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My Alphas Rejected Our Pups Novel Cover

My Alphas Rejected Our Pups

Harper was the only Omega in the Crescent Ridge Pack—bullied by everyone except her three Alpha best friends: Axel, Ryker, and Sterling. They were her protectors, her world, her everything. Until the night they took her innocence and left before dawn. When Harper discovered she was pregnant, she turned to them for help. Instead, they demanded she terminate the pregnancy, publicly humiliated her, and gave her two weeks to comply—or be cast out as a rogue. She chose the storm. Four years later, Harper has rebuilt her life in a quiet mountain town under a new name. Her twins—a boy with Alpha power that shakes the ground and a girl who can read emotions like a book—are her entire universe. But secrets don't stay buried in the wolf world. When her former Alphas discover the pups they ordered destroyed are not only alive but carry an unprecedented multi-Alpha bloodline, they'll stop at nothing to claim them. Custody battles. Armed raids. Dark magic. What none of them expected? Harper isn't the broken Omega they abandoned. Her wolf has awakened—a Lunaris, the rarest bloodline in werewolf history. And she will burn down every pack in North America before she lets anyone take her children. The question isn't whether they can get the pups. It's whether Harper will let them live long enough to try.
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Chapter 5

The envelope was waiting for me on the diner's doorstep when I arrived for the morning shift, pristine white against the weathered wood. My name was written across the front in elegant script—not Ivy Wells, but Harper Mills. The name I'd buried four years ago.

My hands shook as I turned it over, and my blood turned to ice when I saw the wax seal. The Crescent Ridge Pack emblem, pressed deep into crimson wax like a brand of ownership.

Inside, a single line of text in the same careful handwriting: "We know where you are."

I crumpled the paper in my fist, my wolf stirring restlessly beneath my skin. Four years. Four years of peace, of building a life, of watching my children grow up safe and happy. And now this.

The diner door chimed behind me, and I spun around, heart hammering.

"Morning, Ivy." Ron's familiar voice should have been comforting, but instead it sent alarm bells ringing through my head. How long had he been in town now? Three weeks? And how many times had I caught him watching my children with those too-knowing eyes?

"You're early," I managed, shoving the letter into my apron pocket.

"Couldn't sleep." He settled onto his usual stool, and I noticed the way his gaze tracked my movements as I poured his coffee. "Everything okay? You look like you've seen a ghost."

If only it were that simple. Ghosts couldn't hurt you. The living wolves from my past were another matter entirely.

"Just tired," I lied, forcing my hands to stop shaking as I set down his mug.

Over the following days, Ron seemed to be everywhere. When the sink in the diner's kitchen started leaking, he appeared with a toolbox and steady hands, fixing it before I could call a plumber. When Finn mentioned wanting to learn how to fish, Ron offered to teach him, producing a child-sized rod from his truck like he'd been planning it all along.

"You don't have to do this," I told him as we stood by Miller's Creek, watching Finn cast his line with intense concentration while Wren collected smooth stones along the bank.

"I want to." Ron's voice was quiet, sincere. "They're good kids, Ivy. They deserve someone looking out for them."

Something in his tone made me study his profile. There was genuine affection there when he looked at my children, but underneath it, something else. Something that felt like duty.

"Mama, look!" Wren called out, holding up a stone that caught the sunlight like a prism. "It's magic!"

Ron chuckled, but I caught the way his eyes sharpened, the subtle tension that entered his shoulders. Most people would have dismissed a four-year-old's imagination. Ron was cataloguing it.

Miles away, in the sprawling territory of Crescent Ridge Pack, Axel Rowe stood in his office overlooking the training grounds, a medical report clutched in his white-knuckled grip. The words blurred together, but their meaning was crystal clear: Sienna would never carry a child to term.

Two miscarriages in eighteen months. Two failures that had left his Beta mate hollow-eyed and distant, retreating into herself like a wounded animal. The Pack needed an heir, needed the stability that came with a strong bloodline. And Axel had thrown away his only chance at that four years ago.

Harper Mills. The Omega he'd rejected, humiliated, cast out into the wilderness. The woman who'd been carrying his child—a child he'd demanded she terminate.

"Alpha?" His second-in-command, Marcus, stood in the doorway with a tablet in hand. "The trackers found something."

Axel looked up, his storm-gray eyes sharp with sudden interest. "Harper?"

"A diner in Silverdale. Woman matching her description, goes by Ivy Wells now. She has two children, Alpha. Twins."

The report slipped from Axel's fingers, scattering across his desk. Twins. Four years old, according to the surveillance photos Marcus was now spreading out before him. A boy with dark hair and familiar gray eyes. A girl with blonde curls and a smile that made something twist painfully in Axel's chest.

His children. The heirs he'd tried to force her to destroy.

"Bring her back," he said, his voice carrying the full weight of Alpha command. "Bring them all back."

In his own territory, Ryker Thorne sat in his study, staring at the divorce papers his lawyer had drafted. Delilah's voice echoed from the kitchen, sharp and cutting as she berated the housekeeper for some perceived slight. Three years of marriage, and he felt like he was suffocating.

Delilah was everything a Beta mate should be—organized, efficient, socially appropriate. She was also controlling, manipulative, and had made it clear that any children they had would be raised according to her rigid standards. The thought of bringing a pup into this cold, loveless house made his skin crawl.

He found himself thinking about Harper more and more lately. The way she used to laugh, bright and genuine. The way she'd looked at him that last night, like he was worth something. Before he'd proven her wrong.

Meanwhile, Sterling Blackwood was three drinks deep at Murphy's Bar, the only establishment in Crescent Ridge that stayed open past midnight. The bartender had stopped trying to cut him off months ago, recognizing the particular brand of self-destruction that came with losing something irreplaceable.

In his jacket pocket, wrapped in tissue paper like a sacred relic, was a blue hair ribbon. Harper had dropped it during one of their secret meetings, and he'd kept it all these years. Sometimes he'd take it out and breathe in the faint scent that still clung to the silk, torturing himself with memories of what he'd thrown away.

The guilt was eating him alive. He'd been the one to encourage her to tell them about the pregnancy. He'd promised to stand by her, to fight for her. Instead, he'd stood silent while they destroyed her, too much of a coward to risk his own position in the Pack.

Four years later, and the shame still tasted like bile in his throat.

Back in Silverdale, I was loading groceries into my cart when the world tilted sideways. The automatic doors slid open, letting in a gust of cold mountain air, and with it, a scent that made my wolf howl in recognition.

Pine and snow. Leather and something uniquely, devastatingly familiar.

I looked up slowly, my hands frozen on the cart handle, and met a pair of blue eyes I'd seen every night in my dreams for four years. Sterling stood frozen in the entrance, a shadow of the confident Beta I'd once known. His face was gaunt, his eyes bloodshot and rimmed with dark circles. But it was definitely him.

"Harper?" His voice cracked like breaking glass, the sound echoing through the produce section.

Time stopped. Other shoppers moved around us like we were stones in a stream, but all I could see was the man who'd promised to protect me and then watched while they tore my world apart.

His eyes dropped to the groceries in my cart—juice boxes and animal crackers, the detritus of a life with small children—and something shattered in his expression.

"You kept them," he whispered.

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