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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 2

Regina didn’t argue. She got the medallion, wrapped it in a handkerchief, and helped me to the guest room downstairs. She said it was closer, and the master bedroom was… stained. I couldn’t look at it again. The cold floor, the blood, the empty silence in my womb. So I let her lead me away, clutching the bundled handkerchief in my hand.

The guest room was smaller, quieter. A pale green room with a single bed and a writing desk. Regina cleaned me up with a clinical, quiet efficiency. She helped me change out of the ruined nightgown, gave me a towel, a basin of warm water. She didn’t ask questions. Her hands were firm, gentle. When she was done, she left to call the cleaner—not a doctor, a discreet service we used for other messes. She understood.

I sat on the edge of the bed, wrapped in a thick robe. The cramps were gone, replaced by a hollow ache. A void. My body felt foreign. The handkerchief was a hard lump in my palm. The Wisteria. The promise of violence it represented was colder than the blood had been.

Silas is with her. He’s moving her potted plant.

The thought was a splinter in my brain. It wasn’t jealousy. It was a crystalline, perfect clarity. He chose her potted plant over my life. Over our child’s life. The medallion wasn’t just evidence. It was a signature.

The night passed in a blur of quiet agony. Regina came back, said the cleaners were on their way. She made tea. I didn’t drink it. I just sat, holding the silver, waiting for the dawn. When the first gray light filtered through the curtains, I stood up. My legs were shaky, but they held.

“Where is Hazel?” I asked Regina. My voice was flat.

“Miss Hazel? She arrived late last night. After… the incident. She said she wanted to stay close to you. She’s in the adjoining guest room.”

My sister. Hazel. She’d always been the fragile one, the one who saw ghosts in every shadow. She’d come because she sensed something was wrong. A twin’s intuition. I needed to see her. I needed to tell her what happened. To show her the proof.

I walked to the door of her room, my bare feet silent on the hardwood. The handkerchief was still in my hand. I didn’t knock. I just pushed the door open.

The scene hit me like a physical blow.

She wasn’t on the bed. She was on the floor, curled on the pale rug near the window. And around her, a dark, wet stain was spreading.

Blood.

My breath stopped. Hazel’s face was turned toward me, pale as parchment. Her eyes were open, wide with a terror I recognized instantly. It was the same terror I’d felt when the bowl was forced to my lips. Beside her head, on the floor, was a familiar object: a small, black ceramic bowl, overturned. The last dregs of a viscous, dark liquid pooled near its rim.

“Clara…” Hazel’s voice was a thread, thin and frayed.

I dropped the handkerchief. The medallion clattered on the floor. I rushed to her, kneeling in the blood that was her blood, not mine. “Hazel! What happened? Who—”

“They came for me too,” she whispered, her lips trembling. “After you… they thought I knew. I didn’t. I didn’t know anything.” A cough shook her, a weak, wet sound. “But they forced it into me. Just… just in case.”

I clutched her hand. It was cold. “Why? Why would they do this to you?”

Her eyes drifted toward the bed. “Under… the pillow. I hid it. I found it last week, in Father’s old study. I didn’t understand… until now.”

With a shaking arm, she gestured weakly toward the head of the bed. I lunged for it, my fingers digging under the pillow. I pulled out a sheaf of old papers, bound with a faded ribbon. The pages were handwritten, in my father’s precise, cramped script. Family Secret Pharmacological Records.

I flipped through them, my heart hammering against my ribs. Formulas, ingredient lists, notes on efficacy.

My eyes scanned, desperate. Then I found it. A page near the back, titled ‘Cardiac Fortification Elixir – For

Chronic Degeneration.’

Hazel’s weak voice guided me. “Look… at the primary active component.”

I read it. The words were clinical, cold.

Primary Active Component: Extracted cellular matter from a developing fetal cardiac tissue. Preferably from a gestation period of 16-20 weeks. The vitality of the undifferentiated cells provides a potent regenerative force for a failing adult myocardium.

My vision blurred. The letters swam. Fetal cardiac tissue.

