
My Beta Cheated, So His Alpha King Took Me
Chapter 3
The mirror in the corner of the room hadn't been kind to me in years.
I stood in front of it in the gray morning light, wearing Kael's flannel shirt — dark green, too wide in the shoulders, the collar gaping low enough to expose the curve of my neck. The scar there. Grant's mate mark, pale and raised against my skin, a crescent-moon ridge that thirty years had never quite smoothed flat.
I pressed two fingers against it. Habit. The bond had faded from music to static over the decades, but the scar was always warm. Always there.
Then I pressed harder.
I don't know when my fingers became nails. I don't know at what point the rational part of me stepped back and something rawer took over — something that had spent the night curled warm in Kael's flannel and woken up furious about it. My nails dragged across the scar, shallow at first, then deeper, the pain a clean specific thing that my wolf had no language to process except through her body.
Get it off. Get it off. Get it off.
A hand closed around my wrist from behind.
Not gentle. Firm. The grip of something that had already made up its mind.
"Stop." Kael's voice was rough with a sleeplessness he hadn't admitted to, low enough to feel in my spine. "Don't do that to yourself."
"Let go."
"No."
I spun. He released my wrist — not because I'd forced it, I could tell, but because he'd chosen to. He stood close enough that I had to tilt my head back to look at him. Barefoot on the cold stone floor, a rumpled gray shirt that told me he'd spent the night outside my door in a form that didn't require clothing. His eyes were tracking the mark on my neck.
"You can smell it, can't you." Not a question. My voice barely worked. "The real bond. Beneath his mark."
Something happened to his face. The careful stillness cracked — just at the edges, just for a moment — and what bled through was not the controlled Alpha I'd met in the doorway last night. His pupils had gone fully gold, swallowing the ice-blue entirely. His jaw was tight enough to ache.
He leaned in, slow and deliberate, and I understood a half-second before it happened that he wasn't going to kiss me.
He inhaled.
His nose grazed the line of my collarbone, dragged upward along my throat, crossed the scar without pausing, traveled to the spot behind my ear where a she-wolf's scent glands lived. The most intimate thing anyone had ever done to me in my life, and it lasted maybe four seconds, and by the end of it my knees had stopped working entirely.
I grabbed his hair. Dark, coarse, thick between my fingers. He made a sound against my neck that wasn't quite a growl and wasn't quite anything else, and Sable threw herself against the inside of my sternum like she was trying to get out.
Neither of us moved. His forehead rested against my temple. His breath was uneven.
"Thirty years," he said quietly. "Your wolf has been screaming and no one was listening."
I let go of his hair. Stepped back. "I know what it is."
He didn't push. That was what I kept expecting and kept not getting. He simply moved to the window and stood with his back to me, and after a moment said, "Come here."
He positioned himself behind me without touching me first. Then his arms came around — not an embrace, something more structured than that — his hands settling on my ribs. "Breathe from here. Not from your chest."
I wanted to say something dismissive. I didn't.
Belly breathing, slow and low, the way wolves breathe when they're trying to hold their form under the full moon. I hadn't done it in twenty years. Grant had never asked me to. Kael's chest pressed against my back, and his heartbeat found mine without trying.
Beat. Beat. Beat.
Sable moved. Not the death-rattle stillness. Not the grief-whimper. She stood fully upright in my chest, and her fur — her ash-gray, thirty-years-faded fur — caught the light from somewhere and threw it back as silver.
My breath snagged.
"There she is," Kael murmured into my hair.
I stared at the fire across the room. "If you're my true mate... why did the Moon Goddess let him mark me first?"
His chin settled into the curve of my shoulder. His teeth — barely — grazed my scent gland. "Because fate tests Alphas. She gave me a broken queen to heal. Not a princess to claim."
"I'm not a queen." The word felt wrong in my mouth. "I'm a rejected mate."
His arms tightened. The sound from his chest was low and rough and absolute. "Rejected mates don't beg. They *ascend*. And I'm going to watch you burn this kingdom down."
I tilted my head back against him — not a decision, just Sable moving through me — throat exposed, the silver warmth of her pressing outward through my ribs. One suspended moment. Nothing but heat and pine and the smell of winter stone.
Then the castle shook.
The impact rattled the window glass. A full-body collision with the iron gate below, something large and furious hitting stone at full speed. I was at the window before I knew I'd moved.
Grant's wolf — enormous, amber-furred, chest heaving — lunged against the gate in the courtyard below. Six of Kael's black wolves fanned out across the snow in a line. They didn't attack. They didn't need to. They simply stood between him and the door like a wall that had no opinions about what happened next.
The mind-link crackled open. I hadn't reached for it. He'd forced it.
*You've lost your mind.* Grant's voice, fear twisted into contempt, scraped raw. *Alpha Kings don't take used she-wolves. You think you matter to him? You'll be a snack and a story he tells next winter.*
The words landed exactly where he'd aimed them, on every old bruise, every wound he'd catalogued over thirty years of knowing me. The familiar pull rose — the one that said *answer him, defend yourself, explain*.
I stood at the window and felt it clearly, maybe for the first time. The pull. The shape of it. How long I had been responding to it.
Then I closed my hand around the bond channel like closing a fist around a lit match.
Silence.
Not the silence of distance. The silence of choice. I had shut the door myself, and it had made no sound at all.
Kael stood at my shoulder. He didn't ask what Grant had said. Whatever was written on my face was answer enough.
---
I didn't remember falling asleep in the library.
I woke slowly, aware before I opened my eyes that I wasn't in the guest room — the surface under my cheek was warmer, less flat, and something was moving in my hair. Patient, unhurried. His fingers working through a knot at my ends, strand by strand, like someone with nowhere else to be.
My phone lit up on the low table beside us. Screen facing up.
Grant's face first — human, tan, bright-eyed in a photograph I'd never seen. Iceland, from the landscape behind him. And Tara beside him, laughing, their hands stacked together. The caption: *new beginnings.*
Kael's hand stilled in my hair. He'd seen it.
He didn't take the phone away. He didn't say anything sharp or reach for control of the moment. He simply tilted his head down and pressed his face to my temple — not a kiss, the same gesture from the doorway last night, the wolf equivalent of something I had no human word for — and his teeth grazed lightly across my skin.
A red line bloomed. Not a mark. Not a claim.
A question.
"Choose me," he said quietly, "or choose him. But don't do it out of fear." His canines rested against my pulse for one breath, then two. "That's the only thing I'm asking."
The phone screen went dark.
Sable pressed her silver nose to the inside of my ribs, and waited.
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