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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 5

The Royal Lycan Hospital smelled like antiseptic and crushed dreams.

I woke to white walls and the steady beep of monitors, my right hand encased in so much bandaging it looked like a cocoon. A cocoon that would never produce anything beautiful.

Ryder was there. He'd been there every time I surfaced from the drug-induced fog, a solid presence in the chair beside my bed, reading tactical journals or watching Karter sleep on the small couch by the window.

"The surgery went well," the doctor said on day three, her voice professionally gentle. The kind of gentle that preceded bad news. "We've reconstructed the bones, reattached the tendons. You'll regain basic function—holding objects, daily tasks."

She paused. I knew what came next.

"But fine motor control..." She shook her head. "The damage was extensive. I'm sorry, Ms. Wright. You'll likely never be able to draw detailed schematics or write complex code again."

The words didn't land right away. They hung in the air like smoke, shapeless, and then suddenly they were everywhere, choking me.

No more algorithms. No more defense grids. No more strategy maps that could save entire packs.

No more me.

I turned my face to the wall and stopped talking.

Days blurred together. Physical therapists came and went, their cheerful encouragement sliding off me like rain off glass. Karter would curl up beside me, his small hand finding my left one, but I barely felt it. Ryder brought meals I didn't eat, spoke words I didn't hear.

I was hollow. A strategist without the ability to strategize was nothing.

On the eighth day, Ryder walked in carrying a tablet instead of food.

He didn't ask how I was feeling. Didn't offer empty platitudes. He just pulled up a chair, set the tablet on the rolling tray table, and turned it toward me.

"I need your opinion on something," he said.

I stared at the wall.

"The northern perimeter has a weak point." He tapped the screen, pulling up a tactical layout. "We've lost two patrols in the last month. I think the sensor grid is positioned wrong, but I can't figure out why."

Despite myself, my eyes shifted to the screen. The map was a mess—overlapping coverage zones, redundant checkpoints, gaps in the terrain analysis.

"It's the elevation," I heard myself say. My voice was rusty from disuse. "Your sensors are calibrated for flat ground. But that northern ridge has a fifteen-degree slope. You're getting false negatives where the terrain dips."

Ryder's expression didn't change, but something flickered in his gray eyes. "Show me."

I looked at my bandaged hand. "I can't."

"Yes, you can." He picked up the stylus, placed it in my left hand. My clumsy, untrained left hand. "Your mind is the weapon, Nadia. Not your hand. The hand is just the tool."

The stylus felt wrong, foreign. I tried to draw a line on the screen and it came out shaky, childish.

"I can't," I repeated, my throat tight.

Ryder moved his chair closer. "Then I'll help."

He placed his hand over mine, large and warm and steady. Together, we drew. His strength guided my trembling fingers, but the strategy—the brilliant, complex strategy—that was all mine.

We repositioned the sensors. Adjusted the patrol routes. Created a new algorithm that accounted for terrain variation.

When we finished, I was crying. Silent tears that dripped onto the tablet screen.

"You're not broken," Ryder said quietly. "You're adapting. That's what makes you brilliant."

I looked at him then, really looked. Saw the absolute certainty in his face, the respect that had nothing to do with pity.

"Why are you doing this?" I whispered.

"Because I've been using your strategies for three years." He smiled slightly. "Those open-source defense protocols that revolutionized pack security? I knew they came from a genius. I just didn't know where to find you."

He'd been searching for me. Before the alley, before the mate bond, he'd been searching for my mind.

"I want to learn," I said. The words felt like stepping off a cliff. "I want to use my left hand. I want to be useful again."

"You never stopped being useful." Ryder stood, but his hand lingered on my shoulder. "Tomorrow, we start physical therapy. Real therapy. And when you're ready, I have an army that needs the best strategist alive."

That night, for the first time since the alley, I slept without nightmares.

The next three years were war.

War against my own body, my own limitations, my own despair. I spent six hours a day in physical therapy, retraining my left hand to do what my right had done instinctively. I filled notebooks with shaky lines that gradually became steadier, algorithms that grew more complex.

Karter grew too. At nine years old, he was whip-smart and fiercely protective, training with the Lycan pups and showing strategic instincts that made Ryder's trainers shake their heads in amazement. He stopped asking about Parker after the first year. Started calling Ryder "Dad" after the second.

And Ryder... Ryder was patient. Demanding, but patient. He pushed me to be better, never accepting my excuses, but never making me feel less than whole. We worked side by side, his military instincts combined with my tactical genius, creating something unprecedented.

I became Nova. Strategist Nova—a ghost, a legend, the anonymous mind behind the Lycan Army's sudden invincibility.

No one knew who I was. No one knew where I'd come from.

That was exactly how I wanted it.

Until the day Ryder walked into my office—because I had an office now, with three monitors and a view of the Royal Territory—and dropped an invitation on my desk.

The Grand Alpha Summit. And a formal request from Alpha Parker Sullivan of the Silvercrest Pack for a consultation with the legendary Strategist Nova.

"He's desperate," Ryder said, watching my face. "His pack is falling apart. Four hundred percent increase in rogue attacks. They've lost a third of their territory."

I picked up the invitation with my left hand—steady now, strong—and read Parker's words. The pleading tone. The offer of "any price" for Nova's help.

He had no idea he was begging his rejected mate to save him.

"What do you want to do?" Ryder asked.

I looked at my left hand, at the scars on my right, at the tactical maps covering my walls. Thought of Karter, safe and thriving. Thought of the Moonstone Necklace around Zoe's throat and my son bleeding in the training field.

Thought of three years of rebuilding myself into something stronger than I'd ever been.

"I want to go," I said. "I want to watch him beg."

Ryder's smile was sharp and approving. "Then let's show them what a real strategist looks like."

The Summit was in three weeks. Three weeks to prepare for the moment Parker Sullivan would finally see what he'd thrown away.

Three weeks until Nadia Wright became Nova, and made them all pay.

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