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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 3

The morning passed in a slow, thick haze. I sat by Hazel’s bedside, watching her sleep, her breaths shallow but steady. Regina had arranged for a private medic to come, one who knew how to keep secrets. He’d stabilized her, given her something for the pain, and left with a silent nod. The house felt like a tomb, waiting for its next occupant.

I didn’t wait in the bedroom. I waited in the courtyard.

I changed out of the robe. I put on the same simple, oversized linen sleep dress I’d been wearing when they attacked. I didn’t wash the dried, rust-colored stains from its front. I let it hang on my frame, loose and accusing. My hair was a mess, my face pale. I didn’t try to fix it. I wanted him to see what he’d done.

The courtyard was a small, paved square surrounded by high walls. A single iron gate led to the gravel drive. I stood in the center, barefoot on the cold stones, feeling the weak midday sun on my shoulders. It didn’t warm me.

I heard the vehicle long before I saw it. The growl of a heavy engine, the crunch of gravel under aggressive tires. It wasn’t his usual sleek sedan. It was a rugged SUV—something he used for his trips to the Sterling estate, for moving her potted plant through rough terrain.

The sound stopped just outside the wall. A silence, then the slam of two doors.

My heart didn’t speed up. It stayed slow, a cold, measured beat in my chest.

The iron gate wasn’t locked. They didn’t need to break it. But they did. A violent, metallic crash echoed through the courtyard as the gate was kicked open, swinging hard on its hinges and smashing against the stone wall.

Two figures strode into the light.

Silas Thorne first. His face was a mask of controlled fury, his dark hair perfectly combed even in anger. He wore a tailored hunting jacket, boots polished to a shine. He looked like a man coming to discipline a disobedient pet.

Behind him, his younger brother Gideon. Gideon was broader, louder, with a smirk already playing on his lips. He carried the energy of a spectator, someone who came to enjoy the show.

Silas’s eyes found me immediately. He didn’t scan the courtyard for danger, for clues. His gaze locked onto me, standing alone in my stained dress, and his anger seemed to sharpen, to focus.

He stopped a few paces away. Gideon lingered near the broken gate, leaning against the wall.

Silas held up the envelope. Thekraft envelope was crumpled now, stained with something dark—maybe dirt, maybe his own sweat. But the blood seal Regina had placed was intact, a dark red smudge on the flap.

“What is this, Clara?” His voice was low, a dangerous rumble. “A fucking joke?”

He didn’t hand it to me. He threw it. The envelope spun in the air and landed with a slap on the stones at my feet, right next to a patch of dried moss.

“A dissolution contract,” I said. My voice was flat, quiet. It didn’t carry across the courtyard. It just hung between us. “Signed in blood.”

Gideon snorted a laugh. “Blood? Probably from a chicken you slaughtered for drama. You always had a flair for the theatrical, Clara.”

Silas ignored him. His eyes were drilling into me. “You sent this to my office. During a critical meeting with the Sterling family’s financial advisors. You embarrassed me.”

“I didn’t send it to embarrass you,” I said. “I sent it to end you.”

His jaw tightened. A flicker of confusion, then a surge of rage. “End me? Over what? Some fantasy you’ve concocted because I was helping a friend? Ivy needed assistance with a new potted plant arrangement. It was a matter of courtesy.”

“Courtesy,” I repeated. The word tasted like ash. “While three men were in my bedroom. While they forced a black liquid into my mouth. While I bled out our child on the floor.”

Silas’s expression didn’t change. He didn’t flinch. He just shook his head, a dismissive, pitying gesture.

“There were no men, Clara. There was no ‘black liquid.’ You’ve been unstable since the… the suspected pregnancy. The doctors said your hormones were causing hallucinations. I told you to rest.”

Suspected pregnancy.

The term was a clinical bullet. It erased everything. The hope, the scans, the tiny heartbeat.

Gideon chimed in, his voice dripping with condescension. “And your sister? Hazel? That weak-minded girl from the common districts? She probably fed into your delusions. Always whispering ghost stories, seeing plots in shadows. She doesn’t know her place. A commoner girl with no gratitude for the life you’ve given her.”

I looked at Gideon. I let my gaze rest on his smug face for a moment. Then I turned back to Silas.

I didn’t argue. I didn’t scream.

I took a step forward, my bare feet making no sound on the stone. I walked right up to him, until I was close enough to smell his cologne—something expensive, woody, masking the scent of whatever he’d really been doing.

His eyes narrowed, wary now.

I reached for the hem of my sleep dress. The linen was soft, worn. I gathered it in my hands.

