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My Alpha Rejected Me for the Pack’s Healer Novel Cover

My Alpha Rejected Me for the Pack’s Healer

The clinic was quiet in the way only a room with a dying woman in it can be quiet. I stood at the side of the treatment table with two fingers pressed to Mara Clark's wrist, counting. Her pulse was slow. Too slow. And under the slowness, something else — a small, wrong flutter that didn't belong in any heart I had ever treated. I looked at the tray on the steel cart beside me. Alivia had prepared it three hours ago. Neat vials. Neat labels. Her handwriting was always neat.
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Chapter 2

The footage came in on a pack-news feed three mornings after Mara's burial.

Guzman had not put it on my desk. He had set it on the corner of the kitchen counter at the staff house, screen down, the way you leave a letter for someone you love and do not want to push. He poured my coffee. He didn't look at me while he did it. That was the kindness.

I turned the tablet over.

The pack house hall. The same flagstones. The angle was a little different from the way I remembered them — I had been on my knees the last time I'd seen that floor, and the camera had the elevated view of someone tall and unhurried.

Alivia stood on the dais in pale grey silk.

She had chosen the color carefully. Not white — white was for the Luna she was replacing. Not red — red was for the blood she had finally washed out of the seams. Grey was the color of a woman stepping into a role she wanted everyone to believe she had been already half-living.

Lucian stood beside her.

I watched his face for a long time before I let myself look at the rest of him. The camera was not kind. Under the hall lights, the silver edge of his mane — the part of him that announced his bloodline before he opened his mouth — was gone. Just gone. What was left was a flat grey, the color of wet ash. His jaw was tight. His shoulders carried the line of a man bracing against something only he could feel.

He lifted his hand. He set it on the small of Alivia's back.

"For the strength of the Black Moon Pack," he said, "and for the continuity our people deserve, I name Alivia Watson acting Luna, until such time as the Moon Goddess sees fit to confirm the bond."

The phrasing was careful. Until such time. As if the Moon Goddess had not already made her decision and had it walked out of his hall on its own two feet.

Alivia bowed her head. Her hair fell forward exactly the right amount. When she lifted her face she was wearing the small, brave, slightly wet smile of a woman accepting a duty rather than a prize.

She was very good. I have always known she was very good.

The pack howled. Not a full howl — a half-throated, conditional sound, the kind a pack makes when it is told to celebrate something it is not entirely sure of. I noted that. I noted it the way I would note a pulse rate on a chart.

The feed cut.

I sat there with my coffee cooling and tried to find, inside myself, the place that should have been hurting. There was a hollow there. The bond-break wound was still raw at the edges of it. But the center — the part I had expected to be screaming — was very quiet.

I thought, *She'll move on the records first.*

I thought it the way you think about a chess piece sliding across a board. Not bitterly. Just clearly.

And by that evening, through a Moonveil contact I had cultivated quietly across three years, I learned that I had been right. Alivia's first private order as acting Luna, before Lucian had even left the dais — every chart, every drip log, every dosage sheet from Mara's final week — sealed into her personal medical archive. Accessible to no one without her authorization.

The woman did not waste motion.

I closed the tablet. I drank the cold coffee. I went to work.

---

The new research wing at Moonveil was on the east side of the building, two floors down, behind a clearance door that read my palm and asked for nothing else. Guzman had set it up before I asked. He always knew which question was coming before I had finished forming it.

The room was small. White walls, a long bench, a fume hood, a refrigerated cabinet, and a single window high up that let in a square of pale morning. There was a stool. There was a kettle. There was nothing on the walls.

I laid the original Project Phoenix logs out on the bench in order.

I had written the first page of these notebooks in the second month of treating Lucian. I remembered the night. He had been sleeping in the upstairs bedroom of the pack house, his breathing shallow, his wolf folded somewhere small inside him and trembling. I had come back to my own room — the small one off the clinic, the one no one called mine — and I had sat down at the desk and started writing, because if I could not stop the sickness with my hands I was going to stop it with my mind.

Three years of pages. Each one dated. Each one signed with the initial I used in those years, a single quiet *A* that meant nothing to anyone but me.

I began rebuilding.

The vial Lucian had smashed on the pack-house floor — that had been the seventh iteration. The serum was not a single compound; it was a sequence, a cascade, calibrated to a specific wolf-soul signature. To rebuild it, I had to recompile every dosage log, every reaction note, every adjustment I had made on the back of a napkin in his kitchen at three in the morning while he slept upstairs not knowing I was there.

I worked methodically. Two fingers pressed to the inside of my own wrist when a calculation refused to come clean. The kettle, twice. Nothing to eat — the body remembers what it learned.

Guzman came down at noon. He set a sandwich on the corner of the bench and did not ask.

"What is it?" he said, eventually, looking at the column of compounds on the whiteboard.

"A piece of work I started somewhere else," I said. "I want to finish it."

He looked at me for a long moment.

He did not ask again. That was the other kindness.

When he left, I stood at the bench and let the truth I had not let myself name sit quietly on my tongue. I was rebuilding the cure for the wolf of the man who had locked his hand on my arm at sunrise and walked me into a room full of people to be made to kneel.

I had decided, somewhere on the four-hour drive between the Black Moon territory and the Moonveil gates, that I was going to finish it anyway.

Not for him. I was very clear with myself about that. The thing I had loved when I built this serum was not the man Lucian had become; it was the wolf inside him, the one that had reached for my Healer's hand in the dark when his Alpha was not looking, the one that had pressed its head against my palm and shivered like something young. That wolf had not rejected me. That wolf had not made me kneel.

That wolf was still dying.

And I had spent three years learning how to save it.

I was not yet ready to give that up. I did not know if I ever would be.

I bent over the bench and kept working.

---

The second piece of news reached me through the same Moonveil contact, on the seventh evening.

Lucian's aura had flickered at a pack ritual.

Not collapsed. Flickered. The kind of dropped beat that a junior warrior would feel in his own knees and pretend, for the sake of his Alpha and his own future, that he had not. The contact's note was careful and short. *The silver is gone. The grey is going.*

I read it twice. I set the phone face-down on the bench.

My hand stayed on the phone longer than it needed to.

The contact added, almost as a footnote: *Watson is mind-linking him privately. She tells him she is close to a breakthrough.*

Of course she was.

I could see it without being in the room. Alivia at his bedside in the late hours, her hand on the inside of his wrist where she could not feel what I had been able to feel, her voice low and warm and absolutely certain. *Almost there, Lucian. Just a little more time. I'm so close.* The kind of certainty a drowning man will hold onto regardless of whether the rope is real, because the alternative is the water.

She could not replicate the cure. She did not have the original equations. She did not have the wolf-soul signature. She had the performance and she had his belief, and for now, those were enough.

They would not be enough for much longer.

I picked the phone back up. I read the note one more time. Then I turned it face-down again, and I went back to the whiteboard, and I corrected the dosage on the seventh-stage compound by a fraction so small it would have been invisible to anyone in the world but me.

The square of light from the high window had gone gold by the time I straightened up.

I pressed two fingers to the inside of my own wrist, and I counted, and the pulse under them was steady, and I went on.

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