
My Alpha Planned My Death to Keep His Lover Alive
Chapter 4
Soren built his character from scratch in four days.
I watched him do it. Sat in his penthouse while he assembled pieces like a costume — the ostentatious watch, the tailored suit that broadcast money louder than good taste, the practiced slouch of a man who had never needed to earn a room's attention because rooms simply rearranged themselves around him. He even changed his cologne. Something synthetic and sharp layered over his natural scent, designed to project Lycan dominance without reverence. The kind of smell that said *new money with old blood.*
"Too much," I said, when he tried on the watch.
He looked at me.
"Monroe collects status symbols. She'll recognize genuine power from performance." I studied him. "Less obvious. She needs to feel like she discovered you, not like you were put in front of her."
He took the watch off. Put on a slimmer one, platinum, barely noticeable until you knew what you were looking for. "Better?"
"Much."
He smiled slightly, and it wasn't the careful professional smile he used with me during working hours. It was something quieter, warmer. He was looking at me the way he sometimes did when he thought I wasn't paying attention — like he found me interesting in a way that had nothing to do with the case.
I looked back at my notes.
---
The charity event was held at the Ashvale Pack's estate, forty minutes north of the city. One of those enormous fundraising evenings where three hundred wolves dressed in black-tie and convinced themselves they were philanthropists between glasses of champagne.
I went as myself — devoted Luna, Kayden's arm, Mrs. Elliott's careful supplement-packed evening bag tucked under my elbow.
Kayden was distracted from the moment we arrived. He scanned the room constantly, the way he did whenever Monroe was nearby, his gaze restless and searching. And there she was — across the ballroom in a deep red gown, her dark hair swept up, standing beside two women from the hosting pack.
She looked beautiful. She always did. And she looked sick, too, if you knew what to look for — a slight translucence to her skin, the particular careful way she held herself, conserving energy.
I watched Kayden watch her. His jaw worked once, suppressing something, and he patted my hand on his arm without looking at me.
"Mingle," he said, already stepping away. "You're always good at that."
"Of course," I said warmly.
I was good at it. I circulated, smiled, inquired after children and renovation projects and the winter hunt. And across the room, twenty minutes after we arrived, Soren walked in.
He looked nothing like the man who fed Barnaby crackers at his kitchen counter. He moved differently in character — expansive, unhurried, trailing a Beta-equivalent aide who kept murmuring in his ear as if confirming his importance. His manufactured presence pushed outward into the room the way true Lycan power never bothers to.
I watched Monroe notice him.
It was subtle at first. A glance that held a beat too long. Then she straightened slightly. Touched her hair. I could practically see her calculating — who is that, what does he have, and what would it take to introduce herself.
She excused herself from her conversation before he'd crossed half the room.
I turned away and accepted a glass of water from a passing Omega.
---
By the end of the night, Monroe had Soren's card.
I knew because I saw her slip it into her small clutch with the quiet satisfaction of a woman who considers herself very good at this. She glanced toward Kayden once — not with guilt, just calculation — and then looked back at Soren and laughed at something he said, her hand touching his arm briefly.
Kayden saw it.
He was standing by the bar, a full glass in his hand that he hadn't touched, and the expression on his face was one I'd never seen before. Not hurt. Not jealousy exactly. More like a man watching something he owns slip its leash and realizing he has no hands free to chase it.
---
The weeks that followed moved like a tide coming in.
Monroe accepted a dinner. Then a private theater booking. Then a weekend at a resort in Connecticut that Soren had apparently reserved on three hours' notice — the kind of gesture designed to communicate that logistics were not a concern when a woman captured his interest.
At inter-pack events, she arrived alone now, or with girlfriends. When Kayden appeared, she greeted him with a warmth that had cooling edges — friendly, slightly distant, the way you treat someone you used to be close to. He would position himself near her and she would drift, naturally, toward where Soren stood. The seven-year star-crossed love story they had apparently told themselves, the tragic separated bond — it left no visible marks on Monroe. She moved on from it the way you move from one room to the next. No ceremony.
Kayden was unraveling.
He canceled three fabricated business trips in ten days. I noticed the absences in his schedule and said nothing, just adjusted dinner reservations and smiled when he came home tense. He snapped at Marcus twice in front of the pack elders — short, cutting words that Marcus absorbed with the practiced neutrality of a man choosing his battles. The elders exchanged glances. I poured tea and didn't look up.
---
Mrs. Elliott began appearing in the kitchen at six in the morning.
The first time, I assumed coincidence. Then she started bringing printed charts — iron levels, protein intake, sleep data from the wellness tracker she had encouraged me to wear last year as a gift. "Just so we're paying attention," she'd said then, clasping it around my wrist with both hands.
Now she reviewed its data over breakfast while I ate the breakfast she had instructed the Omega cook to prepare.
"Your cortisol is elevated," she said one morning, setting the chart beside my plate. "Stress affects absorption, Adelaide. We need your system functioning cleanly."
"I've been taking on more pack responsibilities," I said. "The Manhattan property coordination. It's a lot of scheduling."
She patted my hand. "Of course, dear. But your health comes first. I've asked Dr. Cross to move your wellness check to this Thursday instead of next week. Just a precaution."
"That's so thoughtful," I said.
She beamed.
Thursday came. I attended the appointment with perfect compliance, answered Dr. Cross's careful questions, and let her draw the required blood. When she stepped out to process the sample, I noticed the intake form on the counter — pre-populated with specific markers that had nothing to do with general wellness.
Donor viability panel. Bone density. Marrow compatibility indicators.
I photographed it with my phone before she came back.
That evening, I drove to a shopping center twenty minutes from the pack house, sat in the parking garage, and sent the image to Soren's secure line.
His reply came in under four minutes.
*Perfect. This is the third this quarter. Keep going.*
I sat in the car for a moment, looking at the parking garage wall. Somewhere underneath the performance — underneath three years of Luna smiles and green dresses and wildflowers on dining tables — I felt the slow, steady burn that had started the night I pinched out a candle and decided to stop grieving.
I tucked my phone away and drove home in time for dinner.
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