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My Alpha Chose My Sister Novel Cover

My Alpha Chose My Sister

Five years. That was one thousand, eight hundred, and twenty-five days of waking up cold. Today was our anniversary. Not that anyone in the Blood Moon Pack would be celebrating. To them, this wasn't the day their Alpha and Luna were united; it was the day the "real" Luna ran away, and the spare was shoved into a white dress to stop a war. I sat at my vanity, the enchanted glass reflecting a face that looked too pale, too tired for twenty-one. My hand drifted up to my neck, hovering over the smooth, unmarked skin there. A dull, throbbing ache pulsed beneath my fingertips—mate sickness. It was a low-level hum of pain that never went away, the physical consequence of a bond that had been legally recognized but never sealed with a bite. "Happy anniversary, Leona," I whispered to the empty room.
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Chapter 3

I heard him before I saw him.

A sound like a freight train hitting the tree line — branches snapping, something massive moving through dense cover at a speed that didn't belong to anything that had ever been cautious. The three rogues heard it too. The largest one lifted its head, and for one suspended second, everything on that ridge went completely still.

Then the black wolf came through.

I had seen large wolves before. Ian's silver, before the injury, had been impressive by any standard. But this was something different. This wolf was a full head taller than the rogues, its coat so dark it looked like a hole cut in the gray morning air, and it moved with the kind of absolute certainty that doesn't come from training. It comes from something older than that. Something that has already decided how this ends.

It hit the nearest rogue before the animal could turn fully, and the sound of the impact was brutal and final. The second one lunged and the black wolf caught it mid-air, shook it once, and dropped it. The third broke and ran. The black wolf let it go.

Then it turned toward me.

I was still on one knee on the crumbling limestone, my left arm held against my chest, my right hand pressed flat against the frozen ground. The wolf's eyes were pale — almost silver — and they were fixed on me with an intensity that should have been frightening and somehow wasn't. It went very still. That predator's stillness, the kind that means it has already assessed everything and found no further threat.

Then it shifted.

The man who straightened up from the shift was tall, dark-haired, maybe twenty-five. His jaw was set and his eyes were the same pale color as the wolf's, and they were still doing that thing — that fixed, total attention, like I was the only object in his entire field of vision that mattered.

"I've got you," he said. His voice was quiet. Not soft — quiet, the way a person is quiet when they are being very deliberate about not frightening something.

I opened my mouth to say I was fine, which was what I always said, which was almost never true. What came out instead was nothing. My vision tilted sideways and his arms were already there, catching me before the ground came up.

The last thing I registered before I went under was his scent.

Pine. Winter smoke. Something clean and cold and certain.

I didn't have a name for it yet. But my wolf, who had been silent for so long, made a sound I had never heard from her before. Low and wondering. Like a door opening onto something she hadn't known was there.

---

I woke to white ceiling and the smell of medicinal herbs and the particular ache of a body that has been through something and is only now beginning to report the full damage.

My left shoulder was wrapped tight. My right forearm too. When I tried to flex my fingers, the pain was sharp enough to make me stop.

The healer was a quiet older woman with gray-streaked hair and careful hands. She checked my bandages without fuss and told me I had lost significant blood. She told me the bite wounds would scar.

I looked at the ceiling and absorbed that.

"Where is Alpha Carter?" I asked.

She didn't answer immediately. That pause — that small, careful pause — told me everything before the words did.

"He returned to the Ironridge pack house," she said. "With the other woman. He sent a warrior to check on your status this morning."

This morning. Which meant I had been here at least one night. Which meant Ian had known I was in the Nighthollow healer's ward for at least one night and had sent a warrior.

Not come himself. Sent a warrior.

I nodded once. "Thank you," I said, because I had been raised to be polite even when politeness was the most absurd possible response to a situation.

She left me alone. I lay there for a while and stared at the ceiling and let myself feel the full shape of it — not the shoulder, not the forearm, but the other thing. The thing that had been building for three years and had finally, on a crumbling ridge with three rogues closing in, reached its absolute limit.

He had not hesitated. That was the part I kept returning to. He had looked at the ridge, looked at the rogues, looked at Melody — and he had not hesitated. Not for a single second.

I had spent three years telling myself the bond would grow. That he was damaged and guarded and that patience was the answer. I had organized my supplies every morning and done my work and made myself useful and small and undemanding, and I had believed — I had genuinely believed — that if I gave enough, I would eventually be enough.

He had not hesitated.

---

I got up on the second attempt. My legs were unsteady and the room tilted slightly when I stood, but I held the wall and waited it out. My bandaged arms hung at my sides. I was still in the clothes I'd been wearing on the ridge, stiff with dried blood in places.

I walked to the doorway.

The healer's ward opened onto a corridor, and the corridor ran past a recovery room with the door standing half-open. I could see into it from where I stood.

Ian was seated beside a cot. His hand was covering Melody's hand. He was leaning forward slightly, saying something in a low voice, and Melody laughed — that soft, private laugh, the one that meant she felt safe and seen and attended to.

She had a shallow scratch on her cheek. A bruised wrist, from the look of the way she held it. She was wearing a clean sweater and her hair was loose and she looked, from where I stood, like a woman who had been through a minor inconvenience and was being very well taken care of.

Ian's face, turned toward her, was open in a way I had never once seen it turned toward me.

I stood in the doorway for a long moment.

Three years. Three years of his treatments, his silence, his single-word answers, his nods. Three years of making myself small enough to fit into the space he was willing to give me. Three years of a mate bond that I had tended like a fire in a room with no windows, feeding it carefully, refusing to let it go out, telling myself that warmth was coming.

He had not hesitated.

My wolf went absolutely still inside me. Not the frightened stillness of the ridge. Something different. Something that felt, for the first time in three years, like clarity.

She had known before I did. She had been trying to tell me for a long time.

I looked at Ian's hand covering Melody's hand, and I felt something inside me that had been bending for three years — bending and bending and refusing to break because I had not let it, because I had kept feeding that fire, because I had believed that giving enough would make me enough — I felt it stop bending.

It didn't break loudly. It didn't break the way I might have expected, with grief or rage or the kind of pain that makes you double over.

It just — stopped.

Like a wire finally going slack. Like a door swinging shut on a room I had been standing in for three years, waiting for someone who was never going to turn around.

I stood in the doorway with my bandaged arms at my sides and I breathed, and I let myself know what I already knew.

And then I started thinking about what came next.

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