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My Alpha Let Me Die in Labor for His First Love Novel Cover

My Alpha Let Me Die in Labor for His First Love

Fifteen missed calls. That was the only legacy I left on my husband’s phone while I went into labor alone during the storm. Trapped in the twisted wreckage of the ambulance, my heart filled with helplessness and desperation, I watched my mate’s Porsche speed past me in the rain. He didn't stop. He didn't look back. He left his pregnant desperate Luna bleeding on the asphalt to rush to his ex-girlfriend’s side for a "phantom cramp." I died cold and unloved, but my soul refused to move on. For months, I floated invisibly through the home I built, watching him replace me. He gave her my jewelry. He put her bastard child in the nursery I had decorated with such hope. He even laughed when she admitted she’d seen my ambulance behind them and deliberately made him block the road. They had murdered me and my unborn pup to clear the path for their "true love,” and they toasted to their perfect life on my grave. But they forgot that vengeance can transcend death. When I was offered a ticket to the moment before the crash, I didn't hesitate. When the darkness faded as my eyes snapped open, the siren wailed above me. The rain lashed against the ambulance window. Everything was exactly as I remembered—the storm, the siren, the twisted metal, the smell of rain on asphalt. The world around me felt achingly familiar, like a nightmare replaying itself, down to the smallest detail. Except for one thing. Me. I was back, my heart burned with rage, grief, and a thirst for vengeance. This time, I wouldn't be the one dying in the rain.
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Chapter 2

The private room was a monument to privilege—marble floors, silk curtains, and equipment that gleamed like jewelry under the soft lighting. Ashley lay propped against Egyptian cotton pillows, her golden hair fanned around her like a halo. She wasn't screaming. She wasn't even sweating.

She was smiling.

"The contractions stopped completely," Dr. Harrison announced, his voice warm with relief. "False alarm, as I suspected. Baby's heartbeat is strong and steady."

Brandon's shoulders sagged as if the weight of the world had been lifted from them. He pressed Ashley's hand to his lips, his eyes closed in what looked like prayer. "Thank the Moon Goddess. I couldn't bear to lose either of you."

Either of you. The words hit me like physical blows, each syllable a fresh wound. I floated there, invisible and voiceless, watching my mate lavish the kind of tenderness on another woman that he'd never shown me—not even when I'd miscarried our first pregnancy two years ago.

"You're being so dramatic," Ashley laughed, but her voice held a note of satisfaction. "It was just a little spotting. But I'm so glad you were here with me."

Three healers bustled around her bed, checking monitors, adjusting pillows, bringing her ice chips and warm blankets. The same healers who should have been fighting to save my child. The same resources that had been diverted from the Luna of this pack to coddle a Delta's phantom emergency.

A nurse entered, her expression grave. "Alpha Vanderbilt? Dr. Martinez needs to speak with you. It's about your wife."

The room fell silent. Ashley's grip on Brandon's hand tightened, her knuckles white against his skin. For a moment, something flickered across Brandon's face—guilt, perhaps, or fear. But it was gone so quickly I might have imagined it.

"I'll be right back," he murmured to Ashley, pressing another kiss to her forehead. "Don't worry about anything. Just rest."

I followed him into the hallway, where Dr. Martinez waited with the kind of expression that delivered life-altering news. The older man's face was drawn, his usually steady hands clasped tightly behind his back.

"Brandon, I'm sorry. We did everything we could, but—"

"No." The word exploded from Brandon's lips. "No, that's not possible. She was fine this morning. We talked about baby names over breakfast."

Liar. We hadn't had breakfast together in weeks. He'd left before dawn, claiming pack business, and hadn't returned until after I'd gone to bed.

"The ambulance crash caused severe internal trauma," Dr. Martinez continued gently. "The impact ruptured several organs. By the time they got her here, she'd lost too much blood. We couldn't save either of them."

Brandon staggered backward, his face draining of color. For a moment, I almost felt sorry for him. The shock in his eyes looked genuine, the way his hands trembled as he ran them through his hair. But then Ashley's voice drifted from the room behind him.

"Brandon? Is everything alright out there?"

The sound of her calling his name was like a switch being flipped. The devastation on Brandon's face shifted, replaced by something that made my ethereal form recoil in disgust. Relief. Unmistakable, shameful relief.

"I—I need a moment," he told Dr. Martinez, but his feet were already carrying him back toward Ashley's room.

I watched him go, understanding flooding through me like poison. My death wasn't a tragedy to him—it was a solution. The inconvenient wife who'd been in the way of his true desires was gone. The child that would have tied him to responsibilities he didn't want had been eliminated. He was free.

"Brandon, you look pale," Ashley said as he returned to her bedside. "What did the doctor want?"

"Nothing important," he lied smoothly, taking her hand again. "Just some administrative stuff about the room charges."

