Follow
Chapters
Share
When My Alpha’s Lies Killed Our Pup Novel Cover

When My Alpha’s Lies Killed Our Pup

I have been Luna of the Ironcrest Pack for seven years. I know what silence from Ezra feels like. It has a texture — cold and deliberate, like a door shut not from the wind but from a hand. This one has lasted seven days, and on the morning of the eighth, he walks into my dressing room without knocking. I am sitting at the vanity, working a comb through my hair. I watch him in the mirror. He does not look at my face. He sets a glossy black box down on the vanity surface — not handed to me, just dropped — and takes one step back, the way you'd put down something that isn't yours and never was. "Joelle didn't want these." His voice is flat. Finished.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

I take the long way back through the pack house.

Not on purpose. My feet just don't want to go the direct route — past the kitchen, past the scent of the morning teas that have been sitting on my nightstand for seven years — and I let them choose. The east corridor is quieter. Darker. The afternoon light comes in thin through the high windows and makes long rectangles on the stone floor.

I have my hand against my stomach.

I don't realize it until I'm almost at the bend near Ezra's study, and then I make myself drop it. Slowly. The way you lower something fragile.

The door is half open. That's the only reason I hear it.

Ezra's voice — low, the register he uses when he is relaxed and certain he is not being overheard. Warm, even. I have not heard that warmth directed anywhere near me in longer than I can accurately calculate.

"— barely even registers anymore." A soft laugh on the other end of the call. His voice again: "No, I'm serious. Her wolf is practically dormant. She walks around like everything is fine. She has no idea."

I stop.

My back is against the wall beside the door frame. The stone is cold through my jacket. I don't breathe. I press two fingers to the inside of my left wrist and I count my pulse and I listen.

"The dosage Dr. Renn worked out is — yeah, it's been working beautifully." A pause. I can hear Joelle's laugh on the other end, light and pleased, the sound of someone hearing good news about a project going well. "Her body's too damaged anyway. Even without it, she probably couldn't — " He lets the sentence trail off the way you trail off when the rest of it is understood and you don't need to say it out loud. "It's been years, Joelle. She's not a problem."

Not a problem.

I stand there in the corridor for a long moment. The light makes its rectangles on the floor. Somewhere down the hall a door opens and closes. My pulse counts itself under my two fingers — steady, steady, steady — and I memorize every word the way I memorize a financial record, the way I memorize anything I am going to need to know exactly later.

Then I walk away. Quietly. The way you walk when you know how to be invisible in your own house.

I go upstairs. I sit on the edge of the bed in the room that has been mine alone for more nights than I have counted, and I put both hands flat on my knees, and I look at the blank wall across from me.

Not a problem.

My hand wants to go back to my stomach. I let it.

---

I make the call at eleven that night.

The house is quiet. Ezra is not home — or he is somewhere in it that is not near me, which amounts to the same thing. I sit in the small chair by the window with my knees pulled up and my phone against my ear, and when Marcus picks up on the second ring I feel something ease slightly in my chest. He is the one person in my life who has never known me as anything other than Helen Pierce. Not Helen Dixon. Not the Luna. Just a client with good instincts and a maiden name on the account paperwork.

"I need a cashier's check," I say. "Ten million. Drawn in my maiden name. How soon?"

A short pause — not surprise, just the sound of him doing the math. "Forty-eight hours if I start liquidating tonight."

"Start tonight."

"Helen." His voice is careful. Not probing. Just careful. "You okay?"

"I'm fine," I say. Same way I said it to Dr. Voss this afternoon. Statement of fact. Five minutes at a time.

He doesn't push. That is why I called him.

"Forty-eight hours," he says again, and I hear the click of keys in the background before we've even hung up.

I sit with the phone in my lap for a while after. Through the window, the Ironcrest grounds are dark and still — the tree line, the patrol paths, the pale shape of the territory marker stones just visible at the edge of the light. Seven years of landscape. I know every corner of it the way you know a place you were never quite allowed to own.

My wolf stirs once, low and slow, like someone turning over in their sleep.

I let her. I don't push her back down.

---

The country club sits on the border of pack land like a place that has agreed not to ask too many questions — old money, white tablecloths, a dining room that is always just quiet enough. I chose it because it is technically neutral ground, and because Margaret Dixon has lunched here every Wednesday for twenty years, and because I needed her to be somewhere comfortable when I showed her what I had brought.

