
Chapter 1 of When My Alpha Chose Her
The crystal chandelier cast a warm, heavy glow over the long mahogany table. It was the welcome banquet for Reese Hudson. She was the daughter of the Silverfang Beta, returning from a five-year pack exchange in Europe. But to everyone in this room, she was something much more important. She was the fated mate who had rejected our Alpha, Tristan Cole, when they were eighteen.
I sat beside Tristan, right where I always sat. I wore a dark silk dress he had picked out for me. My neck, as always, was bare. Five years of sharing his bed, running his pack house, and smiling at his side through every tedious political dinner, and I still didn't have his mark. I used to touch the smooth skin of my neck in the mirror and tell myself he just needed time. I told myself the bond we built was real, and the mark was only a formality.
Then, the heavy oak doors of the dining hall swung open.
Reese walked in.
Tristan stopped mid-sentence. His wine glass froze halfway to his mouth. Beside me, I felt the sudden, crushing weight of his Alpha aura surge into the room. It was thick, possessive, and suffocating. But it wasn't directed at me. I turned to look at him and saw his eyes flashing a bright, predatory gold. His inner wolf was clawing at the surface, desperate and howling.
The entire dining hall went dead silent. You could hear a pin drop on the marble floor.
A heavy floral scent rolled into the room, cutting through the smell of roasted meat and expensive wine. White jasmine. It was thick, intoxicating, and completely undeniable.
Tristan didn't even look at me. His eyes were locked on Reese as she walked down the steps. He leaned forward slightly, his chest rising with a sharp, ragged breath.
"It was always her scent," he murmured.
His voice was low and rough. He spoke as if he were completely alone in the room, totally unguarded. "The one I've been chasing."
The words hit me like a physical blow to the stomach. But I didn't gasp. I didn't flinch. I just sat there as the scattered puzzle pieces of the last five years suddenly clicked into a brutal, humiliating picture.
My own scent carried faint, underlying notes of jasmine. I had always thought he just liked my perfume. Whenever he buried his face in my neck, I thought he was looking for me. Now I understood. He was never looking for me. Five years of devotion, five years of waiting for a mark that was never going to come. I wasn't his mate. I was a scent-shadow. I was just a placeholder kept warm in his bed until the real thing decided to come back.
I placed my linen napkin on the table. My hands didn't shake.
"Excuse me," I said quietly.
Tristan didn't even blink. He didn't notice me speak. He didn't notice me stand up. He didn't notice me walk away.
I walked down the quiet, carpeted hallway and slipped into the pack house study. I closed the heavy oak door behind me and didn't bother to turn on the lights. I walked over to the dark leather chair behind his desk and sat down. I looked at the antique grandfather clock ticking in the corner.
I gave myself exactly one hour.
I didn't cry. Tears were for women who had lost something real. I had only lost an illusion. Instead of crying, I sat in the dark and calculated. I thought about pack law. I had managed Shadowvale's accounts, negotiated their trade routes, and organized their alliances for five years. I knew every legal loophole. I knew exactly what my time was worth.
When the hour was up, I reached over and clicked on the brass desk lamp. I pulled a stack of formal pack documents from the drawer and began to write.
Thirty minutes later, I called for Derek, our Beta, and the pack Gamma. They walked into the study looking tense and confused. Tristan followed them a moment later. He looked deeply annoyed that he had been pulled away from the banquet hall. His eyes were still slightly dilated, his mind clearly back at the table with Reese.
"What is this, Faye?" Tristan asked, his voice tight with impatience. "Make it quick."
I slid the thick stack of papers across the polished mahogany desk. "It's a separation settlement under pack law. I need Derek and the Gamma here as formal witnesses."
Derek frowned, stepping forward. He picked up the top page, his eyes scanning the text. His breath hitched. "Faye, wait. You're asking for half the territory rights to the eastern hunting grounds?"
"And the deed to the lakeside cabin," I added, keeping my voice perfectly flat and professional. "It is standard legal compensation for an unmarked companion of five years who has fulfilled all Luna duties without the title."
Tristan let out a short, distracted sigh. He didn't even look at the numbers on the page. He just looked at the door. He was itching to get back out there. He was desperate to drown in the scent of white jasmine again.
"Fine," Tristan said dismissively. He grabbed a heavy gold pen from the desk.
"Alpha, you need to read this," Derek warned softly, stepping into Tristan's space. "This is millions in pack assets. You can't just—"
"I don't care, Derek," Tristan snapped, his heavy Alpha tone leaking out and forcing the Beta to step back.
Tristan signed his name at the bottom of the pages in quick, messy strokes. He didn't hesitate. He tossed the pen down, the metal clattering loudly against the wood.
"Are we done?" he asked, looking at me for the first time since Reese walked into the dining hall.
He didn't ask me to stay. He didn't ask where I was going. He didn't care.
"We're done," I said.
Tristan turned around and walked out the door without looking back.
Derek looked at me, his expression heavy with a quiet, useless apology. I knew he had seen the truth long before I did. I just nodded at him, picked up the signed papers, and walked out of the study.
I didn't pack much. Just my clothes, my laptop, and my rescue dog, Buster. When I knelt on the cold bedroom floor to clip on Buster's leash, he nudged his wet nose against my cheek and whined softly. I buried my face in his thick fur for a second. The familiar smell of warm amber and honey—my true scent, the one I had unconsciously suppressed for years to highlight the jasmine—flared up in the quiet room to comfort me.
"Let's go, boy," I whispered.
I loaded Buster into the passenger seat of my old truck. I placed the signed settlement papers in the glove box and locked it. It was two in the morning. The massive stone Shadowvale pack house stood quiet against the night sky, except for the faint sound of laughter coming from the dining hall windows.
I started the engine and put the truck in drive. I didn't look in the rearview mirror. I drove through the dark, watching the road turn slick with rain. I left the massive estates of Shadowvale behind, heading straight toward the misty, towering cedar forests of the Pacific Northwest.
I was going back to Cedarhollow. I was going to find my own wolf again.
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