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Reclaiming the Alpha’s Broken Mate Novel Cover

Reclaiming the Alpha’s Broken Mate

Sloane gave five years to Rowan, the man she thought was her forever. But when he chooses his "innocent" protégé over their engagement, Sloane realizes she’s been playing a losing game. She stops fighting. She stops caring. While Rowan thinks he’s finally "tamed" her with his coldness, Sloane is already packing. But her exit isn't silent. It leads her straight into the arms of Silas Vane—Rowan’s most dangerous rival and the only man Rowan fears. Now, the game has changed. Rowan wants her back, but Silas doesn't share his toys.
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Chapter 2

I took my coffee black that morning.

I always had, but lately it felt like the only honest thing left in the house — nothing softened, nothing added, just the bitter pull of it going down clean. I sat at the far end of the breakfast table with both hands wrapped around the mug, and I let my eyes go somewhere that wasn't the room.

Molly was already there, of course. She was always already there.

She sat in the chair that used to be where our housekeeper, Vera, placed the fruit bowl. Somewhere in the last three weeks, the fruit bowl had migrated to the sideboard and Molly had claimed the spot like it had always been hers. She was still in last night's silk slip — or one exactly like it — with her pale hair loose around her shoulders and her hands folded in her lap like a girl waiting to be painted.

Rowan stood behind her.

He had a knife in one hand and a fork in the other, and he was cutting her steak. Cutting it into careful, even pieces, the way you'd do for a child or someone you loved so much the ordinary rituals of eating felt like tenderness. His cufflinks caught the morning light. He hadn't even sat down yet.

I watched the knife move through the meat. I took a sip of coffee.

He finished, set the utensils down, and then — without pausing, without thinking, the way you do something so habitual it has no weight — he reached down and thumbed a smear of sauce from the corner of Molly's mouth.

She smiled up at him. That soft, grateful, upward-tilted smile.

I set my mug down.

Rowan moved toward his end of the table, and as he passed behind my chair, his arm reached past me to grab the saltshaker near my elbow. A casual thing. He didn't touch me. He didn't need to.

But the air shifted, and my body reacted before my mind could catch it — a hard, involuntary flinch, shoulders drawing in, breath going shallow. The kind of reflex that lives in the body now, not the brain. Like the nervous system has its own memory of what proximity to him costs.

I straightened immediately. Looked down at my mug. Hoped neither of them had seen it.

Rowan had. I could tell by the brief, assessing pause before he settled into his chair.

He said nothing about it.

Instead, he unfolded his newspaper — actual paper, because Rowan Voss was the kind of man who still had newspapers delivered — and began to eat. The table was quiet except for the scrape of silverware, the distant sound of the city below, and Molly's soft little sounds of appreciation for the steak he'd cut for her.

I was halfway through my second cup when he spoke.

"The Hargrove Foundation gala is Friday." He didn't look up from the paper. "I'll need you there by seven. Black tie."

"I remember."

"Good." He turned a page. "Molly will be attending as well."

The coffee sat bitter on my tongue. I kept my expression level. "Will she."

"She will." Now he looked up, and his eyes met mine with that particular directness he used when he wanted me to understand there was no room for argument. Not cruelty, exactly. Just efficiency. The way a man looks at a problem he's already solved. "Introduce her as my special consultant. That's the phrasing I want — special consultant. Make sure you say it to Marcus Hale, to the Linford people, to whoever from the Times is covering the evening."

I said nothing.

"Sloane." His voice dropped half a register. "Make sure everyone likes her. Don't embarrass me."

There it was.

Don't embarrass me. As though I were the variable in this equation. As though I were the one who'd brought a twenty-four-year-old to live in our house, to sit at our table, to have her mouth wiped clean by my husband's thumb while I drank my coffee six feet away.

Molly glanced up at him from beneath her lashes, then slid her gaze to me, and for just a second — less than a second — something moved behind her eyes that wasn't soft at all.

Then it was gone. She looked back down at her plate.

"Of course," I said.

Rowan blinked. He'd been watching me, waiting for the sharp edge, the thinly veiled refusal disguised as a question. He didn't get it.

"You'll handle the introduction personally," he said, as if he needed to confirm it.

"Personally," I agreed. "I'll make sure Marcus Hale hears it twice."

A pause. He studied me for a moment longer, then returned to his paper.

I finished my coffee, touched my napkin to my lips, and stood.

"I have calls this morning," I said, to no one in particular. "I'll be in the study."

Neither of them responded. Molly had already picked up her fork again. Rowan was reading.

I walked out of the dining room at a normal pace. Down the hall, past the staircase, past the closed door of the west wing where my piano room was being transformed into something else entirely. I didn't look at the door.

I went into the study and closed it behind me.

The room was mine in the way nothing else in this house was anymore — dark wood, floor-to-ceiling shelves, the faint smell of old paper and the cedar lining of the storage drawers. I'd designed it myself, years ago, when I still believed that building things inside this marriage was a form of permanence.

I crossed to the far wall.

The bookshelf there held three shelves of art history texts I hadn't touched in years. I reached behind the second shelf, found the small recessed panel I'd had installed during the renovation, and pressed. A soft click. The panel swung inward.

Inside was a single manila folder.

I took it out and set it on the desk.

Opened it.

The document inside was nine pages long, printed on the Foundation's formal letterhead, and it bore my signature at the bottom of every page. I'd signed it four days ago, in this room, at this desk, with the door locked and the lamp turned low. The title at the top read: *Sloane Voss — Notice of Voluntary Dissolution of Partnership Interest, Hargrove-Voss Joint Foundation.*

I'd built that foundation. Not in name — Rowan's family money had seeded it — but in every other way that mattered. The donor relationships, the grant frameworks, the annual gala that society columnists had called "the city's most elegant evening" for three consecutive years. That was mine. And I was giving it up with nine pages and a pen.

Because if I stayed, I'd keep handing him weapons.

I stood at the desk and read the first page again, though I'd long since memorized every line. Somewhere outside the study door, laughter drifted down the hall — low and easy, Rowan's and Molly's voices tangled together in that fluid, thoughtless way of people who've forgotten to pretend.

My fingers were steady.

I closed the folder. Slid it back into the panel. Let the shelf swing shut with its quiet click.

Then I picked up my phone from the desk.

Scrolled to a number I hadn't dialed yet. No name attached to it — just eleven digits I'd memorized the same night I'd deleted his text message, standing at the dinner table with Rowan watching my face.

Silas Vane.

The laughter in the hall got louder for a moment, then faded. A door opened somewhere. Closed.

I pressed call.

It rang once.

Twice.

On the third ring, someone picked up. No greeting. Just silence on the other end — waiting, patient, like a man who already knew I'd call eventually.

"It's Sloane," I said.

My voice came out even. Quiet. Entirely sure of itself.

"I'm ready."

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