APKDock Logo
Chapters
share
After My Alpha Marked the Omega, I Walked Away Novel Cover

After My Alpha Marked the Omega, I Walked Away

Avery spent years devoted to Alpha Silas, certain their deep connection would last forever. Her reality is destroyed when Silas chooses to mark a delicate Omega, shattering Avery’s heart and trust. Refusing to endure the humiliation of his betrayal, she decides to break their bond and abandon her pack. Now, Avery ventures into the unknown alone, determined to forge a future far away from the man who discarded their unspoken vow for another.
Chapters
share

Chapter 2

The pack house had a particular smell in the early morning — coffee from the kitchen, pine from the tree line, the faint metallic edge of the ventilation system that nobody had ever bothered to fix. I had lived inside that smell for seven years. I knew every note of it.

Now I moved through it like I was already gone.

The pack archives were in the basement, behind the administrative office. Nobody stopped me. Nobody asked what I was doing pulling training logs from the filing cabinets at six in the morning in yesterday's ceremonial gown, the hem still damp from the grass. I think they were afraid to. Or maybe they just didn't know what to say to a woman who had walked out of a rejection with her spine straight and her face dry, and who had come back the next morning with a notebook and a pen.

I worked methodically. That was the only way I knew how to do anything that mattered.

Patrol schedules first. I pulled the last four months and laid them side by side on the archive table. The pattern was not subtle once you knew to look for it. Cassandra had been assigned to the eastern border rotation in late spring — standard Omega duty, light work, nothing a newly awakened wolf couldn't handle. Except she had missed shifts. Six of them. And each time, the gap had been quietly filled by a reassigned Delta warrior who should have been on the northern perimeter.

I wrote it down. Date, shift, name of the warrior pulled, name of the border left short.

Then I pulled the training evaluations.

Zane had a system for those — ranked wolves reviewed monthly, Omegas quarterly. Cassandra's file was thin. Thinner than it should have been for someone four months into pack integration. Two evaluations where there should have been four, and the two that existed had been signed off by Zane himself rather than the Gamma, which was not protocol. The scores were generous in a way that had no basis in the attached performance notes.

I wrote that down too.

By midmorning I had six pages. By afternoon, nine.

Pack members passed the archive doorway throughout the day. Some slowed. A few looked in. Nobody came inside. I heard Cassandra's voice once, drifting down from the upper floor — that soft, uncertain lilt she used when she wanted something, the one that made her sound like she was always one bad moment away from falling apart. I heard Zane's voice answer, low and careful, the way you talk to something fragile.

Sela made a sound inside me. Not a howl. Something quieter and colder.

I turned a page and kept writing.

---

The supply distribution incident happened on the third day.

I heard about it the way I heard about most things now — through the particular quality of silence that moves through a pack house when something has gone wrong and nobody wants to be the one to say it out loud.

Cassandra had reassigned the Omega work rotations for the weekly supply run. She had done it without consulting Gamma Reid, without checking the border schedule, without apparently understanding that the eastern rotation and the supply rotation shared three of the same wolves. The result was a six-hour window where the eastern border had no coverage at all.

In a pack with active rogue activity two territories over, that was not a scheduling inconvenience. That was a liability.

Reid brought it to Zane. I was in the hallway outside the Alpha's office when it happened — not eavesdropping, just walking past with my notebook, the way I had been walking past things for three days. The door was not fully closed.

Zane's voice was quiet. Controlled. The voice of a man managing a problem he had already decided not to acknowledge as a problem.

"Fix the rotation," he said. "Don't make it an issue."

"Alpha, the eastern border was unmanned for —"

"I said fix it, Reid."

A pause. Then Reid's footsteps, moving away.

I stood in the hallway for a moment after that. The wallpaper there was a dark green pattern I had always meant to replace. I had a paint sample in a drawer somewhere, a warm cream color I had picked out last spring. I thought about that for a second — the paint sample, the drawer, the version of myself who had spent an afternoon choosing wall colors for a life that was never going to happen.

Then I opened my notebook and wrote down the date, the time, and what I had heard.

---

Marcus found me in the library on the fourth evening.

