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When My Alpha Chose Her Novel Cover

When My Alpha Chose Her

The numbers finally aligned at 2:47 AM. I sat back in the cramped basement office—really just a converted storage room that smelled of mildew and old cardboard—and watched the simulation run one more time on my battered laptop. The perimeter algorithm I'd been refining for three weeks traced elegant patterns across the screen, rerouting patrol schedules to cover the vulnerable western border where rogues had been testing our defenses. Green lights bloomed across the digital map. Success. My right hand cramped from hours of coding, fingers stiff around the pen I'd used to sketch the initial defense patterns. I flexed them slowly, feeling the familiar ache that came with these late nights. But it was worth it. The western border would hold now. The pack would be safe.
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Chapter 4

The storm hit at 2 AM, exactly when I'd planned.

Rain hammered the pack house roof as I carried Karter through the servant's entrance, his small body warm against my chest, still drowsy from the mild sedative I'd given him. My duffel bag cut into my shoulder, everything we owned compressed into thirty pounds of fabric and desperation.

The rejection letter was on Parker's desk. By morning, he'd find it. By morning, we'd be gone.

Lightning split the sky as we reached the eastern border, illuminating the narrow alley between the old warehouse and the fence line. My escape route. I'd mapped it weeks ago, back when I still thought planning could save us.

I should have known better.

They stepped out of the shadows when we were halfway through—three rogues, their eyes reflecting the storm light like animals. Wrong. This was wrong. Rogues didn't hunt this deep into pack territory. Didn't move with this kind of coordination.

"Karter, run," I whispered, setting him down.

But there was nowhere to run. The alley dead-ended at a brick wall, and the rogues blocked our only exit.

Then she appeared.

Zoe stepped into the alley mouth, an umbrella keeping her perfectly dry, her smile sharp as broken glass. "Going somewhere, Nadia?"

My wolf snarled inside me, small but furious. I pushed Karter behind me, felt his fingers clutch my jacket.

"Let us pass," I said. My voice didn't shake. Small victory.

"I don't think so." Zoe tilted her head, studying me like I was something fascinating under a microscope. "You know, I actually respect you. All those brilliant strategies, those algorithms that made Silvercrest untouchable. That was you. Not Parker. You."

The admission should have felt like vindication. Instead, it felt like a trap closing.

"Then let us go," I tried. "You have everything. The Luna position, Parker, the pack's respect—"

"But you're still the real strategist." Her smile vanished. "And as long as you're alive, someone might figure that out. Someone might realize that I'm just a pretty face stealing a genius's work."

She nodded to the rogues.

They moved fast. I shifted partially, claws extending, ready to fight even though I knew I'd lose. But they weren't coming for my throat.

The first rogue grabbed my right arm, yanking it away from my body. The second pinned my shoulders against the brick wall. The third pulled out a steel pipe.

"No—" I started.

"Break the hand that draws the maps," Zoe said softly. "Make sure she can never write code or sketch defenses again."

The pipe came down.

The sound was worse than the pain—that wet crunch of bones shattering, splintering, turning to fragments inside my skin. Then the pain hit, white-hot and absolute, and I screamed.

Karter was crying, trying to reach me. I twisted, using my body to shield him even as the rogue brought the pipe down again. And again.

My hand wasn't a hand anymore. Just a mangled thing at the end of my arm, bones jutting at wrong angles, blood mixing with rain.

"Mama!" Karter's voice, terrified.

Zoe watched, her expression satisfied. "Now you're just another broken Omega. Exactly what you—"

The scent hit first—rain and ozone and something wild, something ancient. Power that made the air itself feel heavy.

Then he was there.

The silver wolf was massive, bigger than any I'd ever seen, moving with a speed that defied physics. He tore through the first rogue before the man could scream, jaws closing around his throat. The second rogue tried to run. Didn't make it three steps.

Zoe's umbrella clattered to the ground as she fled, her heels splashing through puddles, disappearing into the storm.

The third rogue—the one who'd held the pipe—backed against the wall. The silver wolf stalked toward him, and I saw murder in those eyes. Saw justice.

The rogue died quickly. Mercy he didn't deserve.

Then the wolf shifted, and I was looking at a man.

Tall. Powerful. Soaked with rain and blood, but somehow still commanding, still regal. His eyes found mine—gray like storm clouds—and something in my chest pulled tight.

Mate.

No. That was impossible. I'd just rejected Parker. The bond was broken. I couldn't—

"You're safe now," he said, his voice deep and certain. He moved toward me, and I realized I was sliding down the wall, my ruined hand cradled against my chest, shock setting in.

Karter pressed against my side, sobbing.

"My son," I managed. "Please. Save my son."

"I've got you both." He lifted me like I weighed nothing, careful of my hand, and somehow gathered Karter too. "I'm Ryder. You're going to be okay."

The world tilted. Rain and blood and the scent of my new mate—because that's what he was, impossibly, terrifyingly—blurred together.

"My hand," I whispered. "I can't... I can't draw anymore. Can't code. Can't—"

"Shh." His arms tightened around me. "We'll fix it. I promise."

I wanted to believe him. Wanted to believe anything except that my life's work had just been destroyed in a dark alley by a woman wearing my mate's necklace.

The last thing I saw before darkness took me was the silver of his eyes, and the absolute certainty in them.

Like he'd been searching for me.

Like he'd finally found something worth keeping.

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