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My Alpha Replaced Me with His Luna Novel Cover

My Alpha Replaced Me with His Luna

Seven years. That's how long it takes for a pack house to become a stranger's home. I stood at the edge of the tree line and looked at the lights of Silvercrest through the falling snow. Warm gold, every window. Music drifting out across the frozen ground, faint but real. The Winter Solstice Banquet — I had counted the days to it like a soldier counts ammunition. One more month. One more week. One more night. My thumb found the mark on my neck before I even realized I was doing it.
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Chapter 3

Faye stepped closer.

Not close enough to touch me. Just close enough to look. She tilted her head to one side, the way you tilt your head at something sad and small, and her eyes moved to the mark on my neck with an expression that was almost tender.

"Oh," she said softly.

Just that. One syllable. Pitched low, meant for the wolves nearest to us, and it landed exactly the way she intended it to.

She reached up and touched her own mark with two fingers — a slow, deliberate gesture, drawing every eye in the room to the difference. Hers was vivid. Dark and raised and fresh, the kind of mark that still carries heat. The kind that means something. She let the candlelight catch it for a moment before she looked back at mine.

"It's so faded," she said. There was no cruelty in her voice. That was the worst part. She sounded genuinely sorry. "I've never seen one that faded before. It looks like it's been — what would you call it?" She glanced back at the wolves behind her, inviting them in. "Abandoned?"

Someone laughed. Then a few more.

I felt my thumb move toward my neck.

I caught it halfway. But not fast enough.

Faye saw it. Her eyes dropped to my hand, then came back up to my face, and she smiled — not wide, not triumphant, just a small private smile, the kind that says I see you. The kind that says I know exactly where it hurts.

"You've been doing that all night, haven't you?" she said quietly. "Touching it. Checking if it's still there."

I lowered my hand.

My wolf was silent. Not the careful silence of an animal holding still before a strike. The other kind. The silence of something that has stopped trying. I had felt her go quiet in stages over the years — a little less present after year two, a little further away after year four — but this was different. This was the silence of a door closing.

I stood in the middle of the hall with the laughter moving around me like water around a stone, and I thought: this is what he planned. Not just tonight. All of it. The posting to Frostfang, the promises, the years of silence. He had needed me far away and too devoted to ask questions, and I had given him exactly that, and he had used every year of it to build this — the warm hall, the vivid mark, the pup on his knee, the document with the official seal — and then he had waited for me to come back so he could show me.

I looked at Charles.

He wasn't looking at me anymore.

He had already turned back to the wolf beside him. His glass was in his hand. He was nodding at something being said to him, his expression easy and present, and the message in that was clearer than anything he could have spoken aloud.

You are already over.

I saw the look he gave Derek Holt. It was brief — a single glance across the room, the kind of look that doesn't need words because the words were agreed on long before tonight. Derek was the Gamma. He had the broad, patient build of a wolf who has spent years executing other people's decisions without losing sleep over them. He caught Charles's eye and gave one small nod.

Then he started moving through the crowd toward me.

Three warriors came with him. They spread out slightly as they walked, not rushing, not drawing attention — just closing the distance with the unhurried efficiency of wolves who have done this before. The wolves they passed stepped aside without being asked. No one said anything. No one looked directly at me.

I understood then that this had been arranged. Not improvised. Arranged. Derek knew where to go and what to do and how many wolves to bring, which meant Charles had thought about this moment before tonight. Had planned for it. Had decided, at some point in the last four years, exactly what would happen if I came back.

I didn't run. There was nowhere to run to.

Derek reached me and put one hand on my arm. His grip was firm and impersonal, the grip of a man moving furniture.

"Come on," he said. Not unkindly. Just flat.

I looked back at Charles one more time.

He was laughing at something. His head tilted back, his shoulders relaxed, the glass raised. The pup on Faye's lap now, small hands reaching for the table's edge. The chandelier throwing gold light across all of it.

He did not look at me.

Not once.

They took me out through a side corridor, away from the music and the candlelight, into the cold dark behind the pack house. The door shut behind us and the sounds of the banquet muffled and then disappeared, and there was just the wind and the snow and the four of them and me.

Derek didn't say anything. Neither did the others.

The first hit came from the left — a fist to the ribs, the same side where I'd taken the rogue's hit two weeks ago. The cracked ones. I heard something give before I felt it, a wet crack that seemed too loud for the open air, and then the pain arrived all at once and I went down on one knee.

I did not scream.

I had decided that before they started. I don't know exactly when — somewhere between the corridor and the cold, somewhere between Derek's hand on my arm and the door closing behind us. I had decided it the way you decide things when there is nothing left to decide except how you carry yourself through what's coming.

They were not angry. That was the thing I kept noticing, even as it was happening. There was no rage in it, no heat. They worked with the detached focus of wolves running a drill — efficient, thorough, not personal. Derek stood back and let the three warriors work, his arms crossed, his face neutral. Following an order. Just following an order.

Another rib. Then something in my shoulder. I was on both knees now, one hand in the snow, and my wolf was so quiet inside me that I couldn't feel her at all — no warmth, no strength, no instinct rising to meet the damage. Just the cold and the dark and the sound of my own breathing going ragged.

I pressed my hand into the snow and I thought about the patrol journal inside my coat. Seven years of kills and routes and weather patterns. Seven years of surviving written in my own handwriting. I thought about the rogue Alpha I had taken down alone in the third winter, the one whose kill Charles had claimed as his own. I had been bleeding from a gash across my ribs then too. I had stayed on my feet then.

I stayed on my feet now. Or tried to. My body had other ideas.

When it was done, Derek crouched down to where I had ended up — on my side in the snow, one arm folded under me, the cold coming up through my coat — and he looked at me for a moment with an expression I couldn't fully read. Not guilt. Not quite. Something closer to the look of a man who has filed something away in a part of himself he doesn't visit.

"Alpha's orders," he said. Like that explained it. Like that closed it.

Then he stood up, and the four of them walked back toward the pack house, and the door opened and the faint sound of music came through for a moment before it shut again.

And then there was just the snow.

I lay there and breathed. Each breath was a negotiation — shallow, careful, working around the damage. The cold was everywhere now, not the familiar cold of Frostfang that I had learned to carry, but a different kind. The kind that comes when your body has stopped fighting it.

My thumb found the mark on my neck.

I let it stay there this time. There was no one left to see it.

The tree line was maybe thirty meters away. Past it, the border markers. Past those, the frozen woods that stretched out for miles with nothing in them.

I thought: I have been colder than this.

I thought: I have been more alone than this.

I wasn't sure either of those things was true anymore. But I held onto them anyway, the way you hold onto the edge of something when the rest of it has already gone.

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