She is already seated when I arrive. Black blazer. Silver at her temples. The kind of posture that announces, without words, that she has navigated harder rooms than this one.

I sit down across from her. I do not apologize for being two minutes early.

She studies me the way she always has — measuring, unhurried, with that particular quality of assessment that tells you she has already formed half her conclusions and is only here to confirm the details. For a moment neither of us speaks. The room murmurs softly around us. A server approaches and Margaret lifts one hand an inch off the table, the smallest possible gesture, and he redirects without comment.

I take the envelope from my coat and slide it across the white linen.

She doesn't open it immediately. She looks at it. Then she looks at me.

"Ten million," I say. "Cashier's check. Drawn in my maiden name, which you'll find is the name on the hedge fund that has been quietly generating that and more for the past six years." I keep my voice even. "In return, I want one thing. A written release of mate-debt — signed and witnessed — and an authorized transfer of my mother's medical care to a facility of my choosing, effective immediately. Her files, her care team, and her treatment costs move with her. Ironcrest's name is off every document."

Margaret opens the envelope.

She reads the check. She looks at the number once, then again, the way you look at a number when the amount isn't the surprise but the source is. Then she is quiet for a moment, and I watch something move through her expression — not guilt, exactly. More like recognition. The look of a woman who has known a thing for a long time and has just been presented with the invoice.

She reaches into her own bag. Withdraws a pen.

"I'll need a document drawn," she says.

"I have one." I take the second paper from my coat and set it on the table.

She reads it. She doesn't take long. She signs at the bottom with the pen held steady, the signature the same controlled script I have seen on pack documents for seven years, and folds the check into her bag without another look at it.

Neither of us orders coffee.

We sit for a moment in the quiet room with the white tablecloths and the soft ambient noise of other people's ordinary afternoons. I take the signed document and fold it carefully, and put it inside my coat, against my chest, next to the two printed pages I have carried there since yesterday.

Margaret Dixon looks at me across the table.

For a single, unguarded second her face does something I have never seen it do in seven years of holiday dinners and pack ceremonies and all the formal, performative occasions where daughters-in-law and matriarchs hold their positions and smile.

She looks sorry.

Not enough to have said anything. Not enough to have done anything. But sorry.

I stand up. I button my coat. I look at her steadily, without anger and without warmth, the way you look at something you understand completely and are finished trying to change.

"Thank you, Margaret," I say.

Then I walk out into the grey afternoon, my mother's freedom folded against my heartbeat, and for the first time in a very long time, I feel the specific weight of a leash going slack.

