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My Alpha Forced Me to Serve His Chosen Mate Novel Cover

My Alpha Forced Me to Serve His Chosen Mate

I smelled him before I saw him. Dark cedar and rain-soaked earth. It hit me like a wall, cutting straight through the pine and mud of Briarwood's eastern border, and my knees almost buckled right there in the crowd. No. No, no, no. My wolf stirred — faint, barely a whisper these days — and let out a sound so small and broken it made my chest ache. She knew. She always knew before I did. I pressed my fingertips hard into the inside of my wrist and forced myself to breathe. The wolves around me were already shifting, murmuring, pressing closer to the tree line where our Alpha, Gerald, stood with his Beta and Gamma.
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Chapter 1

I smelled him before I saw him.

Dark cedar and rain-soaked earth. It hit me like a wall, cutting straight through the pine and mud of Briarwood's eastern border, and my knees almost buckled right there in the crowd.

No. No, no, no.

My wolf stirred — faint, barely a whisper these days — and let out a sound so small and broken it made my chest ache. She knew. She always knew before I did.

I pressed my fingertips hard into the inside of my wrist and forced myself to breathe.

The wolves around me were already shifting, murmuring, pressing closer to the tree line where our Alpha, Gerald, stood with his Beta and Gamma. I was near the back. I was always near the back. Low rank meant you stood where no one had to look at you, and that had suited me fine for three years.

Until now.

They came through the trees in formation. Silverfang warriors — two dozen at least, all in human form but carrying themselves with the kind of discipline that made our patrol wolves look like teenagers. They fanned out along the border in a clean line, and the crowd went quiet.

Then he walked through.

Winston Sullivan.

Seven years, and my body recognized him before my brain caught up. He was taller. Broader. The lean, hungry angles of the boy I'd fed soup to on a freezing November night had been replaced by something harder, something built. His jaw was sharper. His dark hair was cut short. He wore a black coat over a simple shirt, and he moved like the ground belonged to him.

Because it did. He was an Alpha now.

The Silverfang Pack. One of the most powerful territories on the East Coast. I'd heard the rumors over the past year — a young Alpha rising fast, annexing smaller packs, building alliances that made the old guard nervous. I never looked up his name. I couldn't afford to.

A woman walked beside him. Tall, dark-haired, beautiful in the effortless way that Alpha daughters always were. She had her hand resting lightly on his arm, and her posture said everything: chosen mate. Future Luna.

My wolf whimpered again. I dug my nails into my wrist.

Behind Winston, a broad-shouldered man with close-cropped hair and watchful eyes took position at his right flank. His Beta. He scanned the crowd with the calm efficiency of someone cataloging threats.

Gerald stepped forward. Our Alpha was not a weak man, but he was not a fool either. Briarwood had forty wolves. Silverfang had hundreds. The math was simple.

"Alpha Sullivan." Gerald's voice was steady, but I could see the tension in his shoulders. "You're on Briarwood land."

"I am." Winston's voice carried across the clearing without effort. Low, unhurried, final. It pressed against my skin like a physical thing — Alpha tone, but not even fully deployed. Just the natural weight of what he'd become. "And as of this morning, Briarwood land is Silverfang land. Your eastern and southern borders have been formally ceded under the territorial merger clause filed with the Council three days ago."

Gerald's Beta took a half-step forward. Winston didn't even glance at him.

"You can contest it," Winston continued. "But the Council has already approved the filing, and I have twenty-six warriors who made the drive. So I'd suggest we do this cleanly."

Silence. The kind that presses on your eardrums.

Gerald looked at his wolves. At the warriors behind Winston. At the woman on Winston's arm, who watched the whole thing with the detached interest of someone observing a chess match she'd already calculated the end of.

Then Gerald lowered his head. Not all the way — just enough. A public submission.

A murmur rippled through the crowd. Some of the younger wolves looked angry. Most just looked scared.

Winston addressed the assembled pack with the same flat authority. Merger terms. Rank restructuring. All Briarwood wolves would be integrated into Silverfang's hierarchy pending individual assessment. His Beta — Silas Vane, he called him — would oversee the transition.

I stood very still and tried to make myself small. It was a skill I'd perfected over years of having no rank worth noticing.

It didn't work.

His gaze swept the crowd — methodical, assessing, the way an Alpha inventories new territory. It moved across faces without stopping. And then it reached the back row, and it found me.

He went still.

