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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 3

The intelligence report crossed Guzman's desk on a Tuesday.

He didn't show it to me directly. He left it beside the kettle in the research wing, the same way he'd left the tablet with Alivia's Luna announcement — face-down, quietly, like a thing set within reach rather than handed over. I turned it right-side up. I read it. I set it back down with both palms flat on the paper for a moment, not because I needed steadying, but because I needed a second to let the thing I already suspected become a thing I now knew.

Lucian was running experiments on rogues in the outer territory.

Capture and use. That was how the intelligence phrasing went. Alivia's failed serum attempts, applied to living subjects who had no one to report to and no pack to come looking. Damon Reyes overseeing without question, because Damon Reyes had never asked a question in his life when Lucian's voice was behind the order.

I stood at the bench for a long time after that.

The wolf-sickness was accelerating. I had known that. The grey in his aura, the dropped beat at the pack ritual, the reports of Alivia mind-linking him in the late hours with promises she had no equations to back up — all of it pointed the same direction. A man watching himself disappear and reaching for anything solid enough to hold. Even this.

I thought about the serum on the bench behind me. The eighth iteration, almost complete.

I didn't let the thought go anywhere useful. I turned back to the whiteboard and kept working.

---

The raid came on a Thursday night.

I was not supposed to be at the Black Moon clinic. The Moonveil referral had come in late — a pup case, a six-year-old with a wolf-bond complication that the pack's acting medical staff couldn't parse, and the family had gone through proper channels to request a specialist consult. Guzman had flagged it to me because it was my area, and because Moonveil's neutrality clause meant I could enter Black Moon territory for a direct patient consultation without requiring Lucian's authorization. A formality and a technicality and a genuine sick child, all at once.

I arrived at nine. I was still in the pup ward at midnight when the first window broke.

The smell hit before the sound did. Wolfsbane. Not incidental — saturated, deliberate, the kind of concentration you load into an accelerant when you want the wolves inside to lose their shift-reflex before they reach the exit. I recognized it in my chest before my brain had caught up, a deep animal clench that had nothing to do with my Healer's training and everything to do with what I was.

I moved to the pup ward door. Through the smoke beginning to crawl along the floor, I could see the main corridor filling. Not with pack members. With fire.

Ten beds. Ten patients. The oldest was eight.

I pulled the first one out of bed and into my arms and I went through the smoke.

The air at floor level was better. I kept my face down. I had maybe forty seconds per trip before the wolfsbane concentration in the corridor would start degrading my ability to move cleanly, so I counted. Forty seconds in, twenty to carry, forty back. I didn't let myself think past the math.

Somewhere in the third trip I heard him.

Lucian's voice, raw and commanding, cutting through the smoke from the clinic's front wing. Then the particular dense silence that follows a shift — the air pressure change of something very large and very fast moving through a burning building.

I came back through the corridor with the third pup across my shoulders. Through the thickening smoke I saw the shape of him, black and enormous and burning-eyed, wolf-form filling the doorway of the administrative wing. Alivia was in his arms. Human-form, her face pressed into the fur at his neck, her hands gripping.

He looked at me.

One second. Maybe less.

He turned and went through the front exit, and the door swung shut behind him.

I went back for the fourth pup.

Trip five, my vision started going at the edges. The wolfsbane had found the inside of my lungs by then — not enough to drop me, not yet, but enough to put a grey gauze over the periphery of everything. I held the wall. I counted. I kept moving.

Trip seven, the skin on my forearms started to feel wrong. Not burning. Something quieter than burning, which is worse. I didn't look down.

By the time I carried the tenth pup through the clinic's side exit and laid him in the grass, the sky was beginning to pale. My arms felt like they belonged to someone else. The fire was making a low, continuous sound behind me, and the smell of wolfsbane was so deep in my lungs that I could taste it when I breathed.

I sat down in the grass next to the ten pups I had lined up in a row. I put two fingers to the nearest one's wrist. Pulse present. Then the next. Then the next. I went down the line.

All of them.

I got to the end and I stayed there, sitting in the wet grass with my ruined arms in my lap, and I didn't cry. I was too tired to cry and there was nothing to cry about. I had done the math correctly. Everyone who needed to be out was out.

Lucian and Alivia were somewhere on the other side of the smoke.

I had already stopped expecting him to come back.

---

By morning I was in the Moonveil infirmary.

The scars had set deep before Guzman's healer staff could get to them properly — wolfsbane reacts with Healer tissue in a specific way that makes the window for intervention very short, and the four-hour window had passed somewhere around trip eight. There was nothing catastrophic about them. They were just permanent.

I sat up in bed and reviewed the pup files while a junior Healer re-wrapped my forearms. The wrappings were white. Against them, the edges of the scarring were visible above the bandage line. I looked at them the way I looked at everything now — clearly, without deciding in advance what to feel about it.

Guzman came and went. He didn't say anything about Lucian. That was the kindness.

Cayden arrived at ten-fourteen in the morning.

I knew him before I saw him. The particular quality of the air in the doorway changed — the Lycan royal aura is not loud, not the way an Alpha aura is loud, but it has a depth to it, a pressure like standing close to still water that goes down very far. I had been aware of that quality my entire life, and I had been pretending not to be for three years.

He was in field clothes. Dark jacket, plain boots. No escort, no formal anything. He had clearly driven himself, which for a Lycan Prince was either an oversight or a very deliberate statement.

He sat down in the chair across from my bed without explaining himself. He looked at my arms — at the bandages, at the edge of what showed above them — and then he looked at my face, and whatever he was carrying behind his expression, he kept it there.

"Do you want water?" he said.

The question was so ordinary that for a second I didn't know how to answer it.

"Yes," I said.

He picked up the pitcher from the bedside table and poured. He handed me the glass. I drank.

He stayed for two hours.

We talked about the pup cases. We talked about the wolfsbane compound concentration in the fire accelerant and what it indicated about the raid's coordination level. We talked, briefly, about a Moonveil symposium the previous spring that I had not attended and he apparently had. We did not talk about Lucian. We did not talk about the clinic door swinging shut with Alivia on the other side of it. We did not talk about the three years I had been gone, or the decade before them, or the message I had folded in half and put in my desk drawer.

He just sat there, in the chair, with his elbows on his knees and his eyes steady, and he did not want anything from me.

I had forgotten what that felt like. I was not entirely sure I had ever known.

When he stood to go, he looked at my arms one more time. Not at the bandages — at me.

"I'll be in the city for a few days," he said. "If you need anything."

Not *call me*. Not *I'll check in*. Just the information, laid down like something he was leaving within reach.

"All right," I said.

He left. The door closed. The air pressure in the room leveled out.

I looked down at my bandaged arms. I pressed two fingers to the inside of my wrist — an old habit, almost involuntary — and I counted.

Steady. Present. Still here.

On Cayden's desk at the Crescent Throne capital, I didn't yet know it, but the intelligence file on the Black Moon Pack's outer territory had grown thicker overnight. A second report. A third. The kind of accumulation that, in Lycan federal terms, had a name and a timeline and a formal consequence.

The clock had started. I just hadn't heard it yet.

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