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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 30

I almost didn't go back.

I had walked away from the hall, the sound of my own pulse thundering in my ears, and retreated to the safety of the training stairwell. I sat on the top step in the suffocating dark for twenty minutes, wrapping my arms around my knees and trying to convince myself I was finished.

Finished with the conversation, finished with Mira, and finished with the specific, grief of being hollowed out by people who didn't even have the decency to be malicious, only selfish. It's a special kind of hurt, realizing you were sacrificed not because you were hated, but because you were simply convenient.

Then came the soft, rhythmic thud of a knuckle against the heavy door. Pip.

"She's still in the hall," he whispered through the wood. "She hasn't moved a muscle, Sera. She's... I think she's actually crying."

"I couldn't care less," I snapped into the darkness. "Let her."

There was a pregnant pause. I could almost hear him shifting his weight, debating how much to push.

"She also keeps reaching into her bag," he added, his voice dropping an octave.

"Touching something inside. Like she's having a war with herself over whether to give it to you."

I stared at the door, my annoyance flickering into curiosity. "You are a genuine menace, Pip."

"So I've been told," he replied, his tone regaining its usual cheer.

I stood up, brushed the grit from my clothe, and went back.

Mira was a solitary figure in the vastness of the hall. The Ashveil escorts had been ushered away to the guest quarters, leaving her alone with the ghosts of our shared childhood. She stood clutching her bag, her eyes unmistakably red-rimmed. When she saw me re-emerge from the shadows, she jolted, nearly toppling the heavy wooden bench behind her.

"There was something I didn't put in the letter," she said, the words tumbling out before I could even draw breath. "I didn't want it in writing. I didn't know who might intercept it or whose eyes it might fall on."

I didn't move. I stayed by the archway, a silent witness to her unraveling.

She reached into the depths of her traveling bag and withdrew a small, rectangular parcel. It was wrapped in aged, yellowing cloth and bound with a simple hemp cord; the kind of utilitarian packaging that suggested it had been hidden away in a dark corner for a very long time. She held it out to me, her hands trembling.

"It was Mother's," she whispered. "Father had it locked in the deep estate archives, under a seal I wasn't supposed to be able to break. I took it three weeks ago. When the rumors started reaching Ashveil... when I realized what you were doing here. What you truly are. He doesn't know I have it. He doesn't know it's gone."

I stepped forward and took the parcel with a reverence I didn't know I still possessed.

It was lighter than the stone it had been stored under, but it felt like it weighed a hundred pounds. I unwound the cord, the fabric falling away to reveal a small, weather-beaten journal.

The leather was dark, supple, and worn smooth at the corners from years of being handled. On the cover, embossed in fading gold, were two initials: M.V.

Maren Vael.

The air left my lungs in a single, silent rush. This was hers. Her thoughts, her struggles, the daily rhythm of a life cut short. My hands were touching the same leather her hands had held. I traced the curve of the 'M' with my thumb, feeling a strange, phantom heat beneath the surface.

"Father locked it away the very week she died," Mira said, her voice small. "I found it when I was twelve. He caught me with it, raged for hours, and put it back under a heavier lock. I never saw it again until... until I decided to stop being a coward."

"Until you stole it," I corrected softly.

"Until I stole it," she agreed. "I know this doesn't balance the scales. I know it doesn't fix the carriage or the silence. But it's yours, Sera. It was always supposed to be yours."

I looked at her, the journal cradled against my chest. This was the missing map. Aldric had been teaching me from the fragments of his memory, but this was the source. Her training notes, her discoveries, the raw data of a Bloodanchor's soul. It was a lifeline thrown across a nineteen-year gap. It changed the timeline. It changed everything.

"Why didn't you come sooner?" I asked. The accusation was gone, replaced by a weary, genuine curiosity.

Mira looked down at her boots, her shoulders sagging. "Because I was terrified you wouldn't let me through the gate."

It was the most expensive thing she had ever given me: the truth.

"Matter of fact, I almost didn't" I admitted.

*Silence*

We stood there in the center of Ironveil's heart. Two sisters with a canyon of history between us and our mother's ghost sitting in the palm of my hand.

"You can stay tonight," I said finally, the words feeling like a concession of territory.

"One night. Then you go back to Ashveil and you give our father my message."

"He won't like it, Sera. He doesn't handle defiance well."

"I don't care about that," I said, a cold spark of satisfaction lighting in my chest. "I'm counting on it."

Mira almost smiled then; a fleeting, complicated expression that suggested she was finally seeing the person standing in front of her instead of the 'spare' she had grown up with.

"You're so different now," she murmured.

"Indeed I am."

"I'm glad," she said.

And for the first time, I believed her. Not fully, and certainly not with the trust of a sister, but enough to let the fire in my blood settle into embers.

That night, I didn't sleep. I sat cross-legged on my bed, the journal spread open in my lap under the flicker of a single tallow candle.

My mother's handwriting was a revelation; small, frantic, and elegant. It was the script of a woman whose mind moved at a velocity her pen could barely keep up with. She wrote about the weight of the ability, the addictive pull of the dark magic, and the bone-deep exhaustion of being an anchor for a territory that didn't know it was sinking.

She was human in these pages, not the martyr Aldric remembered, but a young woman learning, failing, and fighting.

Two hours in, I hit an entry dated just eight weeks before her death.

She wasn't writing about training anymore.

She was writing about the Dravhen line. About Caius's curse. She had been digging through texts so ancient they predated the current maps, hunting for a pattern she suspected was hidden in plain sight.

At the bottom of the page, she had scrawled four words and underlined them with such force the nib of her pen had nearly torn the paper.

It was built as a key.

The candle sputtered, casting long, dancing shadows across the room.

I stared at those words until they burned into my retinas.

A key. Not a punishment meant to waste a man away. Not a random blight.

It was a masterpiece of design, a living mechanism built to unlock something specific, something that required a specific bloodline to house it and a specific power to turn it.

Caius was the vessel. His agony was the machinery.

I closed the journal and sat in the dark, the mark on my neck pulsing with a low, rhythmic heat.

A key requires a lock. And somewhere, in a corner of the world my mother hadn't lived long enough to name, something was waiting to be opened.

Something that the architects of this curse had been waiting three years for.

And I had just been handed the instructions on how to turn the lock....

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