Follow
Chapters
Share
When The Alpha Chose My Half-Sister Novel Cover

When The Alpha Chose My Half-Sister

The night they crowned Dominick the youngest Alpha to ever unite three territories in the Pacific Northwest, I stood beside him and smiled so hard my jaw ached. The great hall of Ironveil was packed. Every ranked wolf in the region had come — Alphas, Betas, Gammas, their Lunas draped in silk and territorial pride. The chandeliers threw warm gold light across the crowd, and the noise was enormous: laughter, clinking glasses, the low hum of wolves who could feel the shift in power and wanted to be close to it. Dominick stood at the center of it all in a black suit that fit him like it had been stitched onto his body, his Alpha aura rolling off him in waves so thick I could feel it pressing against my skin even though I was his mate, even though I was supposed to be immune. He looked like a king. He looked like he had been born for this. I wore a deep emerald gown, fitted at the waist, my dark hair pinned up to show the curve of my neck — the unmarked side, because we hadn't done the marking ceremony yet. That was supposed to come after the coronation. A private thing.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

I didn't storm in. That's what people expect — the wronged Luna, eyes red, voice cracking, making a scene that everyone can dismiss as emotion. I walked in the way I always walked into Dominick's office: straight spine, measured pace, the kind of calm that makes a room pay attention before you've said a single word.

Reid was already there, standing near the window with a tablet in his hand. He looked up when I entered. Caden came in two steps behind me and took his position by the door without being asked.

Dominick was at his desk. He rose when he saw me — automatic, the way he always did, that ingrained Alpha courtesy that had once made me think he was different from my father. He smiled.

"Sasha. I was just about to come find you — "

"The alliance token," I said. "The one you sent to Goldenridge. I need it."

The smile didn't disappear. It just went still. Like a photograph of a smile.

"That's a diplomatic instrument," he said. "It's part of the ongoing — "

"Diplomatic protocol." I said it before he could. Not mocking. Just naming it. "Right."

He held my gaze. I held his. The mate bond hummed between us, warm and steady, the way it always did, and I let it hum. I gave him nothing through it.

He was waiting for me to ask the real question. To say her name. To give him the opening to explain, to manage, to deploy that Alpha certainty that had always made problems feel solvable.

I didn't give it to him.

I walked to his desk.

The token was in the second drawer — I knew because I had watched him place it there three weeks ago, the night he came back from what the schedule logs called an alliance consultation. A flat disc of hammered silver, Ironveil's crest on one side, the formal seal of the gifting Alpha on the other. Heavy. Significant. The kind of object that meant exactly one thing in pack custom and nothing else.

I picked it up.

I don't know exactly what happened in that moment. I've thought about it since. Sera surged — not in anger, not in grief, but in something older and more absolute, the way a Luna's aura moves when she is claiming what is hers. It came off me in a wave I didn't consciously produce.

To my left, I heard Reid make a sound — low, involuntary. I glanced over. He had tilted his head back, the line of his throat exposed, his eyes slightly unfocused. Behind me, I heard Caden do the same.

Both of them. Baring their necks. Without being asked.

I turned back to Dominick.

He was standing very still behind his desk. His jaw was tight. His eyes were on me with an expression I had never seen on him before — not anger, not guilt, something more complicated than either. Something that looked almost like fear.

Good.

"Sasha." His voice was quiet. The Alpha tone was gone. Just his voice, stripped down. "Let me explain."

"You had seven meetings with Goldenridge," I said. "All scheduled when I was occupied. You sent her a ceremonial gift collar six weeks ago. You gifted a formal alliance token to her pack." I closed my fingers around the token. "What exactly would you like to explain?"

His mouth opened. Closed.

There it was. The silence that confirmed everything I already knew.

I didn't wait for him to find the words. I turned and walked to the door. Caden stepped aside to let me through.

"Sasha."

I paused in the doorway. I didn't turn around.

"The banquet is in two days," I said. "Make sure you're there."

I walked out.

