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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 3

I heard it before I understood what it was.

A low hum, distant at first, like a frequency just below hearing. Then it sharpened — Cullen's voice, threading through the pack mind-link with the precision of a man who had rehearsed every word. His Alpha tone carried grief in it. Controlled. Measured. The kind of grief that sounds more convincing than the real thing because it never cracks.

I pressed my back against the cold concrete wall and listened.

He told them Amelie had suffered a psychotic break.

He told them she had attacked Chelsea — his pregnant mate — in a feral rage, unprovoked, in the middle of the night.

And then, the part that landed like a blade between my ribs: he told them I had blocked pack healer access to his father Ryker for months. Out of spite. That Ryker had died because of me.

The mind-link carried his voice to every allied pack in the Pacific Northwest. Dozens of Alphas, sitting in their own warm houses, their own lit rooms, hearing a grieving son describe a deranged she-wolf who had destroyed his family. I could feel the weight of it even down here, even through the concrete and the iron and the frozen dark. The way a lie that size has its own gravity.

No one would question it. Why would they? He was Cullen Jordan. Rising Alpha. Decorated. Trusted. A man who had spent seven years building exactly this — a reputation so polished that when he finally needed it to function as armor, it held.

I sat very still and let the broadcast finish.

Then I pressed my thumb against my mating mark.

The pain that answered was not the dull, sourceless burn I had carried for years. It was sharp now. Specific. Like a nerve finally exposed to air. I pulled my hand away and looked at the mark in the thin grey light under the door. Even in the dark I could see it — the edges of it fading, the color draining out of something that had been vivid on my skin for seven years. My body knew. It had known for a long time. It was only now being allowed to say so.

I thought about Ryker.

I had liked Cullen's father. He was a hard man, traditional, not easy with warmth, but he had been honest in the way that old Alphas sometimes are — direct, without the performance his son had perfected. When he got sick I had called the pack healer myself. I had followed up twice. I had asked Cullen three times whether the treatment funds were in order and he had said yes, yes, it's handled, stop worrying.

Now I understood what handled had meant.

I pressed my palm flat against the floor and breathed through it. Not grief. Not yet. Something colder. The thing that lives past grief when you finally understand the full shape of what was done to you.

---

Above me, the house was quiet for a long time.

Then I heard footsteps. Not Chelsea's — these were heavier, deliberate, the measured pace of someone moving through a space they owned. Cullen. He crossed the floor directly above my head and stopped. I could track him by sound the way I had always tracked things, the way my father had taught me, the way I had taught Lyla.

He stood there for a moment. Right above me.

I did not move. I did not breathe any louder than I had to.

Then he walked away.

I let the air out of my lungs slowly.

---

Somewhere far north, in the Silverfang Pack house, Lyla was sitting at the kitchen table.

I knew this the way I knew things through the mate bond — not clearly, not in images, but in the particular ache of a mother's instinct that does not require confirmation. She would be drawing. She drew wolves, always wolves, in crayon colors that bore no relationship to actual wolves. Purple ones. Orange ones. A green one she had named after me.

I thought about Elder Marta receiving the mind-link broadcast. I thought about her face going still the way it did when she was holding something she didn't know how to put down. I thought about her looking at my daughter across the kitchen table and not knowing what to say.

When Lyla asked when her mother was coming back, Marta would say nothing. Because what do you say to a five-year-old when the answer is a lie you haven't been given permission to tell?

The Beta would come later. I knew Cullen's Beta — efficient, loyal, the kind of man who followed instructions without asking what they cost. He would use the careful tone. The one adults use when they are delivering something terrible to a child and trying to make it sound like information rather than a wound.

Your mother had to go away. She was sick. She did something very bad.

Lyla would stop drawing.

I pressed the back of my hand against my mouth and held that image until I could hold it without breaking. Then I put it somewhere I could reach later, when I had the means to do something about it.

---

On the second night I ran my hands along the coat lining the way I had been doing every few hours, methodically, checking what I had.

My fingers found the loose seam. And inside it — small, cold, real — Lyla's hair clip.

I held it in my palm for a long moment. The silver leaf shape. The way it tapered to a point at one end.

So you have a piece of me.

My fingers were bleeding at the knuckles from the cold and from running them along the bars. I barely felt it. I turned the clip over and looked at the rusted iron bar mechanism on the other side of the cell door. Storage-grade. Old. The kind of lock that had been installed to hold boxes, not people. Not a she-wolf who had spent seven years running border patrols alone while her mate was somewhere else, who had learned to track and pick and problem-solve because there was no one else to do it.

I looked at the lock for a long time.

Then I got up off the floor, crossed to the bars, and got to work.

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