
Surviving the Alpha's Obsession
Chapter 1
I woke before dawn, my fingers already itching for my paintbrush. The soft glow of approaching sunrise filtered through the curtains of our bedroom in the Blackwood pack house, casting Alexander's sleeping form in golden light. Even after 999 days as his chosen mate, the sight of him still took my breath away—his powerful shoulders, the sharp line of his jaw, the dark hair that fell across his forehead when he slept.
I slipped from beneath the silk sheets, careful not to wake him. Today was too important to risk his scrutiny before I was ready. The inter-pack alliance ceremony at Moonstone Territory would be my first major appearance before the neighboring packs as Luna of the Blackwood Pack. I needed everything to be perfect.
My bare feet made no sound as I padded across the hardwood floor to my studio—the one space Alexander had given me that felt truly mine. The painting waited on its easel, nearly complete after weeks of work. 'Rebirth,' I'd titled it. A phoenix rising from ashes, its wings spread wide against a backdrop of midnight blue.
'He'll love it,' whispered Aria, my wolf, her voice a soft echo in my mind.
'I hope so,' I replied silently, picking up my finest brush. 'It needs to be perfect.'
'Like everything else,' Aria sighed.
I ignored the hint of resignation in her tone. Aria had emerged late—my first shift at twenty had marked me as a 'late bloomer,' an object of quiet pity in werewolf society. Even now, she remained timid, her brown fur unremarkable compared to the magnificent wolves of true Alphas and Lunas. I'd spent my life feeling inadequate until Alexander had chosen me, proving that even a late bloomer could be worthy of an Alpha's attention.
The painting had to be worthy too.
---
The grand hall of Moonstone Territory blazed with light and power as Alphas from five major packs gathered with their Lunas. I stood beside Alexander, my heart hammering beneath the silver silk dress he'd selected for me. My painting had been placed alongside offerings from other packs—territorial treaties, ceremonial weapons, and other symbols of alliance.
'You look beautiful,' Alexander murmured, his hand possessive at the small of my back. 'Like a proper Luna.'
I smiled up at him, warmth spreading through me at his rare compliment. 'Thank you, Alpha.'
The ceremony began with Elder Kane's formal invocation to the Moon Goddess. One by one, pack leaders stepped forward to present their offerings. When Alexander's turn came, I felt a flutter of nervous anticipation.
'The Blackwood Pack brings two offerings,' Alexander announced, his Alpha voice resonating through the hall. 'First, this exceptional work by my true mate, Luna Catherine Whitmore.'
My smile froze as he gestured to a small, faded landscape painting I'd never seen before. The technique was amateur at best—uneven brushstrokes, poor perspective, muddy colors.
'Though she has been gone these ten years, her spirit lives on through her art,' Alexander continued, his voice thick with emotion. 'I've commissioned a wing in the Territorial Art Museum to be dedicated to her work, funded with fifty thousand in gold.'
Gasps of appreciation rippled through the crowd. Fifty thousand? For a collection of mediocre paintings? I felt Aria shrink within me, confused and hurt.
'And your second offering, Alpha Blackwood?' Elder Kane prompted.
Alexander's eyes slid past my painting without pause. 'That concludes the Blackwood contribution.'
The blood drained from my face. My painting—my weeks of work—ignored completely. As if it didn't exist. As if I didn't exist.
'Alpha,' I whispered, too low for others to hear, 'my painting—'
'Not now, Sarah,' he cut me off, his tone pleasant but his eyes flashing a warning.
I fell silent, mortification burning through me as I felt the curious stares of other pack members. Alpha Marcus Sterling of the Crescent Moon Pack caught my eye briefly, his expression unreadable before he turned away.
---
'Did you enjoy the ceremony?' Alexander asked the next morning as we drove deep into his private territory in the Northern Highlands. His voice was light, as if nothing had happened.
'It was... illuminating,' I managed, staring out the window at the passing trees. Aria whimpered softly within me.
'I have a surprise for you,' he said, turning onto a narrow dirt road. 'For our thousandth day together.'
My heart lifted slightly. Perhaps this explained yesterday's behavior—he had something special planned, something that would make everything right again.
The car stopped in a secluded glade surrounded by ancient pines. Alexander led me through a path lined with white stones to a small clearing. There, arranged in a perfect semicircle, stood eight marble memorial stones, each bearing a name and dates spanning exactly one year.
Elena Rivers. Sophia Walsh. Melissa Tanner. Five more names I didn't recognize.
And at the end, an empty space. Waiting.
'What is this?' I whispered, though something cold and terrible was already unfurling in my stomach.
Alexander's face transformed, all pretense of warmth vanishing as his Alpha aura crashed over me like a physical weight, forcing me to my knees.
'This, my dear Sarah,' he said, his voice as cold as the marble before us, 'is where you belong. The ninth and final tribute to my true mate, Catherine.'
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