Not a pause. Not a hesitation. A full-body arrest, like every muscle in him locked at once. His eyes — darker than I remembered, harder — fixed on my face, and for one second the mask cracked. I saw something underneath. Something raw and enormous and immediately suffocated.

One second. That was all.

Then his expression closed like a door slamming shut, and he looked away. He continued speaking as if nothing had happened. His Beta's eyes flicked briefly to the spot where Winston's gaze had landed, then back to his Alpha. He said nothing.

Winston did not look at me again.

He didn't need to. My wolf was already curling into herself, shaking, pressing against the walls of my chest like she was trying to get closer to him through sheer force of longing.

Hush, I told her. Please. Hush.

She went quiet. These days, she always went quiet. That was the problem.

---

The rank reassignment was posted on the pack house board two hours later.

I almost missed it. The board was crowded with new notices — Silverfang protocols, patrol schedules, integration paperwork — and wolves were clustered around it, reading in tense silence. I waited until most of them cleared out before I stepped close enough to read.

My name was near the bottom.

Ellie Hayes — Omega. Assigned: personal service detail, Alpha quarters. Duties: meal preparation, quarters maintenance, attendance at all formal pack functions.

Personal servant. To the Alpha and his chosen mate.

I read it twice. The words didn't change.

Around me, a few wolves glanced over. Some looked away quickly. One — a Briarwood Delta I'd shared kitchen shifts with — met my eyes with something that might have been pity before she turned and walked off.

I pressed my fingertips to my wrist. Held them there until my pulse steadied.

Then I walked to the pack house and reported for duty.

---

The first three days taught me the shape of my new life.

Mornings: I prepared breakfast in the Alpha kitchen. Coffee, black, no sugar — I didn't need to be told how he took it. I'd made him coffee a thousand times in a diner with a leaking roof and a stove that only worked on one side. The muscle memory was still there. My hands moved on their own, and I hated them for it.

I carried the tray to the dining room where Winston sat at the head of the long table, Talia Cole beside him. She was polished and composed, her dark hair pulled back, a silver ring catching the light when she reached for her glass. She glanced at me once when I set her plate down. No contempt. No warmth either. Just a brief, assessing look, like she was filing me away for later.

Winston did not look up.

"More water," he said. Not to me. To the air beside me.

I refilled his glass and stepped back to the wall.

Afternoons: I cleaned his quarters. This was the worst part. Not the work — I'd scrubbed floors and hauled dishes since I was old enough to hold a rag. The worst part was the scent. It was everywhere. Soaked into the sheets, the curtains, the wood of the doorframe. Cedar and rain-soaked earth, so thick I could taste it. My wolf pressed forward every single time, trembling, reaching for the bond like a hand stretching toward a fire.

I let her have those seconds. I owed her that much. She was dying, and this was the only comfort I could give her — stolen breaths of a scent that belonged to a man who wouldn't say my name.

A small, scruffy wolf — barely bigger than a large dog — watched me from a bed in the corner of Winston's room. Runt omega, by the look of him. He had a worn leather collar and calm, unbothered eyes. He watched me dust the shelves and mop the floor and never once growled. When I got close, he sniffed my hand and then set his chin back on his paws, like he'd decided I was acceptable.

"Hey, little one," I whispered.

He blinked at me. That was all.

Evenings: the banquets. The first formal pack dinner after the merger was held in Silverfang's main hall — long tables, candlelight, ranked wolves seated by status. I stood along the wall with the other Omegas in a plain gray dress, hands folded, eyes down.

Winston sat at the center of the head table. Talia was at his right. Silas Vane at his left. They looked like a portrait — power, beauty, authority. Everything a pack was supposed to see when they looked at their Alpha.

I served the courses. Soup, bread, roasted meat, wine. I moved between tables with my head low and my steps quiet. When I reached the Alpha table, I set the plate in front of Winston without letting my fingers shake.

His hand was resting on the table, inches from where I placed the dish. I could see the tension in his knuckles. The white press of bone under skin.

He didn't look at me. He hadn't looked at me since the border.

"That will be all," he said. Same flat tone. Same empty air beside me.

I stepped back. Returned to the wall. Folded my hands.

My wolf was so faint now that I had to strain to hear her. But she was there — a thin, flickering thread of warmth behind my ribs, reaching toward his scent like a vine reaching toward light.

I let her reach. I didn't tell her it was pointless.

She already knew. We both did.

But knowing and stopping are two different things, and my wolf had never learned the difference. Neither, if I was honest, had I.

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