
When My Alpha Left Me to Burn
When My Alpha Left Me to Burn Chapter 1
The boat smelled like cedar and expensive whiskey and the particular kind of ambition that makes a room feel smaller than it is.
I stood near the stern railing with a glass of sparkling water I hadn't touched, watching Joel laugh at something Brielle Hoffman said. She had her hand on his arm. He let her keep it there. The Pacific wind off the Sound pulled at her dark hair and she tilted her face up toward him like a flower tracking sunlight, and Joel — my Joel, the man I had spent five years quietly keeping alive — smiled down at her like she was the answer to a question he'd been asking his whole life.
I looked away.
The Puget Sound stretched gray and wide around us, the Seattle skyline already shrinking behind the stern. The chartered vessel was big enough to feel like a statement — Reid Hoffman's money, everyone understood, even if no one said it out loud. This joint gathering between Silverfang and Black Ridge was dressed up as a celebration of deepening alliance, but what it really was, was a preview. Joel auditioning for a future. Brielle auditioning for a title. And me, standing at the margins in a borrowed cardigan and flat shoes, playing the part I'd been playing for five years.
Omega. Packless. Invisible.
My wolf stirred somewhere deep in my chest — a slow, restless shift, like something large turning over in its sleep. I pressed her back down. Not yet. Not here. Not ever, if I could help it.
I was good at that. Pressing things down.
"You look like you're doing math in your head."
The voice came from my left. I turned and found a man leaning against the railing a few feet away, a glass of something amber in his hand, watching the water with the relaxed posture of someone who had nowhere better to be. He was tall, broad-shouldered, dressed well but not formally — the kind of effortless that costs money. Dark hair. A jaw that looked like it had opinions. And a scent that hit me sideways before I could prepare for it: pine and something electric, like the air before a storm breaks.
I didn't know him. I knew of him, the way you know of weather systems moving in from the coast. Tristan Walker. Lycan Prince. The one the gossip channels called reckless, charming, and constitutionally allergic to responsibility.
He didn't look at me when he spoke. That was the first thing I noticed.
"I'm just watching," I said.
"Mm." He took a sip of his drink. "Watching and doing math. There's a difference."
I didn't answer. He didn't push. After a moment he drifted away toward a cluster of Black Ridge wolves, drink still in hand, and I watched him go with the vague, unsettled feeling of a thread I hadn't meant to pull.
Across the deck, Joel caught my eye for exactly half a second. Then Brielle said something and his attention snapped back to her like a compass needle finding north.
I turned back to the water.
---
The explosion came from below.
Not an explosion exactly — a concussive thud that rolled through the hull and up through the soles of my feet, followed immediately by the shriek of stressed metal and the particular orange glow that means fire has found something it likes. The deck lurched. Glasses shattered. Someone screamed.
Then everyone was moving at once.
I gripped the railing and got my bearings in the three seconds before the crowd panic fully ignited. Rogue attack — I understood it before anyone said it, because I had spent years studying how rogues moved, how they coordinated, what a vessel ambush looked like from a tactical standpoint. They'd hit the engine room. Smart. Cut off the escape route, funnel everyone to the upper deck, pick them off in the chaos.
I was already moving toward the interior stairwell when I heard Joel's voice cut through the noise.
"Brielle. Brielle, where are you —"
I stopped.
He was ten feet away, scanning the crowd with his Alpha aura flaring hot and urgent. His eyes swept past me without stopping. Found Brielle clutching the arm of one of her father's Deltas, her face white, her composure cracked clean open. Joel crossed to her in four strides and grabbed her arm.
"Upper deck," he said. "Now."
"Joel." My voice came out steady. I don't know how. "The lower deck — there are pack members trapped below —"
He looked at me then. Really looked at me, for the first time in longer than I could remember. And what I saw in his face was not the man I had loved. It was the boy from that Lycan gathering, the one who had been laughed at and never recovered, making the only calculation he knew how to make.
His grip on Brielle's arm tightened.
"A she-wolf like Brielle," he said, low and flat, almost conversational, "is worth more to this pack than you'll ever be."
He turned and walked away. He did not look back.
The smoke found me thirty seconds later.
---
The beam came down on the third step of the lower stairwell. It caught my left side and pinned me against the wall, and the pain was bright and immediate and then the smoke started filling my lungs and the pain became secondary to the simple, animal problem of air.
My wolf was not quiet anymore.
She was screaming. Not in fear — in fury, in grief, in five years of compressed silence finally finding its breaking point. The mate bond in my chest felt like a fissure, like something that had been load-bearing had just given way, and I pressed my hand against my sternum and felt the crack spreading and thought, distantly, so this is what it feels like.
I had always known, somewhere underneath the love, that this was possible. I had just chosen not to look at it directly.
The smoke thickened. My vision went soft at the edges.
And then something tore through the wall of the stairwell like it was paper.
He was in wolf form — massive, dark-furred, moving with the kind of controlled force that belongs to Lycan blood and nothing else. He shifted back the moment he reached me, hands finding my shoulders, and the scent hit me like a wave breaking: pine and thunderstorm, clean and cold and electric, cutting straight through the smoke and the pain and the grief.
His hands were warm. That was the thing I registered most clearly. Warm, and steady, and certain.
The bond snapped into place between one breath and the next. Not a crack this time — the opposite of a crack. Something locking into alignment that had been slightly wrong for so long I'd stopped noticing the wrongness.
I looked up at him through the smoke. Dark eyes. A jaw that had opinions. The Lycan Prince who was supposed to be reckless and irresponsible, pulling me out of a burning stairwell with the focused calm of someone who had never once in his life done anything carelessly.
"I've got you," he said.
The smoke took my vision before I could answer. The last thing I felt was his arms around me, and the scent of pine and rain, and my wolf going quiet for the first time in five years — not suppressed, not silenced, but simply, finally, still.
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