Follow
Chapters
Share
My Alpha Faked His Death to Abandon Me Novel Cover

My Alpha Faked His Death to Abandon Me

Five years. For five years, I had prayed to the Moon Goddess for this exact moment. I stood in the center of our Alpha suite, adjusting the collar of my crimson silk dress. The dining table was set to perfection: sterling silver cutlery gleaming under the soft glow of candlelight, two plates of medium-rare steak cooling slightly, and a bottle of expensive red wine breathing on the counter. It was our fifth mating anniversary. But the real centerpiece wasn't the food. It was a small, black velvet gift box resting exactly where my mate, Alpha Bowen Smith, would sit. Inside that box wasn't a luxury watch or a pair of engraved cufflinks. It was a plastic stick with two solid pink lines. I was pregnant.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

Five years. That was how long it took to pull my pack back from the brink of starvation and absolute ruin. Five years of sleepless nights, auditing falsified ledgers, and fighting tooth and nail for every single logging contract in the territory. I wasn't just a pampered Luna anymore; I was a mother, a leader, and a survivor.

Today was supposed to be the crowning achievement of all that grueling hard work. The Silver Ridge Pack was the largest and wealthiest in the region, and securing a joint territorial logging agreement with them would guarantee my pack’s financial security for the next decade.

I stood in the sunlit boardroom of our newly renovated packhouse, my posture rigid, wearing my sharpest blazer. Across the heavy mahogany table stood Alpha Lewis Carter.

He was intimidatingly tall, with broad shoulders and sharp, perceptive amber eyes. But unlike the arrogant, posturing Alphas I usually dealt with, he didn't flood the room with his suffocating aura to establish dominance. He simply stood there, radiating a quiet, grounded authority.

"Luna Arabella," his voice was a deep, smooth rumble that seemed to vibrate in the floorboards. "I look forward to a prosperous partnership."

He extended a large, calloused hand.

I reached out, plastering on my best diplomatic smile. My fingers brushed his palm.

ZAP.

A violent, white-hot jolt of electricity shot up my arm, striking straight into my chest. I gasped, my eyes flying wide open. The sterile smell of the boardroom's lemon polish vanished, instantly replaced by the intoxicating, dizzying scent of fresh rain and crushed cedar.

Mate, Reya howled in my mind, her voice trembling with a desperate, sudden joy. Second chance!

No. No, no, no.

The phantom pain of Bowen’s rejection ripped through my memory like a jagged blade. The cold sneer on his face. The agonizing, soul-tearing snap of our bond. The absolute devastation of trusting an Alpha with my heart, only to be discarded like garbage.

Panic clawed fiercely at my throat. I violently yanked my hand back, stumbling away from the table until my shoulders hit the wall. My breathing turned shallow and erratic. I wrapped my arms tightly around my chest, physically and mentally rejecting the invisible, magnetic pull trying to drag me back to him.

"Don't," I choked out, my voice breaking, terrified of the bond.

The room went dead silent. The Silver Ridge warriors tensed, clearly insulted by my blatant rejection of their Alpha.

But Lewis didn't look angry. His amber eyes darkened with immediate, profound understanding. He looked at my trembling hands, my defensive posture, and the sheer terror swimming in my eyes. He saw the invisible scars Bowen had carved into my soul.

Instantly, the heavy, dominant energy of his Alpha aura vanished. He pulled it back so completely that the air in the room actually felt lighter. He took a deliberate step backward, putting safe distance between us.

He didn't demand my submission. He didn't invoke the sacred mate pull.

Instead, he turned his head slightly to the tall, stoic man standing at his right. "Beta Marcus," Lewis said, his voice calm and perfectly level. "Please walk Luna Arabella through the final clauses of the treaty. Handle the formalities. I need to step outside for some fresh air."

He didn't look back as he left the room, giving me exactly what I desperately needed in that moment: space.

I thought that would be the end of it. I thought he would take his signed treaty and leave me to my rebuilt, heavily guarded life.

I was wrong.

Lewis didn't push. He didn't demand a marking ceremony or force his presence in my packhouse. Instead, he began a slow, agonizingly patient courtship that bewildered my defenses.

It started with the flowers. Every Tuesday, after his border patrols, a small bouquet of wildflowers—bluebells, daisies, and sweet alyssum—would appear on my desk. No grand, expensive roses. Just quiet, hand-picked proof that he was thinking of me.

When our packs had to negotiate the shared borders, he sat in my office, helping me review the complex treaties. He pointed out vulnerabilities but never once overstepped. "Your territory, your call, Arabella," he would say, his tone thick with genuine respect.

But it was his actions with Scout that truly began to melt the ice around my heart.

My son was five now, a bundle of endless energy and sharp curiosity. Growing up without a father, Scout was naturally cautious around older male wolves. But Lewis never forced a connection.

I stood on the back porch of the packhouse, a mug of coffee warming my hands, watching the edge of the woods.

Lewis was crouched in the dirt, his large frame folded patiently beside my small, dark-haired boy.

"See this impression here?" Lewis murmured, pointing to a faint indentation in the mud. "The heel is deep. The deer was running fast. If you want to track it, you have to look ahead, not just down at your feet."

Scout nodded solemnly, his little brow furrowed in deep concentration. "Like this?" he asked, pointing a chubby finger at a snapped fern.

"Exactly like that," Lewis smiled, his face lighting up with genuine pride. He reached out and gently ruffled Scout's hair. "You've got good instincts, little wolf. You're going to be a great leader one day."

Scout beamed, a bright, gap-toothed smile that made my chest ache with love.

