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When My Mate Chose Her Over Our Ceremony Novel Cover

When My Mate Chose Her Over Our Ceremony

My mother picked the dress. White, fitted through the waist, with a row of tiny pearl buttons running up the back that took her twenty minutes to fasten. She stood behind me in the mirror and smiled like she'd won something. Maybe she had. "You look beautiful, Autumn," she said. I didn't answer. I was thinking about the blood oath document folded in the inside pocket of my jacket — the jacket I'd already packed in a bag in the basement, three floors below us. The Shadowridge pack house was the kind of place designed to make you feel small. High ceilings, stone floors, chandeliers that threw gold light across everything. The ceremonial hall held maybe two hundred wolves, all of them dressed up, all of them watching the doors.
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Chapter 3

Nora Voss did not introduce herself. She looked me over once, the way you look at a piece of equipment you're not sure is worth the storage space, and said, "Shadowridge girl. You're late."

I was four minutes early.

I didn't say that.

"Warm up," she said. "Two laps, full shift if you've got a wolf form worth using. Then we see what you actually are."

I ran the laps in human form. My wolf was present — watchful, coiled — but I wasn't ready to show Nora what she looked like yet. Not until I understood what I was being measured against.

It didn't matter. The drills that followed were not about wolf form. They were about everything underneath it — footwork, reaction time, the gap between knowing a move and executing it when someone twice your size is already moving. Nora paired me with a Delta named Russ who had four inches and sixty pounds on me and the kind of patience that comes from having knocked a lot of people down. He knocked me down seven times in the first session.

I got up seven times.

The seventh time, I was slow about it. My left knee had taken the brunt of the last throw and the ground was cold and hard and for a moment I just stayed there, breathing, staring at the dirt. Not because I was giving up. Because I was calculating. Russ's weight distribution on the follow-through, the half-second he spent resetting his stance, the angle that would let me use his momentum instead of fighting it.

I got up.

Nora blew the whistle. "Stop."

Russ stepped back. I straightened, breathing hard, and waited.

Nora walked toward me with her arms crossed and her expression doing nothing in particular. She stopped two feet away and looked at me for a long moment — the kind of look that is actually an assessment, not a performance.

"Tomorrow," she said. "Five AM. East sparring room. Just you."

She walked away before I could respond.

Russ glanced at me sideways. "That's the private slot," he said, like I might not understand what that meant. "She hasn't given that to a new recruit in two years."

I nodded and went to find the water station. My knee ached. I didn't limp.

The days after that had a rhythm to them — brutal and simple and, in their own way, clarifying. Five AM with Nora, who pushed me past the point where technique lived and into the territory where only instinct remained. Morning drills with the Delta cohort. Afternoons in the strategy room, where I traded Shadowridge intelligence for access to Ironvale's tactical archives and started building a picture of the regional pack network that was considerably more detailed than anything I'd had before. Evenings, I ran the eastern fence line alone.

That was how I found Scout.

Third week. The fence line near the eastern border, where Ironvale's territory pressed up against the rogue corridor. The other wolves on patrol gave the area a wide berth — there had been a half-feral wolf-dog sighted near the tree line for days, and the general consensus was that anything that scarred and that aggressive was not worth the trouble.

I saw him on a Tuesday night. He was at the edge of the tree line, maybe thirty feet out, and he was not doing anything except existing with a kind of furious wariness that I recognized in my bones. Scarred across the muzzle and one shoulder, ribs showing under the rough coat, eyes that tracked every movement with the flat, exhausted alertness of something that had survived by trusting nothing.

The patrol wolf behind me said, "Don't bother. He'll take your hand off."

I sat down in the dirt.

Not toward him. Not reaching. Just — down. Cross-legged, ten feet from the fence line, hands in my lap.

The patrol wolf stared at me. Scout stared at me. I looked at the middle distance and waited.

After a while, Scout retreated into the trees. I got up and went back to the barracks.

I came back the next night. And the night after that.

On the fourth night, he didn't retreat. He stood at the tree line and watched me sit in the dirt for forty minutes, and when I finally stood to leave, he took three steps forward before stopping himself. Like he'd made a decision and then thought better of it.

On the fifth night, he crossed the distance.

It wasn't graceful. He moved in stops and starts, head low, every muscle ready to reverse the decision. He stopped two feet away and we looked at each other in the dark, and I kept my hands still and my breathing even and did not make the mistake of reaching for him.

He pressed his scarred head against my knee.

I sat very still and let him.

After a while, I put one hand on his back, lightly, and he didn't move away. We stayed like that for a long time, in the cold, at the edge of rogue territory, while the night settled around us.

He followed me back to the barracks. He slept at the foot of my bunk. In the morning, Nora looked at him, looked at me, and said nothing — which, from Nora, was the same as approval.

I named him Scout.

---

Three hundred miles south, in the Shadowridge pack house, Elias Montgomery woke to an empty bed and a mate bond that hummed with absence like a frequency just below hearing.

His wolf had not been quiet since the ceremony. Not the restless, manageable pacing of a wolf between shifts — something lower and more persistent, a whine that lived behind his sternum and would not be reasoned with. He had caught her scent for one moment in the ceremonial hall, pine and something warmer underneath, and his wolf had gone completely still with a recognition so absolute it had felt like a physical blow.

He had overridden it. He was good at overriding things.

He called Derek into his office at seven AM and told him to file Autumn's absence as a minor administrative matter. A Luna who had left before the bond was formalized. Handle it quietly, no pack-wide announcement, no search protocol.

Derek wrote it down. He was efficient and thorough and had been Elias's Beta for four years, and his face, when he looked up from his notes, was not entirely neutral.

"Quietly," Elias said again.

"Of course," Derek said. He closed his notebook and left.

Elias stood at the window of his Alpha office and looked out at the Shadowridge grounds and told himself this was a minor complication. A manageable variable. The bond was a formality. The girl had made her choice.

His wolf paced and whined and would not be still.

Elias turned away from the window and went back to work.

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