The hallway was empty. My footsteps were quiet on the stone floor. I kept walking until I reached the east wing, until the door of my study was closed behind me and the lock clicked and there was nothing between me and the silence.

I set the token on my desk.

Sera was very still inside me. Not the stillness of grief. The stillness of something decided.

"Two days," she said.

"Two days," I said.

I sat down and did not cry.

---

I learned later — much later — what happened after I left.

Dominick went to Elio's quarters that same evening. I can picture it: the knock, the soft light inside, the smell of chamomile tea that Elio always made when someone came to him with something difficult. The careful, gentle voice. The measured words.

Elio told him my reaction was exactly what the exposure therapy was designed to produce. That the confrontation was necessary. That I would process the pain and emerge stronger. That the plan was working.

Dominick believed him.

He was a wolf who had never been wrong about anything tactical. He had united three territories before the age of thirty. He had outmaneuvered every rival, every challenge, every threat the Pacific Northwest had put in front of him. He trusted his Healer the way he trusted his own instincts — completely, without reservation, because both had always been right.

He did not come to me that night.

He did not explain.

He trusted the plan.

I lay in bed in the east wing guest room — I had moved there quietly, without announcement, the way you move a piece on a board — and I listened to the pack house settle into silence and I thought about that. About a wolf who loved me enough to try to fix me, and not enough to ask me first. About the specific arrogance of someone who mistakes management for care.

Sera stirred.

"He thinks he's helping," she said. There was no warmth in it. Just observation.

"I know," I said.

"Does that change anything?"

I looked at the ceiling. The token was in my desk drawer, two rooms away. The territorial contracts were filed behind it. The banquet invitations had gone out four days ago. Every ranked wolf in Ironveil would be there. Every allied representative. Every witness I would ever need.

I touched the unmarked side of my neck.

"No," I said. "It doesn't."

Outside, the wind moved through the eastern ridge. Somewhere in the pack house, a door closed. The bond hummed, faint and warm, the way it always had.

I closed my eyes and let it hum.

One more day.

