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The Cursed Alpha's Substitute Bride  Novel Cover

The Cursed Alpha's Substitute Bride

She was never supposed to be the bride. Sera Ashveil was nineteen years old, invisible, and worth nothing to the pack that raised her. Her sister Mira is the beautiful one. The chosen one. The one their father actually looks at when he speaks. Sera is just the spare. So when the most feared Alpha in the known territories - Caius Dravhen, cursed, dangerous, and slowly being destroyed by dark magic - demands a bride from the Ashveil bloodline, the decision takes less than an hour. Mira refuses. Nobody asks Sera. She is dressed in her sister's gown before dawn, pushed into a black carriage, and delivered to a monster - a substitute for a bride nobody wanted to send, to a man nobody expects her to survive. The last woman sent to Caius Dravhen lost her mind within three days. Her eyes stayed open but everything behind them simply vanished.Sera arrives expecting the same fate. What she doesn't expect is that his curse - the dark magic consuming him from the inside out - doesn't break her. It wakes her. Something has been sleeping inside Sera Ashveil for nineteen years. Something old, something hungry, something that the Ashveil pack beat down so thoroughly they were certain it was dead. They were wrong. She came to Ironveil as a sacrifice. She will leave as something they never saw coming.
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Chapter 20

I found a dead bird on my window still three mornings after moving to the north wing.

Small. Black-feathered. Arranged with a deliberateness that made clear it was not an accident of nature. Its wings were spread flat, pinned at the tips with two iron needles, and around its neck - tied with red thread - was a small rolled piece of parchment.

I did not touch it. I stood in the window and looked at it.

Then I went to get Kael.

He came and examined it without touching it either, his dark eyes moving over every detail with the careful thoroughness of a man who had learned to read threats the way other people read text.

"It's not Zoran," he said confidently.

I had not expected that.

"The iron needles. The red thread. This is a pack practice. Old intimidation, the kind that was used internally, between wolves, before formal challenge systems existed. Zoran's people use different methods."

Internal. Pack practice.

"Reva," Kael did not confirm it. He didn't have to. The absence of denial was its own answer.

"She can't formally challenge me," I said slowly. "Luna-designate status puts that outside pack protocol. So she's doing this instead."

"She's trying to frighten you into leaving," Kael said. "Without leaving any formal grounds for discipline."

"She's escalating," I said.

"She's running out of options," Kael replied. "Which makes her more dangerous, not less."

I looked at Kael quietly and then at the dead bird.

"Take the parchment but leave the bird," I said.

Kael glanced at me. Awaiting further confirmation.

I gave him a slight nod.

"I want her to know it didn't work," I said. "She needs to see that I looked at it and didn't flinch. If I remove it she will think she got a reaction from me."

Kael looked at me for a long moment. Then he took the parchment, unrolled it, read it,

said nothing about its contents, put it in his pocket and left the bird exactly where it

was.

The parchment's contents, I learned from Kael that afternoon, were a list;

Every interaction between me and Caius that Reva had observed or been informed of.

The study meetings. The dinner. The night he had knocked on my door. The move to the northwing. All of it documented, annotated, framed in the language of manipulation - the substitute bride engineering a position she had no right to, the cursed Alpha being

managed by a nobody from a nothing bloodline who had arrived three weeks ago and was already sleeping in the corridor outside his room.

It was addressed to the senior pack council.

She was building a formal case. Not a challenge. Something slower and more

devastating. A delegitimization. An argument, made through proper channels, that my confirmation as Luna-designate had been made under undue influence and should be reviewed by the pack's governing structure.

"Can she do that?" I asked.

"Technically," Kael said. "There are precedents. If she gets enough senior wolves to co-sign the petition, it goes to a full council hearing."

"How many signatures does she need?" I asked.

"Seven. Out of twelve senior wolves." He replied.

"How many does she have?" I chipped back.

*A pause.*

Then he sighed.

"As of this morning," Kael said, "four."

Four?! She needed only three more. Out of eight remaining senior wolves.

"Who are the four?" I asked.

He told me. I filed their names and everything I knew about them - which was, after three weeks of careful observation, more than any of them probably realized.

"Does Caius know?" I inquired.

"Not yet." He replied.

"Good, tell him," I said.

"It will- "

"Tell him," I said again. Firm. "He needs to know what's happening in his own pack. And

I won't have decisions made for me without my knowledge. Not again. Not here."

Kael looked at me for a moment. Then nodded in agreement.

The confrontation happened that evening.

Not planned - not by me, at least.

I was crossing the upper corridor toward the training stairwell when Reva stepped out of a side room.

Not an ambush precisely - her posture was too controlled for ambush. But it was not accidental either.

We were alone in the corridor. No witnesses. For the first time since my arrival, no one

between us and whatever she intended.

She looked at me with that copper-haired composure and I asked.

"What do you want?"

"You're very clever," she said.

And it was not a compliment. "Coming in as the spare, the invisible one. Playing weak. Playing frightened. Getting the old man's sympathy and the Beta's attention and the Alpha's..."

She stopped. Reset. "You played it beautifully."

"I didn't play anything," I said. "I just... survived.

There's a difference."

"You engineered a position- "

"I was put in a carriage at four in the morning in my dead sister's dress and sent to a

cursed man nobody expected me to survive," I interrupted. My voice came out quiet. Completely steady. "I didn't engineer anything. I just didn't die. And I understand that's inconvenient for you."

Reva stared at me. She was speechless.

For the first time - the very first time since I had arrived in Ironveil, I watched her not

know what to do with what she was looking at. The control slipped. Just a fraction. Just

enough.

"He's going to destroy you," she said. "Not intentionally. But the curse, what it does- "

"The curse doesn't work that way on me," I said. "You've seen it. You know something is

different."

*Silence.*

Her facial expression changed in an instant.

"I loved him," she said. Very quietly. Not to wound me. But to explain.

"For three years I watched him disappear into that thing. I couldn't help. Nobody could

help. And then you arrive and in three weeks..."

She stopped.

I looked at Reva the way I had looked at Mira in that corridor with the silk pouch. And I saw what was underneath the composure and the cruelty and the six years of careful positioning.

Grief. Real, genuine, unprocessed grief.

A woman who had watched someone she loved be slowly destroyed and had spent three years with no weapon against it and had responded the only way she knew how - by controlling everything she could reach.

I understood that. In my own way. I understood it completely.

"The petition," I said carefully. "Withdraw it."

Her expression changed in an instant. She looked confused.

"Not for my sake," I said. "Because if it goes to council it becomes public and Zoran will

use it. A pack divided over its Luna is a pack with a visible weakness and right now we

cannot afford a visible weakness. You know that."

Silence. Long enough that I thought she would refuse.

Then: "I'll think about it." She said softly.

She walked past me down the corridor.

I stood alone and let the tension leave my

shoulders slowly and thought about grief and love and how they twisted together into the

shape of cruelty when there was nowhere else to put them.

I wasn't going to forgive Reva.

But I was beginning, slightly, to understand her.

Behind me, from the direction of the study, I felt the mark on my neck flare. And that means he had been in the corridor.

He had heard. Everything.

And he had let me handle it.

That, I thought, was its own kind of statement.

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