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When My Alpha Chose Her Novel Cover

When My Alpha Chose Her

The crystal chandelier cast a warm, heavy glow over the long mahogany table. It was the welcome banquet for Reese Hudson. She was the daughter of the Silverfang Beta, returning from a five-year pack exchange in Europe. But to everyone in this room, she was something much more important. She was the fated mate who had rejected our Alpha, Tristan Cole, when they were eighteen. I sat beside Tristan, right where I always sat. I wore a dark silk dress he had picked out for me. My neck, as always, was bare. Five years of sharing his bed, running his pack house, and smiling at his side through every tedious political dinner, and I still didn't have his mark. I used to touch the smooth skin of my neck in the mirror and tell myself he just needed time.
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Chapter 2

I drove through the night without stopping.

The highway narrowed somewhere past the mountain pass, two lanes cutting through walls of dark evergreen. Rain came and went in sheets. Buster slept curled on the passenger seat with his head on my thigh, his warmth the only thing keeping me tethered to the present. I kept both hands on the wheel and my eyes on the white line. I didn't turn on the radio. I didn't think about the dining hall, or the gold in Tristan's eyes, or the way he signed those papers like he was approving a catering invoice.

I thought about the road.

By the time the first pale light broke through the trees, I had crossed into Cedarhollow territory. I knew it before I saw the sign. The air changed. It came through the cracked window — wet cedar bark, moss, cold river stone. It smelled like I was sixteen again, running drills in the rain with mud on my knees and my wolf howling just beneath my skin.

I hadn't been back in almost eight years.

The town was small. One main road, a hardware store, a gas station, a post office with a flag that needed replacing. And on the corner, tucked between a used bookshop and a veterinary clinic, the coffee shop. Grounds & Fog. The same green awning. The same chalkboard sign out front, the handwriting different now but the style the same.

I pulled into the gravel lot and turned off the engine. I sat there for a long time. Buster lifted his head and looked at me. I looked back at him.

"I don't know what I'm doing here," I told him quietly.

He licked my hand. That was enough of an answer.

I clipped on his leash and walked inside. The bell above the door jingled. The shop was nearly empty — just a teenage boy wiping down the espresso machine and an older woman reading a paperback in the corner booth. The air smelled like fresh coffee grounds and cinnamon. The floors were scuffed hardwood. Rain streaked the windows in long, crooked lines.

I ordered a black coffee I didn't want and sat at the window table. The same table I used to sit at during training summers, back when I would scribble scenes in a spiral notebook and pretend I was writing the next great American novel. I wrapped both hands around the mug and stared at the rain.

I wasn't thinking. That was the strange part. After five years of constant calculation — managing Tristan's schedule, anticipating his moods, reading the room at every pack dinner so I could smooth over whatever tension he created — my mind was just... blank. Like a machine that had been running too long and finally shut down.

Buster lay under the table with his chin on my boot. I didn't drink the coffee. I just held it and watched the water run down the glass.

I don't know how long I sat there. Long enough for the mug to go cold.

The bell above the door jingled again.

I didn't look up. I heard boots on the hardwood, a low voice ordering something at the counter, the hiss of the espresso machine. Normal sounds. Nothing that should have mattered.

Then the footsteps stopped.

Not at the counter. Not at another table. They stopped about four feet from mine, and they stayed stopped. I could feel someone standing there, very still, the way you stand when you've just walked into something you weren't prepared for.

I looked up.

Lucas Lane stood in the middle of the coffee shop with a paper cup in one hand and his other hand frozen halfway to his jacket pocket. He was taller than I remembered. Broader in the shoulders. His dark hair was damp from the rain, pushed back from his face. He wore a simple gray henley and work boots, no pack insignia, nothing that announced rank. But his eyes — steady, warm, the color of dark honey — were locked on me with an expression I couldn't quite read.

His nostrils flared. Just once. A small, involuntary movement.

I knew what that meant. I had spent five years watching Tristan's wolf surface at the wrong scent. I recognized the moment a wolf caught something it wanted.

But Lucas didn't surge forward. He didn't flood the room with aura. He didn't say my name like it was a claim. He just stood there for a beat, and then something in his expression settled. Like he had made a decision.