She smiled and settled back against her pillows. "Good. I was worried it might be pack business. You work too hard, you know. When the baby comes, I want you to promise me you'll take some time off. Just for us."

"Of course," Brandon murmured, and I could see the future he was already painting in his mind. A future where Ashley's child would inherit everything that should have belonged to mine. Where she would take my place as Luna, wearing my jewelry, sleeping in my bed, ruling over the pack I'd helped him build.

The hours that followed blurred together in a haze of bitter observation. Ashley's labor progressed smoothly—too smoothly for someone who'd supposedly been in distress earlier. The healers fussed over her like she was made of spun glass, while somewhere in the basement morgue, my body grew cold on a metal table.

When Ashley's son finally arrived—healthy, pink, and screaming with indignant life—Brandon cried. Actual tears streamed down his face as he held the child, his expression soft with wonder.

"He's perfect," Brandon whispered, his voice thick with emotion I'd never heard when he spoke about our lost babies. "Absolutely perfect."

"Just like his father," Ashley said, exhausted but radiant. "What should we name him?"

"James," Brandon said without hesitation. "After my grandfather. James Vanderbilt."

Vanderbilt. He was already claiming the child, already rewriting history to make this bastard his heir. The name that should have belonged to my son—the name we'd chosen together during those brief, happy months when I'd still believed in his love.

The days that followed were a masterclass in public deception. Brandon played the grieving widower with Oscar-worthy performance. He arranged a lavish funeral, spoke movingly about our "deep love" and "tragic loss," accepted condolences with appropriately broken dignity.

But I saw the truth. I saw him slip away from my wake to take Ashley flowers in the hospital. I saw him stand at my graveside with tears in his eyes while texting her sweet messages. I watched him field concerned calls from pack members while his fingers traced patterns on Ashley's naked back.

"I can't believe she's gone," Ashley murmured one evening as they lay tangled in the sheets of a downtown hotel room. "It feels so sudden."

"These things happen," Brandon replied, his voice carefully neutral. "Car accidents. They're unpredictable."

"Still, the timing... right when I was having my scare. It's almost like fate, isn't it?"

Brandon's hand stilled on her shoulder. "What do you mean?"

"Nothing, really. Just that maybe the Moon Goddess knew we were meant to be together. Maybe she cleared the path for us."

The casual cruelty of it—the way she spoke about my death like it was a cosmic favor—sent rage coursing through my spectral form. But Brandon didn't correct her. He didn't defend my memory or honor the years we'd spent together. He simply pulled her closer and changed the subject.

Weeks turned to months, and I remained trapped, watching my life be systematically erased. Brandon moved Ashley into a penthouse apartment across town, furnished it with pieces from our home—including the antique rocking chair I'd bought for our nursery. My nursery, which he'd had gutted and converted into a home office within a month of my funeral.

The expensive organic crib, the hand-carved dresser, the mobile I'd spent hours assembling—all of it went to Ashley's son. My child's inheritance, gifted to another woman's baby while I watched helplessly from the shadows.

But the worst revelation came when I discovered the truth about Ashley's marriage. Marcus Morrison wasn't just controlling—he was broke. His construction business had failed, leaving them drowning in debt. Ashley hadn't reconnected with Brandon out of love or even lust.

She'd hunted him like prey, using their shared history and his guilty conscience to transform him into her personal ATM. And Brandon, flattered by her attention and desperate to maintain his image as the devoted Alpha, had fallen for every manipulation.

My family's money—the inheritance my grandmother had left me, the trust fund my parents had established—all of it was flowing into Ashley's accounts. Designer clothes, spa treatments, private school tuition for a child that wasn't even Brandon's.

Because James Morrison—despite his new surname—belonged to Marcus. I'd seen the medical records Ashley kept hidden in her jewelry box. The conception dates didn't lie, no matter how much she'd convinced Brandon otherwise.

The final insult came on what would have been our fifth wedding anniversary. Brandon posted a tribute on social media—a photo of us from our honeymoon, accompanied by a caption about eternal love and never forgetting. The comments poured in: condolences, heart emojis, promises of prayers.

But while his followers mourned our lost love, Brandon was in Ashley's bed, whispering promises about their future together. About the family they'd build. About the pack they'd rule side by side.

I'd thought death was the worst thing that could happen to me. I'd been wrong. This was worse—being forced to watch my life stolen piece by piece, my memory desecrated, my child's future handed to a stranger while the man I'd loved celebrated his freedom.

But as I floated there in the darkness, something began to change. The grief that had anchored me to this existence was transforming into something else. Something harder. Something that burned like ice and cut like silver.

Revenge. The word whispered through my consciousness like a prayer, and for the first time since my death, I felt something other than pain.

I felt purpose.

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