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My Alpha Forgot Our Love
My Alpha Forgot Our Love

My Alpha Forgot Our Love

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I had rehearsed the words so many times that by the time I finally said them, they came out calm. Almost gentle. Like I was reading from a document I'd already signed. "I, Selene Carlson, Luna of Ironvale Pack, reject you, Arthur Miller, Alpha of Ironvale Pack, as my fated mate." The office was quiet except for the rain against the windows. Arthur sat behind his desk — the same desk we'd picked out together eight years ago from a salvage yard when we couldn't afford anything better — and he didn't flinch. He didn't look up. He had a pen in his hand and some kind of territory report open in front of him, and for a moment I thought he hadn't heard me. Then he set the pen down. "Accepted," he said. That was it.

Chapter 1 of My Alpha Forgot Our Love

I had rehearsed the words so many times that by the time I finally said them, they came out calm. Almost gentle. Like I was reading from a document I'd already signed.

"I, Selene Carlson, Luna of Ironvale Pack, reject you, Arthur Miller, Alpha of Ironvale Pack, as my fated mate."

The office was quiet except for the rain against the windows. Arthur sat behind his desk — the same desk we'd picked out together eight years ago from a salvage yard when we couldn't afford anything better — and he didn't flinch. He didn't look up. He had a pen in his hand and some kind of territory report open in front of him, and for a moment I thought he hadn't heard me.

Then he set the pen down.

"Accepted," he said.

That was it. One word. The same tone he used to approve supply requisitions.

I pressed my thumb against the inside of my wrist — a habit I'd developed somewhere in the last three years, when I learned that the body needs somewhere to put things the face can't show — and I waited for something. Pain. Relief. The soul-deep rupture the old stories described. What I felt instead was a dull, spreading ache, like a bruise finally surfacing after the impact had long passed.

He still hadn't looked at me.

I turned and walked out.

The pack house hallway was empty at that hour. My footsteps were quiet on the hardwood floor we'd refinished together the first winter, when Ironvale was still small enough that the Alpha and his Luna did their own repairs. I passed the framed territory maps on the wall — each one marking a year of expansion, a border pushed further, a rival pack absorbed or allied. I had hung every single one of them.

I did not look back.

---

I heard about the crash at dawn.

Marcus Webb knocked on my cottage door while it was still dark, his face doing the careful thing it did when he was managing bad news. He told me Arthur's SUV had gone off the mountain road sometime after midnight. A ravine off Route 9, the rain-slicked stretch we'd always said needed guardrails. Pack warriors found the wreckage at first light.

"He's alive," Marcus said quickly, reading my face. "Diane's with him."

I nodded. I asked if Kason was still asleep. Marcus said yes. I told him I'd be there in twenty minutes and closed the door.

I stood in my kitchen for a moment with my hand flat on the counter. Outside, the rain was still coming down.

I thought about the fact that he had driven straight to Hayley's penthouse celebration. That was where he'd been going. That was the direction he'd chosen, thirty minutes after I spoke the rejection words in his office.

I picked up my keys and drove to the medical wing.

---

Diane Holloway met me in the corridor outside his room. She was still in her working clothes, her dark hair pulled back, the particular stillness around her eyes that meant she'd been up all night managing something serious.

"He's stable," she said. "Head trauma. I've got him sedated for now."

"Hayley?"

Diane's expression shifted — just slightly. "She arrived about an hour ago. She's in there."

I didn't go in immediately. I stood in the corridor and listened to the rain on the medical wing's high windows and thought about nothing in particular. Or tried to.

Then I heard it.

A sound I hadn't heard from Arthur in years — a low, guttural snarl, the kind that came from the wolf rather than the man. Then a crash. Then Hayley's voice, sharp and startled.

I pushed the door open.

Hayley was backed against the far wall, her carefully chosen dress — silk, deep green, the kind of thing you wear to a celebration — slightly askew. Arthur was sitting up in the hospital bed with his canines partially extended, his eyes carrying that particular gold-flecked light that meant Fenris was close to the surface. He had one hand locked around the wrist of a pack warrior who'd been standing guard, and he was scanning the room with the focused, almost frantic energy of someone searching for something specific.

