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The Alpha Sacrificed Our Pup for His Fake-Sick Mistress Novel Cover

The Alpha Sacrificed Our Pup for His Fake-Sick Mistress

Clara Vance and her sister Hazel Vance married the powerful Thorne werewolf brothers, carrying their heirs to save the Alpha's dying father. But when thugs force a miscarriage potion down their throats, Clara realizes the medicine was never for the father—it was for Ivy Sterling, the brothers' manipulative childhood friend. Left bleeding and ignored by Silas Thorne, Clara’s love turns to ash. She initiates the ancient severance trial to break the mate bond, shattering Silas's world. As the truth behind Ivy's fake illness comes to light, the brothers face the devastating reality of their betrayal. Silas will bleed, beg, and break his own bones to win Clara back, but some shattered bonds can never be repaired.
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Chapter 1

“Move, Clara!”

The voice was a muffled growl through a black cloth mask. A hand, thick and brutal, clamped over my jaw, forcing my mouth open. The world tilted—my bedroom, my sanctuary, all the soft lamplight and velvet cushions—became a prison in a single, shattering second.

They came through the door.

It wasn’t a knock. It was the sound of the lock giving up, a crack of wood, and then three shadows moving with a purpose that stole the air from my lungs. I was on the bed, reading a book to distract myself from the dull ache in my lower back. Now, I was a puppet with its strings cut.

Another man, taller, held a small ceramic bowl. The liquid inside was pitch black, viscous, and it smelled like rotten earth and bitter herbs. My stomach revolted.

“No,” I choked out, trying to twist my head away. “Please, don’t—”

“Drink it.” It wasn’t a request.

The bowl was tipped against my lips. The cold rim dug into my skin. I fought, I clawed at the hand on my face, but my nails found only thick fabric. The liquid poured in, flooding my mouth. I tried not to swallow, but a fist thumped against my diaphragm and my body betrayed me. I gulped, gagging as the awful stuff slid down my throat, burning like acid.

They let me go. I collapsed back onto the mattress, coughing, spitting, but most of it was inside me now. A deep, wrong heat bloomed in my core, right where my baby—my sweet, tiny, secret hope—was curled up safe.

Oh god. Oh god no.

The first cramp hit like a knife. A sharp, tearing twist deep in my belly. I cried out, a sound that was more animal than human, and rolled off the bed onto the floor. The thick wool carpet was supposed to be soft. It felt like concrete.

“Silas,” I whispered, my vision blurring with pain and panic. “Silas, help me.”

The men were just standing there, watching. Their eyes, the only thing visible above the masks, were flat.

Empty. Like they were waiting for a timer to run out.

Another cramp, worse than the first. My whole abdomen clenched, a wave of pressure that made me vomit a little of the black liquid onto the carpet. I saw the stain spread, dark on dark. I curled in on myself, my hands clutching my stomach, trying to protect what was inside. A feeble, desperate thought flickered: my phone.

The comm unit. It was on the bedside table, where I’d left it after my last futile call to him.

I had to try.

Gritting my teeth against a scream, I uncoiled my body and lunged. My fingers scrambled over the polished wood of the nightstand, knocking over a glass of water. My hand closed around the cool, rectangular shape of the communicator. I clutched it, my thumb finding the record button by muscle memory.

I pressed it, held it close to my mouth, and poured every ounce of my terror into the microphone.

“Silas,” I gasped, the words broken by another vicious cramp. “They’re here. In the bedroom. They forced something into me. It’s… it’s hurting me. Hurting… us. Please. I need you. Now.”

I sent the audio burst. The little screen flashed Transmitted.

The waiting was a agony worse than the cramps. Ten seconds. Twenty. The men shifted, one of them checking the window. My body was shaking, sweat soaking through my silk nightgown. A warm, terrifying wetness started to seep between my thighs.

Then, the reply pinged.

I opened it. One line of text, converted from his voice. His tone, I knew, would be that cold, dismissive drawl.

The one he used when he thought I was being dramatic.

The words appeared on the screen.

“I’m helping Ivy Sterling move her new potted plant. Don’t bother me with lies just to get my attention.”

potted plant. The potted plant. A fucking plant.

The pain in my belly wasn’t just physical anymore. It was a hollowing out of my soul. Ivy Sterling. Her laugh, her perfect blonde hair, the way she’d touched his arm at the last party. The potted plant. He was with her. While men in masks poured poison into me in our home.

The final cramp tore through me, a rending, internal rupture. I felt a pop, a release, and then a flood. A hot, gushing rush of blood poured out of me, soaking my nightgown, pooling on the wool carpet beneath me. The warmth was sickening, immense. And in that moment, the last faint flutter I’d felt for weeks—the tiny, hopeful kick of a life growing—stopped. Just vanished. A silence in my body where there had been a secret song.

I’m empty.

A roar shattered the frozen moment.

Regina, my housekeeper, a woman built like a fortress, barreled into the room. She wasn’t holding a broom.

She was holding a length of solid iron pipe, her face a mask of fury.

“Get out! Get out of this house!” she screamed, swinging the pipe at the nearest intruder.

It connected with his shoulder with a dull thud. He grunted, stumbled back. The other two, startled by the sudden violence, didn’t fight. They moved for the window—the same one they’d probably used to scout the room. They shoved it open, the cold night air rushing in, and scrambled out onto the ledge and down.

The first one, the one Regina had hit, was the last to go. As he turned to climb out, his heavy coat swung.

From its pocket, a small, shiny object tumbled free.

It fell silently into the expanding pool of my blood.

He didn’t notice. He just disappeared into the darkness outside.

Regina rushed to me, dropping the pipe. “Miss Vance! Clara!”

I couldn’t answer. I was just staring at the thing that had fallen.

The blood was warm, still flowing from me. It was a deep, awful red, staining the pale wool. And in the center of it, next to the shattered pieces of the black ceramic bowl they’d used, lay a silver medallion.

It was about the size of a large coin. And even through the film of blood, I could see the design etched into its surface: a delicate, curling vine of wisteria flowers. A Wisteria crest.

The moonlight from the open window caught it. The silver gleamed with a cold, merciless light, right there in the middle of all the heat and the ruin.

Regina’s hands were on my shoulders, trying to lift me. “We need to call a doctor! An ambulance!”

My eyes stayed locked on the medallion. The Wisteria. Ivy Sterling’s family crest. She had it on everything—her stationery, the clasp of her favorite scarf. A symbol of her old-money elegance.

It was lying in my blood, next to the weapon they’d used to take my child.

My voice came out, a dry, cracked thing. “Don’t call a doctor,” I said. “Call a cleaner.”

Regina froze. “Clara, you’re bleeding—”

“I know what I’m bleeding,” I interrupted, my gaze finally lifting to hers. The pain was a distant thunder now.

Something colder was filling the space it left. “And I know who paid for it.” I pointed a trembling finger at the silver in the red. “Get that. Bag it. Don’t let anyone see it.”

Outside, the wind moaned through the open window. Silas was moving apotted plant for Ivy. And I was here, on a cold floor, with a silver secret shining in a pool of my own ending.

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