Follow
Chapters
Share
My Alpha Credited My Work to His Dead Mate Novel Cover

My Alpha Credited My Work to His Dead Mate

The bleach fumes burned my throat, a familiar sting I’d grown used to over the last five years. My knees ached against the cold tile of the scullery floor, the harsh bristles of the scrub brush turning my knuckles raw and red. But today, the pain felt distant. Today was the day everything changed. Above the industrial sinks, the mounted television flickered, broadcasting the live feed from the pack grounds just outside. The roar of the Silver Creek Pack vibrated through the speakers, a wall of sound cheering for one man. Cullen. My heart hammered a frantic rhythm against my ribs. He looked magnificent on the podium, his sandy hair catching the sunlight, his posture radiating the new strength of an Alpha. I paused my scrubbing, wiping a soapy hand on my stained apron.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

The sheets were silk. Real silk. Not the scratchy cotton blends the omegas were allowed to salvage from the donation bins, but cool, slippery fabric that felt like water against my skin. I woke with a gasp, my hands flying up to cover my face, expecting a blow. Expecting the scullery floor.

But the air didn’t smell like bleach and mildew. It smelled of pine, rain, and deep, dark earth.

"Easy," a voice rumbled from the corner of the room.

I flinched so hard I nearly fell off the massive bed. Alpha Evander Holmes was sitting in a wingback chair, reading a book. He looked too big for the furniture, his shoulders broad enough to block out the sunlight streaming through the window. His wolf, Shadow, was a sprawling mass of black fur at his feet. The beast lifted its head, chuffed softly, and laid it back down.

"You’re safe, Vivian," Evander said, closing the book. He didn't approach me. He stayed perfectly still, telegraphing that he wasn't a threat. "You’ve been asleep for two days."

Two days? Panic clawed at my throat. The scullery schedule. The floors. Cullen would kill me.

Then I remembered. The rejection. The pain. The rescue.

Evander stood up, and I shrank back against the headboard. A man in a suit entered the room—Beta Marcus, if I remembered correctly—carrying a tray of food. He froze when he saw Evander near the bed.

"Alpha," Marcus said, his voice tight. "Shadow… he’s letting her be this close?"

"Leave the tray, Marcus," Evander commanded without looking away from me.

Marcus set the food down quickly and backed out, casting a bewildered look at the giant black wolf that usually tore intruders apart. Shadow just thumped his tail against the floorboards.

Evander brought the tray to the bedside table. "Eat. You’re malnourished."

I hesitated. In Silver Creek, omegas ate last. We ate leftovers. To take food before an Alpha was a punishable offense. My hands trembled as I reached for a roll.

"You don't need permission," Evander said gently. He picked up the book he’d been reading and tapped the cover. "Do you know this author?"

I squinted. *Structural Integrity of Ancient Lycan Strongholds.*

"I… I’ve read it," I whispered, my voice rusty. "Chapter four is wrong."

The words slipped out before I could stop them. I clamped a hand over my mouth, eyes widening. You didn't correct an Alpha. You didn't speak unless spoken to.

Evander didn't strike me. He just tilted his head. "Show me."

He handed me the book and a pencil. My fingers itched. The moment the graphite touched the paper, the fear receded, replaced by the only thing that had ever made sense to me: lines and angles.

"Here," I sketched rapidly in the margin. "The load-bearing arch for the underground tunnels. If you use granite like he suggests, the moisture from the earth will crack the keystone within five years. You need reinforced limestone or a steel beam disguised as timber."

I looked up to find Evander staring at me. Not with pity, and not with lust. He was looking at me like I was the most valuable thing in the room.

"He stole everything, didn't he?" Evander asked softly. "Every single idea."

I nodded, tears pricking my eyes. "He burned my journals. All except the ones hidden under the floorboards in the omega quarters."

Evander’s eyes darkened. "Then we’re going to get them back."

***

That night, the moon was a sliver of bone in the sky. We didn't take an army. Just Evander, myself, and the darkness.

He called it a "training run," but as we slipped through the dense forest bordering the Silver Creek territory, I knew it was an act of war. Evander moved through the woods like smoke, his powerful body making no sound. I struggled to keep up, but every time I stumbled, his hand was there to steady me.

The Silver Creek pack house loomed ahead. My heart hammered against my ribs. This was suicide. If Cullen caught us…

"Trust me," Evander murmured against my ear, his breath warm.