I took a shaky breath, inhaling the faint scent of cedar and rain that drifted on the morning breeze. Bowen had broken me with his selfishness, leaving me terrified of the very concept of a mate. But watching Lewis Carter—a powerful Alpha who chose patience over power, who nurtured my son instead of demanding my submission—I realized something terrifying.

My walls weren't just cracking. Under the gentle warmth of his consistent love, they were finally beginning to fall.

You may also like

After My Mate Burned Me Alive Novel Cover
9.0
The previous life, my mate, Carson Marshall, the Gamma of the Silver Moon Pack, had betrayed us all for Armani Gutierrez, a rogue spy. Not only did he share the pack’s defense plans with her, but he also abandoned his post to take her on a private outing. While they were away, rogues armed with the stolen information attacked our territory, breaching our defenses without a fight. Joey, Carson’s younger brother and a loyal Delta, had been gravely injured defending the pack. I sent multiple urgent messages to Carson through the mind link, begging him to return and save us. When he finally arrived, the rogues were driven back, but the damage was done. Armani, meanwhile, met a tragic end—allegedly forced to jump off a cliff during the chaos. Before her death, she left a letter accusing me of orchestrating the attack to eliminate her and claiming that Joey and I had been unfaithful, even suggesting the child I carried was his. Carson told me he didn’t believe her lies. But six months later, on the night of our child’s first moon, he set our home ablaze, his voice cold and filled with rage.
From Omega to Lycan Princess Novel Cover
8.7
The monthly pack gathering was always a special event for me. As an Omega in the Silverfang Pack, these nights were rare occasions when I could feel like I belonged. Tonight was extra special—I'd been planning to surprise Cristian with the news that I'd finally completed my thesis on ancient Lycan migration patterns, something that had taken months of research. I smoothed down my simple blue dress—the nicest one I owned—and touched the silver ring on my finger for reassurance. It was my only heirloom, though few knew its true significance. "You look beautiful tonight, Lexi," Elena, my roommate and closest friend, whispered as we entered the community hall. "Are you going to tell him how you feel?" I nodded, clutching my folder of research papers tighter. "I think tonight's the perfect night." The hall was already packed with pack members. Music played from somewhere in the corner, and the scent of food and excitement filled the air. I scanned the room for Cristian's tall figure, my heart racing at the thought of seeing him.
I Rejected the Alpha Who Killed Me Novel Cover
7.5
Five years ago, I tore my inner wolf out of my soul to save Alpha Floyd's life. In return, he treated me like a "Wolfless freak" and made me a slave in my own pack. To please his mistress, he pressed glowing coals laced with silver directly into my palms, burning the hands that had once woven protection spells for him. Then, he watched with cold indifference as I drowned in the freezing Moon Pool, sneering that I was just "being dramatic." It wasn't until the autopsy that he saw the surgical scars on my heart. He finally realized I hadn't lost my wolf—I had given it to him. Consumed by madness and guilt, Floyd sacrificed his own soul in the Silver Dungeon, begging the Goddess to turn back time. He wanted a second chance to worship me. When I opened my eyes, I was eighteen again, back at the Academy. Floyd stood before me, his eyes ancient and filled with tears. "I remember everything," he choked out, reaching for me with a trembling hand. "I came back for you, my Luna." I looked at the man who had murdered me in the name of love. "You think suicide buys forgiveness?" I stepped back, grabbing the hand of the quiet Beta student he used to despise. "I reject you, Floyd Meyers." "And this time, I'm choosing the man who would never let me burn."
Marked By the Mateless Alpha Novel Cover
8.2
Elinora Vale was born wolfless, unwanted, and sent to die at the edge of Nocturne Hollow. When she’s summoned to the Alpha’s court as a tribute girl, she expects to serve—then be discarded. Instead, when Alpha Riven Drayke lays eyes on her, a silver flame-shaped mark appears across his chest—the mating mark he was never supposed to have. Panic erupts. Mates aren’t chosen by fate in Nocturne Hollow. They’re killed. Because the last time a Mateless Alpha took a mate, an entire pack burned to ash. Now, Riven must reject Elinora or die. But Elinora has secrets too. Her wolf didn’t die… it was caged, hidden by ancient magic. She isn’t just a tribute. She’s the last heir of the Nightblood line. And she was sent to kill the Alpha who slaughtered her parents.
Moonfire: The Alpha's Chosen Novel Cover
8.6
Lyra has lived her whole life as an outcast, mocked for being a wolf who cannot shift. But on the night of the Moonfire-the rare celestial blaze that marks the true heirs of the Moon Goddess-she is chosen. Marked by fire, she carries a destiny that could unite or destroy the werewolf packs. Kaelen, the ruthless Alpha of the Stormfang Pack, is drawn to her against his will. Their bond is not the simple fated pull of mates-it is the dangerous calling of the Moonfire, binding their souls for a purpose greater than love. But enemies rise, and the packs are torn apart by those who would kill Lyra before her power awakens fully. In a war where wolves fight for dominance and gods whisper from the shadows, Lyra must decide: will she embrace her power as the Alpha's chosen-or burn the world to ashes?
My Alpha Stripped Me for His First Love Novel Cover
8.7
My Alpha and mate humiliated me for wearing a dress that looked like one he bought for his first love. I hadn’t known. I hadn’t known when I pulled the gown over my body, when I stood in front of the mirror, running my hands over the delicate fabric. The deep crimson color shimmered under the candlelight, the soft silk hugging my frame perfectly. It had been left for me by a servant, folded neatly on my bed with a simple note: For the Luna. I had thought it was a gift. A token of love from my mate. I should have questioned it. I should have noticed the uneasy looks the maids gave me when I stepped out of my chambers.