"Her scent is wrong," he said. His voice was rough, stripped of the Alpha tone's usual command — it was just raw, confused urgency. "Why is she here? Where is my mate?"

Hayley straightened. "Arthur, it's me. It's Hayley. You need to—"

"I don't know you." He said it without cruelty, which was somehow worse. Just a flat, certain statement of fact. "Your scent is wrong. I need Selene. Someone bring me Selene."

The room went very still.

I stepped inside.

The moment my scent reached him — honeysuckle and rain, the same as it had always been, the same as the night of our awakening ceremony when he'd crossed an entire bonfire circle just to stand next to me — his whole body changed. The tension left his shoulders. The gold in his eyes deepened. He let go of the warrior's wrist.

"Selene." He said my name like it was the only word he was certain of. He reached for me, his face flooding with a relief so complete and unguarded that it looked like a different person wearing Arthur's face. "I've been asking for you. Why didn't they—"

"Stop."

My voice came out steady. Luna-steady, the register I'd learned to maintain through pack meetings and territory disputes and two years of nursing Lauren through her illness while my mate shared hotel rooms with another woman.

I walked to the foot of his bed. Not close enough to touch.

He looked at me with those open, nineteen-year-old eyes, and I made myself look back.

"I need you to listen to me," I said. "All of it. Without interrupting."

He nodded immediately. Of course he did. This version of him would agree to anything I asked.

So I told him. I kept my voice even and my sentences short. I told him about Hayley — not just the last night, but the years of it, the diplomatic trips, the pack banquets, the way she'd worn Luna-adjacent status like a costume while I raised our son alone in the east wing. I told him about Kason, who was six years old and flinched when he heard his father's footsteps in the hall. I told him that I had spoken the rejection words last night in his office, and that he had accepted them without looking up from his desk, and then driven toward Hayley's celebration.

I watched his face as I spoke.

The joy drained out of it slowly, replaced by something I didn't have a name for — not guilt exactly, because guilt requires memory, and he didn't have that yet. More like the expression of someone watching a building collapse and understanding, distantly, that they are somehow responsible for the fire.

"That's not—" he started. "I wouldn't—"

"You did."

He made a sound then. Not words. Something that came from lower than language — from Fenris, I realized, the wolf clawing at the inside of a man who couldn't yet reconcile what he was hearing with who he believed himself to be. His hands gripped the bed frame. The metal groaned.

Then the panic hit him like a wave.

His breathing fractured. His shoulders hunched forward. The partial shift came without warning — his spine bowing slightly, the bed frame cracking under his grip, Fenris surging up through the seams of a man who was coming apart at the foundations.

I pressed my thumb hard against the inside of my wrist.

I did not go to him.

I turned and walked out of the room, and I did not look back, and I kept my steps even all the way down the corridor until I turned the corner and the sound of him couldn't reach me anymore.

---

Diane found me by the window at the end of the hall.

She stood beside me for a moment without speaking, which was one of the things I'd always valued about her. She didn't fill silence with noise.

"Blood clot," she said finally. "Pressing on the temporal lobe. That's why the memory loss. It may dissolve on its own, or it may need surgery. We can't force the timeline either way."

I nodded.

"Selene." She paused. "His wolf's response to your scent — I've been a pack healer for nineteen years. I've never observed a mate-recognition reaction that strong. Not clinically. Not even close."

I looked out at the rain.

"I know," I said.

That was the worst part. I had always known. Even last night, standing in his office, speaking the words into his indifference — I had known that somewhere inside Arthur, Fenris still remembered exactly who I was.

It just hadn't been enough.

"I want him discharged to pack grounds," I said. "Not the main pack house."

Diane nodded slowly. "I'll arrange it."

I thanked her and walked back toward the exit, back toward my car, back toward the cottage where Kason was still sleeping and the wildflowers on the windowsill were the ones I'd picked myself.

The rain was letting up. Barely. But enough.

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