He walked over and pulled out the chair across from me. "Mind if I sit?"

His voice was the same. Quiet, unhurried. The kind of voice that didn't need volume to be heard.

"Lucas," I said. It came out rougher than I intended.

"Hey, Faye." He sat down and set his cup on the table. He looked at me — really looked, the way a healer looks at a wound, not flinching from it but not poking at it either. I knew what he saw. The dark circles. The stiff posture. The careful blankness I was wearing like armor.

He didn't ask what happened. He didn't ask why I was sitting alone in a Cedarhollow coffee shop at dawn with a cold cup of coffee and a rescue dog under the table. He just sat with me for a moment, letting the silence be what it was.

Then he said, "Do you need a place to stay?"

That was it. No conditions. No follow-up questions. No pack-hierarchy calculation about what it meant to house a she-wolf who had just walked out on one of the most powerful Alphas in the region.

I opened my mouth to say something polite and deflecting. Something like I'm fine or I'll figure it out. But the words didn't come. Instead, I looked at him across the table, and for the first time in five years, I told the truth.

"Yes," I said. "I do."

Lucas nodded like I had told him the weather. "Okay. I'll make a call."

He pulled out his phone and stepped outside under the awning. I watched him through the rain-streaked window, speaking to someone in that same calm, measured tone. Buster's tail thumped once against the floor, as if he had already decided this place was acceptable.

Ten minutes later, a woman walked into the coffee shop. She was about my age, maybe a year or two older, with short auburn hair and an easy, open face. She wore a flannel jacket over a tank top and had the kind of energy that filled a room without crowding it.

"Faye Montgomery?" She extended her hand. Her grip was firm and warm. "Mara Ellis. I'm the Gamma here. Lucas said you needed a cabin."

She didn't say Lucas told me about your situation. She didn't look at me with pity or curiosity or the careful political interest I was used to from Shadowvale wolves who were always calculating what you could do for them.

She just smiled and said, "Come on. I'll show you."

I followed her out into the rain. Lucas was leaning against his truck in the parking lot. He caught my eye as I passed and gave me a small nod. Nothing more. I nodded back.

Mara drove me down a narrow gravel road that wound through towering cedars. The trees were enormous, their trunks dark with rain, their branches so thick overhead that the light turned green and soft. The pack house sat at the end of the road — not a stone fortress like Shadowvale, but a sprawling wooden lodge with wide porches and smoke curling from the chimney.

She didn't take me to the main house. She led me past it, down a short path through the trees, to a small cabin with cedar-plank walls and a covered porch just big enough for two chairs.

"It's not much," Mara said, pushing open the door. "But the roof's solid and the hot water works."

The cabin was simple. One room with a bed, a desk, a woodstove in the corner. A small kitchen along the back wall. The windows looked out into the cedars. Rain tapped steadily against the glass.

Mara set a stack of firewood beside the stove and draped a thick wool blanket over the foot of the bed. She moved through the space with the practiced ease of someone who had done this before — welcomed wolves who showed up with nothing and needed somewhere to land.

At the door, she paused. "Coffee shop opens at six," she said. "Best cinnamon rolls in the Pacific Northwest. Don't let Lucas tell you otherwise — he's biased toward the blueberry scones."

I almost smiled. Almost.

"Thank you, Mara."

She looked at me for a moment. Not with pity. With something quieter. Recognition, maybe.

"Get some sleep, Faye," she said. And then she was gone.

I stood in the middle of the cabin and listened to the rain. Buster padded across the wood floor, sniffed every corner, and then jumped onto the bed and turned three circles before lying down with a heavy sigh.

I sat on the edge of the bed beside him. I put my hand on his back and felt his ribs rise and fall. The cabin smelled like cedar and woodsmoke and clean rain. Nothing like stone and expensive wine and white jasmine.

My wolf stirred. For the first time in months — maybe years — she didn't feel like she was pressing against a locked door. She felt like she was just... breathing.

I lay down next to Buster, still in my clothes, still in my boots. I pulled the wool blanket over both of us. The rain kept falling. The cedars creaked in the wind outside.

I closed my eyes and slept.

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