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When My Alpha’s Betrayal Took Our Miracle Pup Novel Cover

When My Alpha’s Betrayal Took Our Miracle Pup

I had been sitting at the dining table for two hours when I heard his key in the lock. The gift was still wrapped. A small thing — a leather-bound journal with his initials pressed into the cover, because Everett had mentioned once, years ago, that he used to keep one before the Alpha title swallowed his time. I had ordered it three weeks in advance. I had wrapped it myself. Five years. Tonight marked five years since the Moon Goddess bound us together, and I had set the table, lit the candles, and waited. He came in smelling of jasmine and vanilla. I knew that scent. I had known it for a long time.
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Chapter 2

The reply came three days later.

I was at my private terminal when it arrived — a single encrypted message, routed through a Council relay address I had to look up twice to confirm was real. The sender was listed only as P. Hale, Lycan Council Advocacy Division.

I read it standing up.

Petra Hale. I knew the name. Every Luna in a troubled pack knew the name, the way you know the name of a doctor you hope you never need. She had handled the Greywood Luna petition four years ago, and the Ashford dissolution before that. She was not the kind of advocate you contacted for minor grievances.

Her message was brief and precise. She had reviewed my preliminary summary. She found it credible. She advised me to begin compiling formal documentation immediately: healer records, financial transfer logs, any witness accounts I could secure without alerting the Alpha. She used the word immediately twice.

I sat down.

Then I opened my encrypted files and started organizing.

I had more than I realized. Eight months of careful, instinctive record-keeping — dates and amounts and aliases, healer appointment logs with Maren's initials on every entry, the two halves of the torn pregnancy confirmation smoothed flat and scanned. I had kept all of it without a clear plan, the way you keep a spare key without knowing which door it will open. Now I knew.

I worked for three hours. Sera was quiet the whole time, settled low in my chest, watchful. Not grieving. Just waiting.

When I was done, I sent the compiled files to Petra Hale and closed the terminal. Then I went to get dressed for the banquet.

---

The main hall had been decorated for the occasion. Everett had approved the budget himself — I had seen the requisition, a number that would have covered two months of my healer treatments. White flowers banked the long tables. The chandeliers were lit at full brightness. Pack members filled the room in their best clothes, voices bright with the particular energy of people who had been told to celebrate.

Lacey stood near the front, in a dress the color of champagne.

I took my seat at the Luna's table and folded my hands in my lap and watched Everett cross the room toward her.

He moved differently around her. I had noticed this for years and filed it away with everything else. His shoulders dropped. The Alpha performance softened at the edges. He touched her shoulder when he reached her — just briefly, just his hand resting there for a moment longer than a congratulatory gesture required — and she looked up at him with an expression I recognized. The expression of a woman who knows exactly what she is to a man and has decided it is enough.

Pack members watched their Alpha and their new Gamma and smiled.

None of them looked at me.

I was used to that. The Luna's seat carried weight in theory and invisibility in practice. I had learned early that the pack took its cues from Everett, and Everett had never once looked at me the way he was looking at Lacey right now.

Sera stirred in my chest. Not a warning — just a low, exhausted movement, like something turning over in its sleep. I felt her grief more than my own. Mine had gone somewhere past feeling, into a place that was very quiet and very clear.

Everett stepped to the front of the room and raised his glass.

"Tonight we recognize one of our own," he said. His voice carried the easy authority of a man who had never doubted his right to fill a room. "Lacey Hoffman has served this pack with dedication and skill. As of tonight, she holds the rank of Gamma of the Ironvale Pack."

Applause. Lacey ducked her head with a small, modest smile — the performance of a woman who was surprised, who hadn't expected this, who was simply grateful. I watched her accept the congratulations of pack members who pressed forward to shake her hand, to touch her arm, to tell her she deserved it.

Not one of them crossed the room to speak to their Luna.

I refilled my own water glass and waited.

---

The banquet moved through its courses. I ate what was placed in front of me. I answered the few remarks directed my way with the appropriate words in the appropriate tone. I was very good at this — at being present in a room without being visible in it. Five years of practice.

I was watching Everett laugh at something Lacey said when I decided to get up for more water.

The pitcher was at the far end of the table. A small thing. An ordinary movement. I pushed back my chair and stood.

I saw Lacey register it from across the table. Just a flicker — her eyes tracking to me, then away, then back. Something shifted in her expression. A decision being made.

She began moving toward the same end of the table.

We were three feet apart when it happened.

She stumbled. It was beautifully done — a sudden lurch forward, her hand shooting out and catching my arm, her fingers gripping hard before she recoiled with a sharp, high cry. She staggered back a step, clutching her wrist to her chest, her face crumpling.

"She grabbed me," Lacey gasped. Her voice carried perfectly across the sudden quiet. "The Luna — she grabbed my wrist —"

Heads turned. The room went still in that particular way of a crowd that has just been given something to react to and is waiting to see which direction to go.

Lacey's eyes filled with tears on cue. She was very good at that — the tears arriving at exactly the right moment, not spilling over, just trembling at the edge, just enough to be visible from across a table.

I stood very still.

I had not touched her. My hands were at my sides. The water pitcher was still on the table, untouched. Anyone who had been watching — actually watching, not just reacting — would have seen that. But the room was not watching. The room was looking at Lacey's face, at the tears, at the way she cradled her wrist like something had been broken.

I looked at her.

She looked back at me, and for just a moment — just a fraction of a second before the performance reasserted itself — I saw it. The calculation. The satisfaction. The absolute certainty that this was going to work.

Sera went very still inside me.

So did I.

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