We bypassed the sensors—I knew exactly where the blind spots were; I had designed the perimeter upgrades Cullen never implemented because they were 'too expensive.' We slipped into the servants' entrance. The smell of the scullery hit me, triggering a wave of nausea, but I pushed past it.

My old room was a closet, really. I dropped to my knees, prying up the loose floorboard under the cot. There they were. Three leather-bound journals, dated and signed. My proof.

"Got them," I breathed, clutching them to my chest.

"Well, well," a sharp voice cut through the dark. "The rat returns to its nest."

I spun around. Grace Barnes stood in the doorway. Sofia’s younger sister. She looked just like the portrait of Sofia—blonde, beautiful, and sneering. She held a flashlight, the beam blinding me.

"Stealing back your little doodles?" Grace laughed, stepping closer. "Cullen told me you were delusional. He said you seduced Alpha Holmes to get revenge."

"They're mine," I said, my voice shaking but defiant.

Grace reached for the journals. "Hand them over, Omega. Before I scream and bring the whole pack down on you."

Suddenly, a low, tectonic rumble filled the tiny room. Evander stepped out of the shadows behind me. He didn't shift, but his eyes were glowing with such intense, predatory violence that the flashlight shook in Grace’s hand.

*"Get. Out."*

The Alpha command hit the air like a physical blow. Grace turned pale, dropping the flashlight. She scrambled backward, tripping over her own feet, and fled down the hallway without a word.

"We need to move," Evander said, grabbing my hand. "Now."

***

By the next morning, the fallout had begun.

We were back at the Obsidian Pack house, safe behind Evander’s borders, but the news was everywhere. Cullen had gone on the offensive.

On the television screen in Evander’s office, Cullen stood next to Alpha Barnes. He looked haggard, his eyes wild, but his voice was smooth.

"Vivian Hart is a thief and a traitor," Cullen declared to the cameras. "She has stolen proprietary designs belonging to the Silver Creek Pack. Designs inspired by my late mate, Sofia. Furthermore, she has conspired with the Obsidian Pack to undermine our alliance."

Alpha Barnes stepped forward, his face red with fury. "If Alpha Holmes does not return the thief and the stolen property for a tribunal, the Blood Moon Pack will consider this an act of aggression."

I sank into the chair, the journals heavy in my lap. "They want a war," I whispered. "Over me."

Evander turned off the TV. "Let them come."

"No," I said. I stood up, surprising myself. The fear was still there, but something else was rising through the cracks. Anger. Pure, hot anger. "Cullen wants to play the genius? He wants to pretend he understands architecture?"

I walked over to Evander’s desk and slammed the journals down.

"The Lycan Architectural Showcase is in two weeks," I said, my voice gaining strength. "It’s judged by the High Council. Blind entries."

Evander raised an eyebrow, a slow smile spreading across his face. "You want to enter."

"Cullen’s 'Moonlight Fortress' is a prison," I said, pacing the room. My hands started moving in the air, tracing lines only I could see. "It’s walls and cages. It’s fear. I don't want to build a fortress. I want to build a sanctuary."

I looked at Evander. "The Phoenix Sanctuary. Housing for Rogues. For Omegas. For the people the packs throw away. A place that uses the landscape instead of fighting it."

Evander walked around the desk and took my hands in his. His thumbs brushed over my callouses—the marks of my slavery, now the tools of my liberation.

"Draw it, Vivian," he commanded softly. "Burn him to the ground with it."