I was at the long table near the window, the notebook open, a stack of resource allocation records beside it. The lamp was on. Outside, the sun was going down through the trees in long orange strips.

He sat across from me without asking. That was very Marcus — he had always been the kind of Beta who understood that some conversations don't begin with permission.

He did not look at the notebook. He did not look at the records. He looked at me, and his expression was the careful, neutral look of a man who had spent years being loyal to someone and was currently finding that loyalty uncomfortable to wear.

"I'm not here to apologize for him," he said.

"I know," I said.

"But I was in that room." He paused. "I heard the words. I watched you stand up." Another pause, shorter. "I won't lie to the Council about what I saw."

It was not an offer of alliance. Marcus was Zane's Beta and he would be Zane's Beta until one of them was dead. I understood that. I did not need him to choose a side.

What I needed was exactly what he was offering: a witness who would tell the truth.

"Thank you, Marcus," I said.

He nodded once. He stood. He left without another word, his footsteps quiet on the library floor.

I watched the door close behind him.

Then I looked down at my notebook — ten pages now, eleven if I counted the resource allocation summary I had started that morning — and I thought about the Pack Council. About pack law. About the specific, procedural language of territorial severance and safe passage rights, which I had been reading about in the pack's legal archive for the past two days.

Sela was quiet inside me. Not the howling quiet of the first night. Something different. The quiet of a wolf who has stopped grieving and started watching.

I turned to a clean page.

I wrote: COUNCIL PRESENTATION — DRAFT ONE.

And I kept going.

You may also like

After My Alpha Chose Her Over Our Pup Novel Cover
7.9
Betrayed by her Alpha mate, a devastated mother must face a cruel reality after he abandons their child to rescue another woman. Forced to navigate the agony of rejection and shifting pack loyalties, she fights to protect her pup and rebuild her shattered life. Throughout this emotional journey of healing and self-discovery, she uncovers a hidden inner strength. Now, she seeks to reclaim her worth and find a true love that will never cast her aside.
After My Mate Poisoned Me, I Unleashed Silver Novel Cover
9.5
When her beloved mate poisons her, a werewolf is left for dead. Yet, the lethal silver meant to kill her triggers a dormant, formidable power instead of ending her life. No longer a submissive shadow, she rises with newfound strength and a thirst for justice. As she unleashes a silver storm against her betrayers, she fights to reclaim her future. This is a tale of broken bonds and a woman transforming her agony into an unstoppable force.
Betrayed by the Alpha and His Hidden Heir Novel Cover
9.7
Elara’s world falls apart when Alpha Silas, her mate, discards her for a woman who secretly bore his successor. Exiled and devastated, she is forced to navigate treacherous pack politics while enduring the sting of his profound betrayal. As Silas prioritizes his legacy and hidden family, Elara fights to forge a future far from the man who sacrificed their sacred bond for a secret past. Her journey is defined by survival, agony, and shattered trust.
Luna Rejects Cheating Alpha Novel Cover
8.2
Lyra is devastated when she catches her fated mate, Alpha Kael, in a betrayal with another woman. Refusing to endure his infidelity, she rejects their sacred connection and escapes the pack. Yet, Kael is determined to reclaim his Luna, sparking a fierce pursuit. While navigating treacherous pack politics and her own conflicted emotions, Lyra discovers a mysterious power awakening inside her that could change her destiny forever.
My Alpha Betrayed My Trust Novel Cover
8.2
Elara’s life crumbles when her fated mate, the Silver Moon Pack’s Alpha, forsakes their bond for a heartless political pact. Banished and devastated, she escapes into the wild while harboring a monumental secret: she is pregnant with his child. While Elara carves out a hidden existence, her former partner recognizes his grave error. A perilous pursuit unfolds as the powerful leader desperately tries to track down the woman he once threw away.
Reborn Heiress: The Predator In Silk Novel Cover
8.7
Betrayed and murdered, Jane King awakens on the very night her life was ruined. Now armed with future knowledge, the former charity case transforms into a ruthless strategist seeking vengeance against the Norman family. As she meticulously orchestrates their downfall, the mysterious Hudson Ellison observes her lethal evolution. Instead of stopping her, he offers a dark alliance. Jane must decide if partnering with him leads to power or her own destruction.