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The Alpha’s Daughter Stole My Marriage and My Pregnancy Novel Cover

The Alpha’s Daughter Stole My Marriage and My Pregnancy

After a cruel betrayal by the Alpha’s daughter, a woman finds her future shattered. Her rival’s schemes have stolen both her intended marriage and her unborn child, leaving her to navigate the pain of lost dreams. In a world of primal instincts and shifting pack loyalties, she must confront ultimate deception to reclaim her dignity. This werewolf romance explores love and jealousy as she seeks justice and the strength to overcome her stolen past.
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Chapter 2

I found Gavin in his study that evening.

He was at his desk, a map of the northern border spread open in front of him, a half-empty glass of whiskey at his elbow. He looked up when I came in. The lamp behind him cast his face in warm gold, and for a moment he was just my mate — broad-shouldered, familiar, the Alpha whose scent still made my wolf lean forward even now.

I closed the door behind me.

"The wolf-dog won't eat," I said. "He's been retreating to corners. Tucking his tail whenever Rosie comes near him."

Gavin leaned back in his chair. "He's adjusting. New presence in the house. It throws animals off."

"I found wolfsbane traces in his bowl."

He didn't move. His expression didn't change. He just looked at me, steady and patient, the way he looked at a junior warrior who'd brought him an incomplete report. "Wolfsbane drifts in from the northern runs," he said. "It catches on boots. The patrol wolves track it through the kitchen all the time. You know this."

I did know. That was the problem — it was a reasonable explanation. Just reasonable enough.

"Gavin." I kept my voice even. "Koda hasn't acted like this before. Not once, in all the time he's been with me."

"He's old," Gavin said, and turned back to his map. "Old animals get set in their ways. A child in the house is an adjustment. Give it time."

His Alpha tone wasn't fully deployed — just a thread of it, threaded through his voice like wire in silk. My wolf's ears flattened anyway. It was reflexive, bone-deep, the way a decade of pack conditioning responds to an Alpha's certainty. I felt my next argument soften before I could speak it.

I looked at the side of his face. He was already studying the border map again. The conversation was over.

He held eye contact with me for one long moment before he'd looked away — just a half-second too long. Long enough for me to catalog it and file it somewhere cold and quiet inside my chest.

I didn't push. Not yet.

"Goodnight," I said instead, and left him to his maps.

---

The Omega's name was Petra.

I only learned that later. At the time, I barely knew her face — she was new to the pack house rotation, young, careful-moving, the kind of Omega who had perfected the art of being useful without being visible. She kept the kitchen running in the hours before and after the ranked wolves moved through. She wiped down surfaces, restocked shelves, and noticed things.

She told me, weeks after the fact, what she had seen.

The first time was a Tuesday. Rosie had come into the kitchen in the late afternoon, when the cook was resting and Petra was the only one there. The girl had moved to the cabinet where the herbal tins were kept — legitimately kept, because Lena the Healer maintained a working stock of pack medicines throughout the house. Petra had been at the sink, her back half-turned, hands in the wash water. She caught the movement in her peripheral vision: small fingers, quick and precise, lifting a tin she had no business lifting.

Petra went still. She didn't turn around. She watched the reflection in the window above the sink.

Rosie's hands were steady. That was what Petra remembered. A child's hands, but none of a child's uncertainty. She measured the amount with the focus of someone who had done this before or thought carefully about how much was too much to notice.

She tipped it into the ceramic mug that had been set out for my evening tea. Stirred it once. Set the tin back with the label facing the same direction it had been before.

Then she walked out of the kitchen, and Petra stood at the sink with water going cold around her wrists and said nothing.

She said nothing the second time, too. And the third.

Not because she didn't care. Because she was an Omega, new to this house, and the girl was under the Alpha's protection, and Petra had learned early what happened when an Omega's word went up against the pack hierarchy's comfort. The story would write itself without her help: the Omega had misunderstood, the Omega was confused, the Omega had something against the child. It wouldn't even need to be said cruelty. It would just be the natural weight of rank, pressing her account flat.

So she memorized instead. Every detail, every time — the day, the hour, which tin, how much, how long Rosie stirred. She stored it somewhere inside herself, waiting, the way a wolf waits in cover for the moment to become clear.

I didn't know any of this yet. I was drinking my evening tea and noting that it tasted faintly bitter, and telling myself the cook had changed the blend.

---

The pack adored her within a week.

I watched it happen with the particular helplessness of someone who can see a current pulling and cannot yet reach the bank.

Rosie was exquisite in public. I mean that with no softness. She was the most precisely calibrated child I had ever seen, and I had attended enough Alpha-family gatherings to have seen many. In front of the pack elders, she was small and soft-voiced, a little hesitant at the edges, her eyes flickering up to Gavin's face with an uncertainty that made the older wolves want to reassure her. She called him Alpha Gavin in a voice that managed to be both properly respectful and quietly yearning — the voice of a child who was trying very hard not to need more than she was given.

The elders softened visibly, every time.

She leaned into Gavin's side when he was speaking to his Gamma, pressing her shoulder against his arm, and he would put his hand on her shoulder without looking down — the automatic, unthinking gesture of someone whose body had already accepted a weight it was learning to carry. He didn't notice he was doing it. That was what made my wolf go quiet with something colder than anger.

Because I noticed. My wolf noticed.

There was a quality to his protectiveness that I recognized the way you recognize a scent that reminds you of something you can't name. It wasn't the careful, deliberate charity of an Alpha sheltering a packless pup. It was older than that. More visceral. The kind of instinct that moves before the mind can explain it.

I had felt Gavin's Alpha protectiveness before — directed at his pack, at me, at the territory he'd built. This was the same force but aimed differently. Deeper. As though it came from somewhere below decision.

My wolf snarled at the back of my throat, and I swallowed it down and smiled at an elder who was telling me what a kind heart the Alpha had, taking in such a lost little pup.

"Yes," I said. "He does."

I pressed my palm flat to my stomach, where my secret was still warm and waiting, and I watched Gavin's hand settle on Rosie's shoulder again — steady and sure as a man who didn't know he was already holding the proof of everything he'd never told me.

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