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My Alpha Poisoned Me To Keep Me Weak Novel Cover

My Alpha Poisoned Me To Keep Me Weak

The silver light faded from my fingertips as Elder Thomas drew his first full breath in three days. His chest rose and fell steadily now, the death rattle gone from his lungs. Around me, pack members gasped and whispered, their voices blending into a chorus of awe that made my heart swell. "She did it," someone breathed. "The bone-knitting technique actually worked." I pulled my hands back, studying them in wonder. That strange silver glow—I'd never seen it manifest so brightly before. It had pulsed through my veins like liquid moonlight, warm and powerful and utterly foreign. For a moment, I'd felt something stir deep inside me, something that felt like recognition. "Ocean, you're a miracle worker," Elder Thomas's daughter sobbed, clutching my hand. "Thank you.
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Chapter 3

The infirmary was silent except for the soft clink of glass vials as I returned them to their shelves. My hands moved mechanically, sorting herbs I could identify in my sleep. Moonpetal root. Silverleaf extract. Wolfsbane powder.

My neck still ached where Jaden's fingers had dug in.

The warrior had survived. Barely. I'd knelt on that floor for two hours, pouring every ounce of strength into pulling the poison from his veins while Jaden's hand stayed locked on my neck like a collar. A reminder of what I was.

Nothing.

"Child."

I spun around. Elena stood in the doorway, her weathered face half-hidden in shadow. The elderly healer moved like a ghost, silent and careful.

"You should be resting," I said, turning back to my work. "It's late."

"So should you." She crossed the room, her joints creaking. "But here we are."

I didn't answer. What was there to say?

Her gnarled hand closed over mine, stopping my movements. "That light in your palms. When you healed Marcus today."

"What about it?"

"It's not normal, Ocean." Her voice dropped to barely a whisper. "I've been a healer for sixty years. I've never seen silver light like that. Not in any common wolf."

Something cold slithered down my spine. "I don't understand."

"The Royal Family." Elena's eyes searched mine, urgent and afraid. "The old legends speak of healing light that glows like moonbeams. A gift passed through the Lycan bloodline."

I pulled my hand away. "That's ridiculous. I'm nobody. I don't even have a wolf."

"Don't you?" She stepped closer. "Or has someone made very sure you believe that?"

The words hung between us, dangerous and impossible.

"Why would Jaden keep you so close, yet so suppressed?" Elena continued. "Why does he watch you like a hawk? Why does he give you that 'medicine' every single day?"

My throat tightened. The bitter tea Jaden insisted I drink each morning. For my health, he'd said. To keep me strong.

"You need to find out the truth," Elena whispered. "Before it's too late."

She left as silently as she'd come, leaving me alone with questions that felt like knives.

I shouldn't have gone to his quarters. I knew that even as my feet carried me through the darkened pack house, past sleeping guards and empty hallways. I just needed to talk to him. To explain that I wasn't trying to sabotage anyone. That I was loyal. That I was worthy.

The lies we tell ourselves are always the cruelest.

Light spilled from beneath Jaden's door. Voices drifted through the wood—his, and Rosalie's.

I raised my hand to knock.

"She's so pathetic," Rosalie's laugh was sharp and bright. "Did you see her face when you made her kneel? I thought she might actually cry."

"She's useful." Jaden's voice, casual and cold. "For now."

My hand froze.

"Once she teaches me the final incantation, we're done with her, right?" Rosalie asked. "You promised."

"Of course." Ice clinked in a glass. "We'll sell her to the rogue ring. They're always looking for healers, and they pay well. The suppressants are costing a fortune anyway."

The world stopped.

Suppressants.

Not medicine. Not vitamins. Not something to keep me healthy.

Poison.

Five years of poison, fed to me every morning by the man I thought saved my life.

"What if she refuses to teach me?" Rosalie's voice turned petulant.

"She won't. She's too broken to refuse anything." Jaden laughed, and the sound carved something vital out of my chest. "That's what five years of suppressants and manipulation will do. She actually thinks I care about her. It's almost sad."

I backed away from the door. One step. Two. My shoulder hit the wall and I barely felt it.

Saved me.

He saved me.

Except he didn't.

Elena's words echoed in my skull. Why would he keep you so close, yet so suppressed?

Because I was never his salvation project.

I was his prisoner.

The next morning, Jaden summoned me to his office. I went because my body still remembered how to obey, even when my mind was screaming.

He sat behind his desk, relaxed and confident. "Your journals. The ones with your healing research. I need them."

I looked at him—really looked at him—and wondered how I'd ever thought those eyes held warmth.

"No."

The word felt foreign on my tongue. Powerful.

Jaden's expression didn't change. "Excuse me?"

"I won't give you my journals." My voice was steady, stronger than I'd ever heard it. "And I won't teach Rosalie another thing."

Something flickered across his face. Surprise, maybe. Then rage.

He moved faster than I could track. His hand cracked across my face, snapping my head to the side. Pain exploded through my cheek, bright and sharp.

I tasted blood.

But I didn't fall.

I turned back to face him, my hand pressed to my burning cheek, and smiled.

Because for the first time in five years, I wasn't afraid.

I was furious.

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