And then I lifted it.

I pulled the fabric up, over my hips, up to my ribcage. I exposed my stomach to him, to the midday sun, to his brother’s staring eyes.

The skin was pale, stretched, and utterly flat. No swell, no curve of a sixteen-week pregnancy. But it wasn’t clean. Smears of dried blood, rusty and brown, streaked across my abdomen and lower belly. The evidence of the flood, the violent emptying.

Silas’s breath caught. Not a hitch—a full, audible stop.

His eyes dropped. They scanned the bloodstains, the flatness, the undeniable physical truth. His control wavered. His lips parted slightly.

I didn’t let him speak. I reached behind me, to where Regina had discreetly left a folded bundle on a courtyard bench. I picked it up. It was the sheet from my bed, the one I’d lain on when everything ended. It was heavy, linen, stained a deep, pervasive red in its center.

I unfolded it with a single, sharp motion.

Then I threw it.

It wasn’t a gentle toss. I flung the sheet directly at Silas’s chest. The heavy fabric smacked against his tailored jacket, the central, blood-soaked patch landing right over his heart. It clung for a moment, then slid down, but the stain was transferred—a faint, pinkish smear on the fine wool.

He stumbled back a half-step, his hands coming up instinctively to catch the sheet, then letting it fall to the ground. He stared at the fabric, at the massive, rust-colored bloom in its center. His pupils widened, then contracted, a rapid pulse of shock.

“No hallucinations, Silas,” I said, my voice finally gaining a edge, a cold, sharp steel. “No hormonal delusions.

Just blood. My blood. Our child’s blood. On the floor of the bedroom you never came to protect.”

The silence that followed was different. Gideon’s smirk had vanished. He was staring at the sheet on the ground, his face pale.

Silas looked from the sheet to my exposed stomach, to the stains on my dress. His own facade was cracking.

The arrogance was leaking out, replaced by something else—panic, maybe. Or the dawning realization that his lies wouldn’t stick this time.

His eyes flickered, calculating. Then they hardened again, but with a new purpose. A defensive, aggressive pivot.

He turned away from me, not toward the gate, but toward theSUV parked outside the wall.

“You think this proves something?” he said, his voice rough now. “You think a stained sheet and some… some performative display changes the facts?”

He walked quickly, his boots snapping on the gravel. He didn’t look back.

Gideon followed him, confused.

I stood there, my dress still raised, my stomach bare to the world. I watched.

Silas reached the back of theSUV. He grabbed the handle of the trunk, yanked it open. The metal groaned.

He reached inside, into the dark space. He grabbed something—a shape bundled in rough canvas—and pulled it out with a violent, grunting heave.

He dragged it across the gravel, back toward the courtyard gate.

It was a man. A man tied with coarse hemp rope, his hands bound behind his back, his legs tangled. He was dressed in the dark uniform of our household guards. His face was bruised, bloody. He was unconscious, or pretending to be.

Silas dumped him just inside the gate, on the muddy patch of earth where the gravel met the soil. The man landed with a thud, his body limp.

Silas pointed a finger at him, then turned that finger toward me, his face a portrait of renewed, manufactured outrage.

“This,” he spat, “is the man who was supposed to guard your wing last night. He was found this morning, drunk, in a tavern, boasting about being paid to ‘take a night off.’ He abandoned his post. He is the reason you were vulnerable. Not some imagined conspiracy. Not Ivy Sterling. Not me.”

He stood over the prone guard, a conqueror presenting his trophy. “Your ‘attackers’ were probably thieves,

Clara. Opportunists. And this failure is the only person to blame.”

Gideon was nodding now, trying to reclaim his earlier swagger. “See? A simple security lapse. You’ve blown this all into a fantasy to punish Silas for spending time with a friend.”

I lowered my dress. The fabric fell back over my skin, hiding the stains, the flatness. I didn’t feel exposed anymore. I felt armored.

I looked at the bound guard on the ground. His uniform was real. His injuries looked real. Silas’s story was fast, slick, and almost believable.

Almost.

I walked toward the man. Silas watched me, his chest still marked with the faint pink smear from my sheet.

I knelt beside the guard. I didn’t touch him. I just looked at his face. His eyes were closed, but one was swollen shut. A fresh cut on his lip.

And then I saw it. On his left hand, tucked half-under his body, a small, specific detail. The cuff of his uniform shirt was torn. And on the skin of his wrist, visible through the tear, was a mark. Not a bruise. A tattoo. A tiny, precise design.

A curling vine of wisteria flowers.

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