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 I died, Alpha went mad. Novel Cover
8.0
Everyone in the Shadowfang Pack knew that Alpha Kael was fiercely devoted to his Luna. To save me, he had sacrificed his own soul to shadow magic. He had endured the agony of being flayed alive, just to keep me breathing. He had torn open his own heart, feeding me his blood, just so we could be together. For three hundred years, I firmly believed I was his Luna, his other half. But now, I was looking right at him. Kael, my Kael, thrusting his hips forward in a violent, primal rhythm, pinning a woman against the mattress. A bell hung around her ankle, chiming with his every movement. It was Lyra. My handmaiden. Her magic-laced voice slithered into my mind via the mind-link. "Does it hurt, Luna? The Bell of Severance only rings when I feel... pleasure. And with every chime, your soul shatters a little more." Kael kissed her passionately. "Make it ring louder. I want to hear it."
He Was Mine, Until the Hotel Night Novel Cover
8.7
Betrayed. Murdered. Reborn. I was the perfect Luna-to-be—until my Alpha fiancé and my best friend shoved me off a balcony. Now I’m back, one week before my death, armed with the truth and a hunger for revenge. I’ll play the sweet, innocent bride everyone expects, all while setting traps they’ll never see coming. Every smile hides a blade, every toast a warning. This time, I’m not here to survive. I’m here to win—and when I’m done, they’ll wish they’d never touched me.
My Alpha Chose His Bastard Over Our Pup Novel Cover
9.6
For five years, Serena Blackwell endured miscarriages, manipulation, and a mother-in-law who called her "defective." She built Silvercrest Pack's business empire from nothing—all while her Alpha husband, Ryker Stone, hid a mistress and secret son behind her back. When Serena finally gets pregnant again, she expects joy. Instead, she discovers the truth: Ryker's "dead" secretary Victoria is very much alive—and has been raising his four-year-old son in a penthouse across town. Worse? Ryker wants Serena to terminate her pregnancy so his "real" heir can inherit. But the Luna everyone underestimated has a secret of her own. She isn't the orphan Ryker's family pitied. She's the hidden daughter of the Crescent Moon Alpha—a bloodline so powerful, even the Elders bow to it. Now, with a pup growing inside her and revenge burning in her heart, Serena is done playing the grateful wife. She'll take back her company. She'll expose Victoria's darkest secret. And she'll make Ryker watch as everything he built crumbles around him. Some wolves bite back.
My Alpha Chose My Sister Novel Cover
8.5
Five years. That was one thousand, eight hundred, and twenty-five days of waking up cold. Today was our anniversary. Not that anyone in the Blood Moon Pack would be celebrating. To them, this wasn't the day their Alpha and Luna were united; it was the day the "real" Luna ran away, and the spare was shoved into a white dress to stop a war. I sat at my vanity, the enchanted glass reflecting a face that looked too pale, too tired for twenty-one. My hand drifted up to my neck, hovering over the smooth, unmarked skin there. A dull, throbbing ache pulsed beneath my fingertips—mate sickness. It was a low-level hum of pain that never went away, the physical consequence of a bond that had been legally recognized but never sealed with a bite. "Happy anniversary, Leona," I whispered to the empty room.
Reborn Surgeon: The Billionaire’s Secret Obsession Novel Cover
7.4
Standing on the edge of a limestone quarry in the pouring rain, I thought we were just having another family argument. Then my mother, Ardell, screamed that I’d let the life insurance lapse, and my brother, Hakeem, stepped out of the shadows with a cold, calculating look in his eyes. I told them I knew the truth—that Hakeem had cut the brake lines on my father’s car—but they didn't flinch. Instead, Hakeem shoved me hard, sending me tumbling into the abyss. I hit a jagged ledge thirty feet down, the sound of my spine snapping like a dry branch echoing through the rain. As I lay paralyzed and broken, my mother watched from above, asking if I was dead yet, before Hakeem whistled for the starving wild dogs that lived in the quarry floor. "Nature will clean up the mess," Hakeem said, walking away while the first set of teeth sank into my throat. The agony was a tidal wave, but the rage was hotter, a nuclear hatred for the family that stole my future and the daughter I’d never see grow up. I died in that dirt, consumed by fire and teeth, wondering how a mother could choose a car payment over her own child's life. But then, I gasped for air, sitting bolt upright in my old trailer bedroom. I looked at the calendar: May 12, 2014. I was seventeen again, but I wasn't the same girl. Inside this malnourished body was the mind of a world-class trauma surgeon and the elite hacker known as 'Phantom.' This time, I wasn't going to the quarry; I was going for their throats.
Rejected Mate's Vengeance Novel Cover
9.5
I had been involved with Ronan for three years, yet he never wanted our relationship to be public. Even when pack members whispered about us after spotting us together, he would immediately deny it, saying, "We’re just packmates." When the other Deltas sneered at me, calling me delusional for thinking I could ever be worthy of a Beta, he brushed it off lightly, saying, "Don’t worry about it." I couldn’t understand why a Beta needed to maintain an image of being unmated. He claimed he was at the height of his career, with the Alpha relying on him heavily, and asked me to be patient. But then, when he was caught embracing Callie Jackson, a Gamma from the Crimson Fang Pack, by a patrol group, the pack erupted with gossip. He quickly called a pack gathering, standing before the Alpha and the rest of the Silver Moon Pack, and publicly declared, "Let me introduce you to my mate." That was when I knew my love story had ended. Ronan’s announcement spread like wildfire through the pack. Whispers and murmurs filled the training grounds, the dens, and even the healer’s den. Some warriors called him a hypocrite for maintaining an unmated image to benefit from the attention of the pack’s females, while others praised him as a true Beta who gave his mate a sense of security. Callie quickly stepped forward, her voice sweet but carrying an undercurrent of triumph. "Life is precious, grateful to have you by my side," she said, her words echoing through the gathered crowd.