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Open the Official Website

You may also like

After My Alpha Fathered A Child With His Mistress Novel Cover
8.7
I stood before the full-length mirror in my dressing room, smoothing down the front of my custom-designed silver gown. The fabric caught the light with every movement, shimmering like the scales of a fish—or perhaps like the tears I'd been holding back for years. "It's just one day," I whispered to my reflection, reaching up to touch the moonstone pendant hanging at my throat. "Mom's pendant always brings luck." My mother's voice seemed to echo in my mind: *The Moon Goddess watches over those who sacrifice for love.* I'd sacrificed everything—my inheritance, my ancestral lands, my family's legacy—all for Enzo's dream. The Silver Creek Training Center would be the largest of its kind in three territories, a state-of-the-art facility that would secure our pack's future for generations. "We can't have children," Enzo had told me three years ago, his eyes downcast as he explained his supposed battle injury. "But we can leave a different kind of legacy." I'd believed him. I'd sold everything my parents left me, pouring millions into his vision. A knock at the door pulled me from my thoughts. "Ready, sweetheart?" Enzo's voice carried that familiar timber-and-pine scent, though today there was something else beneath it—something sweet and floral that made my wolf, Luna, stir uneasily within me.
BENEATH THE MOON'S BITE  Novel Cover
7.4
In a world ruled by dominance and desire, being an Omega is a curse, especially when you're mine. On his eighteenth birthday, Luca wakes to a nightmare, his wolf has chosen the lowest rank of all. An Omega. The scent of submission, the mark of shame and the kind of wolf others own, use, and discard. But Luca isn't broken, he's burning and the only one who's ever made him feel safe is Rafe, his best friend, his protector and his temptation. Then Rafe shifts and becomes an Alpha and their wolves recognize each other, the bond between them is instant, magnetic, and utterly forbidden. Because an Alpha claiming a Male Omega? That's forbidden, but this Omega? He's different Now their connection is more than a secret, It's a sin to their world, a deadly craving, slow, delicious and primal to fall into. And when one bite can seal a bond or spark a war, how long can they resist it? He's not supposed to want him. But gods, he does. And once an Alpha touches what's his... he never lets go.
Betrayed by My Alpha Mate Novel Cover
9.2
While I was helping Alpha Timothy copy some files for the pack, I accidentally stumbled upon a hidden photo album. Without thinking, I opened it and was overwhelmed by a flood of images. The screen was filled with pictures of him with another she-wolf. The realization hit me hard—my mate was seeing someone else. Just then, my phone buzzed with a message from my best friend, Murphy, a Delta in the Moonlight Pack like me. "Iliana, I’ve got something to tell you. Alpha Timothy is planning to propose to you on Thanksgiving!" My chest tightened, the air suddenly feeling too heavy to breathe. The bond between us, once strong and unshakable, now felt like a fragile thread on the verge of snapping. I clenched my fists, trying to steady myself. How could this be happening?
His Untamed Prey: The Reborn Heiress Novel Cover
7.1
I was the top commander of a black-ops military program. After slaughtering my way through a hellish mission, I reached the extraction helicopter, trusting my second-in-command to watch my back. But the moment our hands locked, he didn't pull me up. Instead, he plunged a syringe of lethal neurotoxin directly into my neck. He aimed his gun at my chest, coldly stating that I was too dangerous to live. My lungs stopped, and I died in a pool of my own blood. But the endless blackness suddenly shattered. My consciousness violently forced its way into a new, broken shell. I woke up in a freezing alley, soaked in muddy rain. This body belonged to seventeen-year-old Eliza Wyatt. A massive wave of foreign memories crashed into my brain. Her own younger sister had just stood at the top of the stairs with a mocking smile, watching street thugs beat Eliza to death. "Take good care of the Wyatt family's eldest daughter. Tonight is the night she finally disappears." The endless humiliation, the cold stares of her family, and the brutal betrayal by her own blood flashed before my eyes. Why was this fragile girl treated like garbage and pushed to her death by the very people who should have protected her? I looked down at my pale, trembling hands. The top commander was dead, but in this bleeding shell, Eliza Wyatt was very much alive. I picked up a switchblade from the bloody puddle and stood up in the storm. It was time to hunt.
Luna Reclaims Her Power Novel Cover
8.5
I stared at the adoption papers spread across Vincent's mahogany desk, the black ink swimming before my eyes like poison seeping through water. My hands trembled as I gripped the edge of the chair, my knuckles white against the dark leather. The official seal of the state adoption agency seemed to mock me from the pristine white pages. "Sign them, Carolina." Vincent's voice cut through the suffocating silence of his office, cold and detached as if he were discussing pack finances rather than our children. Our triplets. The three perfect pups I'd carried for nine months, nursed through sleepless nights, and loved with every fiber of my being. Behind him, Sloane Webb stood with her manicured hand resting possessively on his shoulder, her crimson nails digging slightly into the fabric of his Alpha ceremonial jacket. A triumphant smile played at the corners of her glossy lips, and her green eyes sparkled with malicious satisfaction. She looked like a predator who'd finally cornered her prey. "Multiple pups weaken the Alpha bloodline," Sloane whispered, her voice honey-sweet but laced with venom.
Marked By Two Worlds Novel Cover
9.7
Elara Voss was rejected by her Alpha on the night of the Blood Moon - cast aside as a nobody with no wolf, no rank, and no future. She ran. But fate had other plans. In the human world, she collides with Damien Crest - cold, ruthless billionaire by day, the last living Shadowking by night. He offers her a contract marriage. She has nowhere else to go. But ancient markings are awakening on her skin. A god is whispering her name. And Kael, the fearsome Werewolf High King, has declared across all supernatural realms that she is his fated mate. Two kings. Two worlds. One woman who was never supposed to matter. They all rejected her once. Now they'll burn their empires down to claim her.