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My Alpha Framed Me to Protect His Pregnant Lover Novel Cover

My Alpha Framed Me to Protect His Pregnant Lover

The phone rang while I was cutting silver paper for Lyla's gifts. I knew it was him before I looked. Seven years of marriage teaches you the rhythm of a man's calls, even the ones that lie. I picked up and tucked the phone against my shoulder. "Amelie." Cullen's voice was tired in that careful way of his. "There's a problem at the northern border. Rogues. I can't make it back for the Solstice." I kept cutting. The scissors made a clean, even sound. "How many?" I asked.
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Chapter 2

The Alpha tone hit me like a wall.

Not sound. Not words. Something older than both — a pressure that started in my chest and drove downward through my legs until my knees struck the hardwood floor and I was kneeling before I understood what had happened. My wolf went silent inside me, curled small and trembling, the way she always did when his command came down hard. I had felt it before, in pack meetings, in moments of crisis. I had never felt it aimed at me.

My mind was screaming. My body did not care.

The front door burst open behind me. Cold air and snow and the smell of unfamiliar wolves — four of them, maybe five, local pack warriors in dark gear, their eyes sweeping the room and landing on me. On my knees. On the floor.

I watched them take it in. A she-wolf down. A distressed Luna pressed against the doorframe with a fresh mating mark gleaming on her neck, one hand pressed to her chest, performing fear with the precision of someone who had rehearsed it. A toddler scooped up by a pack female who had appeared from somewhere in the back of the house, the boy's face buried against her shoulder.

And Cullen. Standing in the center of the room. Composed. Grieved. The portrait of a burdened Alpha.

"She breached the perimeter," he said. His voice was quiet. That was the worst part — how quiet it was. "Feral behavior. She attacked my mate."

No one looked at my face. No one looked at the fact that I had no wounds on my hands, no blood under my nails, nothing that said attack. They looked at him. They always looked at him.

He crossed the room and crouched in front of me. For one terrible second I thought he was going to say something real. Something that acknowledged seven years, a daughter, a bond that still burned on my neck.

His hand closed around the Luna pendant at my throat.

The chain snapped cold against my skin. He pocketed it in one smooth motion, the way you pocket a key you no longer need. Then he reached into my coat and took my phone. My wallet. My ID. Everything that said I was someone. Everything that said I was his Luna, that I had a name, that I existed in any official capacity in the pack world.

He stood up.

"Take her down," he said.

The warriors did not hesitate.

---

The staircase was narrow and unlit, cut into the earth beneath Chelsea's guest house. The walls were raw concrete. The air dropped ten degrees with every step, and by the time they pushed me through the iron door at the bottom I could see my own breath.

The cell was small. A rusted iron bar mechanism on the outside — the kind built for storage, not for people. A drain in the floor. No window. No light source except the thin grey line under the door above.

The warriors left without a word. The door at the top of the stairs closed. The bolt slid home.

I stood in the dark and listened.

Above me, through the floorboards, I could hear the toddler laughing. A high, bright sound, completely ordinary, completely unbothered. Chelsea's voice followed it, warm and domestic, saying something I couldn't make out. A cabinet closed. Water ran. The sounds of a household settling in for the night.

I sat down on the floor with my back against the wall and I did not make a sound.

I pressed my thumb against my mating mark the way I always did when I was thinking, and the burn that met my fingers was different now. Not the dull, sourceless ache I had carried for years. Something rawer. Like a wound that had finally been told what it was.

I thought about Lyla pressing the hair clip into my hand. So you have a piece of me.

I reached into the lining of my coat where the seam had come loose and felt the small metal edge of it, cold and real against my fingertips.

I did not sleep.

---

She came in the morning.

I heard her footsteps on the stairs before the door opened — unhurried, deliberate, the walk of a woman who owned the ground she was standing on. The light from above silhouetted her for a moment before she descended far enough for me to see her face.

Chelsea Webb. In the daylight she was exactly what she had looked like through the frosted window. Tall. Composed. The cream sweater replaced by something soft and grey. Her blonde hair loose around her shoulders.

And the mark. She had not covered it. She had dressed around it, the neckline of her sweater pulled just wide enough that the mating mark sat in full view, still faintly pink at the edges, catching the thin light from the stairwell.

She was carrying a tin plate.

She crouched outside the bars and set the plate on the floor just beyond my reach. Cold scraps. Bread, mostly. A few pieces of something that might have been meat. Enough to sustain a body. Calculated, I understood immediately, to the exact ounce of that.

"You look terrible," she said. Her voice was pleasant. Conversational. The tone of a woman making an observation about the weather.

I said nothing.

"He never loved you." She tilted her head slightly, like she was explaining something to someone slow. "I need you to understand that. Not because I want to be cruel. Because I think you've been telling yourself a story for seven years and it's kinder to just — stop."

The floorboards above us creaked. Cullen's footsteps, heavy and even, moving through the house.

"The bond was useful," Chelsea continued. "Henrik Simmons' daughter. The political optics of a fated Luna. He's not stupid. He knew what you were worth on paper." She paused. "But he came home to me. Every time. For seven years, he came home to me."

I looked at the plate just beyond the bars. I looked at the distance between it and my hand.

"Lyla knows you're gone," she said. Her voice did not change. That was the thing I would remember — how unchanged her voice was. "He told her last night. That you went feral. That you attacked me. That you abandoned the pack." A small pause. "She cried for a while. She'll be fine."

Something moved through me then. Not grief. Not yet. Something colder and more precise, the thing that lives on the other side of grief when grief has nowhere left to go.

I pressed my arm through the bars and pulled the plate toward me. The iron was cold enough to burn.

Chelsea watched me do it. She smiled — not unkindly, which was somehow worse than cruelty would have been.

"I'll bring more tomorrow," she said, and stood, and walked back up the stairs.

I sat in the dark with the plate in my lap and the hair clip against my ribs and the sound of my daughter's name still hanging in the frozen air.

I turned the clip over in my fingers. Felt the small, flat edge of it. The way it tapered to a point at one end.

I looked at the rusted iron bar mechanism on the other side of the bars.

Old. Storage-grade. The kind of lock that had never expected to hold anyone who was paying attention.

I began to pay attention.

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