

Three weeks, and she had a seat at the table I had never been offered in twenty years.

I finished my water. I called Waffles, who came bounding over from where he'd been investigating something in the grass, tail going, completely unbothered by the state of the world.

I clipped his leash and we walked back toward the cabin, and I thought about the strategy room window, and the deployment files, and the way Declan had apparently facilitated all of it without a single question.

My wolf stirred inside me. Not angry. Just very, very still.

Like she was listening for something she already knew was coming.

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