You may also like

After My Alpha Sold Me to Another Pack Novel Cover
9.6
The silver glass bit into my palm as I sawed through the restraints. Five years. Five years of planning this moment, memorizing guard rotations, stealing fragments of broken mirror during the weekly hose-downs. The storm outside Wolf's Bane Asylum screamed louder than the voices in my head—the ones that whispered I was already dead, that escape was just another form of torture. My wrists burned where the silver touched skin. I didn't care. Pain was an old friend now. The guard's footsteps echoed down the corridor. I pressed myself against the wall, every muscle trembling from malnutrition and years of wolfsbane injections. My wolf—Luna, she used to be called—hadn't spoken in so long I'd almost forgotten her voice.
BONDED CURSE Novel Cover
8.0
When the Moon Summit names you Kaien Thorn’s fated mate, the whole world leans in. When Kaien rejects her under the Council’s eyes, Sariah Vale becomes a public wound — humiliated, hunted, and erased from every bonded ledger. She flees into the Rogue Wilds and finds something the Council never expected: a clan willing to crown the girl they called a mistake. Blood will buy power and blood will buy revenge. As Sariah claws herself into a queen the rogues didn’t know they needed, Kaien—Alpha of the iron-hearted Bloodfang—finds his bones aching for a phantom bond he swore to bury. Between them lie burned loyalties, whispered prophecies, and a secret bloodline that could remake the world or end it. They’ll try to destroy one another. They’ll try to use one another. But fate is tired of being the only author here. When the stone of oaths wakes under Sariah’s hand, the choice is brutal and simple: rise and rule a new world together, or burn what’s left to ashes. Call it war. Call it love. Call it what you’ll — just don’t call it fair.
From Broken Bond to Unyielding Vengeance: A Luna’s Rise Novel Cover
8.3
Callen’s driver, Langston, dropped him off late that night, his usually composed demeanor replaced by a slight unease. As a Delta, Langston had always been discreet, but tonight, his eyes flickered with something unspoken. “Luna,” he began, addressing me with the respect my title demanded, “Alpha Callen had quite a bit to drink while standing in for me. I’d appreciate it if you could look after him.” Beside him stood Sophie, Callen’s newly promoted Beta—or, as I’d come to learn, Gamma. She was draped in Callen’s custom-tailored jacket, her eyes bold and unflinching as she met my gaze. The audacity was almost admirable, if it weren’t so insulting. “Luna,” she said, her voice sweet but laced with a challenge, “Alpha Callen can get a bit clingy and throws minor tantrums when he’s drunk. Please don’t hold it against him.” Callen leaned heavily against her, his broad frame unsteady, the faint scent of alcohol and something floral—Sophie’s perfume—clinging to him. The lipstick stain on his white shirt was faint but unmistakable, a mark that screamed of carelessness and disrespect. Suddenly, it hit me.
Goodbye, Alpha! Novel Cover
8.1
Rejected by her fated mate and forced into a sham marriage, Aria Winters must navigate a life of humiliation and loneliness as the Luna-in-name-only of the Blackwood Pack. Alpha Damien Blackwood publicly rejected her on her eighteenth birthday, choosing a human girl over his true mate. But when pack politics threaten to destabilize his rule, Aria is forced into a contract marriage with the man who despises her—all to save her dying brother. Now, trapped in a gilded cage and tormented by Damien’s mistress, Aria must find the strength to survive in a world that sees her as nothing more than a weak Omega. But beneath the surface, a quiet power is stirring… and Aria is about to discover that even the most broken wolves can learn to rise again.
Luna Rejects Alpha Mate Novel Cover
8.2
The annual pack alliance ceremony was always a grand affair, with delegates from neighboring packs gathering to renew their vows of peace and cooperation. I stood beside Wilson, my fingers lightly brushing against his as was expected of a Luna, though he had made it clear through his stiff posture that he'd rather I kept my distance. Three years of this treatment had taught me to hide my hurt well. The Great Hall of the Moonstone Pack house glowed with amber light from hundreds of candles, their flames reflecting off the polished wooden tables where Alpha Elena Blackwood and other visiting dignitaries sat. I kept my face composed in a serene smile that grandmother Luna had taught me was befitting of a Luna, even as my wolf, Aria, whimpered inside me. *Stay strong,* I silently assured her. *Just a few more hours and this will be over.* I watched as Rosa glided across the hall in her ceremonial dress—a stunning creation of silver silk that complemented her delicate frame. She had positioned herself strategically near the altar where the alliance documents would be signed, ensuring all eyes would be on her during the most important moment of the ceremony. That's when I noticed it—a small tear forming along the seam of her dress, just below her shoulder blade. The fabric was stretching dangerously, threatening to reveal more than just a glimpse of skin.
Rejected and Claimed by the Rogue Novel Cover
9.4
I stood on the raised dais, the white silk of my ceremonial mating gown fluttering in the night breeze. Below, the members of the Blood River Pack watched in hushed silence, their eyes reflecting the torchlight. This was supposed to be the greatest honor of my life. I was Sloan Morgan, a simple Healer, chosen by the Lycan King himself to mate with Alpha Pierce. It was a union meant to unite strength and healing, a reward for saving the King’s life during the rogue wars. But as Pierce ascended the stairs, I felt no warmth from the bond. Usually, when a wolf meets their mate, the air crackles with electricity, and scents bloom like spring flowers. But Pierce’s aura was a wall of ice. His dark eyes didn't hold love or even lust; they held a burning resentment. He stopped inches from me, his towering frame casting a shadow over my face, blocking out the moonlight.