“Ivy Sterling,” Hazel breathed out, her voice fading. “She has… a congenital heart weakness. The doctors said it was degenerative. Untreatable by conventional means.” She coughed again, a spot of blood appearing on her chin. “Silas… he must have known. He must have provided the… the access. To you.”

The pieces locked together. The cold, metallic click in my mind was deafening.

My pregnancy. My sixteen-week scan, where Silas had held my hand and smiled at the tiny, flickering heartbeat on the screen. He’d asked the doctor so many questions. About development. About cardiac function. He’d seemed so invested.

He was investing in ingredients.

Ivy’s heart. Her weakness. Her family’s wealth. Their Wisteria crest on a medallion dropped in my blood.

They hired men to harvest my child. To brew a fucking potion for her. And they tried to clean up the loose end—my sister—who might have stumbled on the truth.

The rage that filled me wasn’t hot. It was frozen, sharp, and absolute. It settled in my bones, replacing the ache of loss.

I stood up, leaving Hazel on the floor. I walked to the writing desk. On it was a stack of fine parchment, a bottle of ink, a sharp-feathered pen. I didn’t sit. I leaned over, uncapped the ink, and dipped the pen.

My hand was steady. The shaking had gone.

I wrote. Two documents. The language was formal, legal, the kind used for dissolving bonds between partners in our district. Dissolution of Union Contract. Irreconcilable Acts of Betrayal and Malice.

I didn’t detail the acts. I just wrote the title, our names, and the date. Then, at the bottom, I needed a signature. Something more binding than ink.

I looked at my hand. My fingers were clean, but my palm… from kneeling in Hazel’s blood. I pressed my right palm flat onto the first page, then the second. The blood from her wound—from the same poison that had taken my child—made a perfect, dark red imprint.

A blood signature. A seal of truth.

I folded the papers tightly, my movements crisp and final. I found a thick kraft envelope on the desk shelf, slid the documents inside, and sealed it with a dab of wax from a candle on the mantle.

Regina was standing in the doorway, her face grim, watching me. She’d seen Hazel. She’d seen the bowl.

I turned to her, holding the envelope. “Take this,” I said. My voice was clear, cold. “To the Alpha manor. To

Silas’s office. Hand it to him personally. Do not give it to a servant. Do not leave it on a desk. You look him in the eye and you tell him it’s from me.”

Regina nodded, her jaw tight. “I will.”

She took the envelope from my hands. Her fingers brushed mine, a fleeting touch of solidarity. Then she turned and walked out of the room, her steps quick and determined.

The door to the hall swung shut behind her. A gust of wind from the main entryway—she must have opened the front door to leave—swept through the corridor and into the room. It was a cold, sharp draft, carrying the scent of early morning and distant rain.

It swept over the desk.

A loose corner of one of the parchment sheets, a scrap I’d trimmed off and discarded, lifted from the desktop. The bloody fragment, a tiny piece of the contract of my vengeance, fluttered in the air for a second, then drifted down, spinning, to land softly on the floor.

It settled in the pool of Hazel’s blood, right next to the overturned black bowl.

I looked at it. A bloody scrap of paper next to a vessel of poison. Next to my sister’s broken body. Next to the silver medallion I’d dropped.

I knelt beside Hazel again, taking her cold hand. “They’ll pay,” I whispered, not to her, but to the room, to the wind, to the silent house. “He’ll pay. And she’ll pay. For every drop.”

Hazel’s eyes were closing. “He won’t just… accept the papers, Clara.”

“I know,” I said. The frozen rage in my veins was starting to thaw, and what was replacing it was something else. Something focused. Something hungry. “He’ll come. He’ll come to explain, to lie, to try and control me again.” I leaned closer, my voice dropping to a whisper only she could hear. “And when he does… I won’t be the woman he left on the floor anymore.”

Her eyelids fluttered. “What… will you be?”

I didn’t answer. I just watched the bloody scrap of paper on the floor, and imagined Silas opening that envelope. Imagined his face seeing my blood-stained palm print, the formal words of dissolution. Imagined the confusion, then the anger, then the inevitable, arrogant decision to come here, to confront me, to try and salvage his reputation, his control.

He’ll walk into this house, I thought. And he’ll walk into a trap I’ve already set with his own betrayal.

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