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When The Alpha Chose My Half-Sister Novel Cover

When The Alpha Chose My Half-Sister

Elara has lived as an outcast, ignored by both her kin and the pack. When the Alpha finally arrives to name his lunar mate, Elara's dreams of a better life are crushed as the formidable leader selects her malicious half-sister instead. Now ensnared by treachery and archaic traditions, Elara must endure her heartbreak. Yet, amidst this rejection, she uncovers a secret power that possesses the potential to reshape her fate and the pack's entire future.
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Chapter 1

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. Something I had been looking forward to for months.

My wolf, Sera, was restless inside me. Not anxious. Excited. She had been purring all evening, drunk on the energy of the crowd and the pride of standing next to the most dominant wolf in the room.

"Luna Sasha." A deep voice to my left. I turned to find Reid, Dominick's Beta, inclining his head. He was tall, broad-shouldered, with the kind of face that never gave anything away. "The delegation from Ashfall wants a word with the Alpha. Should I hold them?"

"Let them through," I said. "But after the toast. He's about to speak."

Reid nodded and disappeared into the crowd. I watched him go, then turned back to Dominick, who was leaning down to hear something from his Gamma. He caught my eye and winked.

I felt it in my chest. That pull. The mate bond, warm and steady, like a hand pressed over my heart.

I loved him. I want that to be clear. Whatever came after — whatever I did and however I did it — I loved him that night. Completely.

The toast happened. Dominick raised his glass and the hall went silent, five hundred wolves holding their breath while the new territorial Alpha spoke about unity, about strength, about the future of Ironveil. His voice carried without effort. Alpha tone threaded through every word, not commanding, just present — the way gravity is present. You didn't resist it. You just felt it.

The crowd roared. I clapped with them, my emerald ring catching the light.

Then the crowd surged forward to congratulate him, and I was pressed close — closer than I'd been all evening — as wolves reached past me to shake his hand, to clasp his shoulder. Someone jostled me from behind and I stumbled into Dominick's chest. His arm came around my waist automatically, steadying me, and I laughed and tilted my face up to say something teasing.

That's when I smelled it.

Sweet magnolia. Vanilla. Layered and intimate, clinging to the collar of his shirt like it had been pressed there by someone's skin.

The world didn't stop. That's what people say in stories — the world stopped, time froze, everything went silent. It didn't. The crowd kept cheering. The music kept playing. Dominick kept smiling down at me with that easy, golden confidence that had made me fall for him in the first place.

But inside me, Sera went quiet.

Not howling. Not raging. Silent. The way a blade is silent before it cuts.

I knew that scent. I had known it since I was fourteen years old, standing in the doorway of my mother's bedroom in Goldenridge, watching her pack her things into a single suitcase while the pack house buzzed with whispers about the new baby — the beautiful baby girl with the magnolia-and-vanilla scent who had just been born to my father's mistress.

Kimber.

My half-sister. The daughter of the woman who stole my father and destroyed my mother's life.

Her scent was on my mate's collar.

I pulled back from Dominick's chest slowly. Naturally. The way you pull back from an embrace when the moment passes. I smoothed the front of my gown and smiled up at him.

"I'm going to get some air," I said. My voice was perfect. Light. Easy.

"You okay?" He searched my face.

"Just warm. It's packed in here." I touched his arm. "Go. They're waiting for you."

He kissed my forehead and turned back to the crowd. I watched him go. Then I walked through the hall with my spine straight and my chin up, nodding to every wolf who caught my eye, until I reached the terrace doors and stepped out into the cold October air.

The terrace overlooked the eastern ridge of Ironveil territory — miles of dark forest under a half-moon. I gripped the stone railing and breathed. In. Out. In.

Sera was still silent.

"Talk to me," I whispered.

Nothing.

"Sera."

A long pause. Then, very quietly: "I know what you're thinking."

"Do you."

"You're thinking about your mother."

I closed my eyes. The image came without permission — Adelaide, former Luna of Goldenridge, standing in the pack hall while my father, Alpha Malcolm, read the formal demotion in front of every ranked wolf. Her Luna aura stripped. Her title gone. Omega. The word had landed on her like a physical blow, and I had watched her absorb it without making a sound, because she was too dignified to scream and too broken to fight.

She had trusted the bond. She had trusted the Moon Goddess. She had trusted that twenty years of loyalty would mean something.

It meant nothing.

"I'm not her," I said.

"No," Sera agreed. "You're not."

I stayed on the terrace until my hands stopped shaking. Then I went back inside, found Dominick, and stood beside him for the rest of the evening. I laughed at the right moments. I accepted congratulations. I let him rest his hand on the small of my back.

I did not ask him about the scent. I did not confront him. I did not cry.

I smiled through the rest of the ceremony.

Later — much later — after the last guest had gone and the hall staff were clearing glasses, Dominick collapsed into bed still half-dressed, exhausted and happy. He reached for me in the dark.

"Come here," he murmured.

"In a minute," I said. "I need to check something in my study."

He was asleep before I closed the bedroom door.

My study was at the end of the east wing — a room I had chosen specifically because it locked from the inside and had no windows facing the main courtyard. I sat down at my desk, turned on the lamp, and pulled the first file from the bottom drawer.

Territorial contracts. Allied pack agreements. Every clause in Ironveil's pack law governing mate-bond severance, asset division, and Luna rights upon rejection.

I had read these documents before. Not casually — carefully. The way you read something when you know your survival might depend on understanding every word. I had started studying pack law the month after Dominick and I were paired, because I had watched what happened to a Luna who didn't.

But tonight I wasn't reading for education. I was reading for war.

The Jaxson scandal was three weeks old. Alpha Jaxson of the Stonewall Pack — a wolf I had met twice at regional summits, unremarkable, forgettable — had secretly transferred two-thirds of his territory to a side mate and vanished. His Luna, a quiet she-wolf named Petra, woke up one morning to find the pack accounts drained, the allied contracts reassigned, and her name removed from every territorial deed. She had nothing. No land. No allies. No legal standing. The regional Alpha Council had expressed "concern" and done exactly nothing.

I thought about Petra as I spread the contracts across my desk. I thought about my mother packing that single suitcase.

Then I stopped thinking about them and started thinking about myself.

I worked through the night. Every territorial holding Dominick and I shared — mapped. Every allied pack contract — catalogued, with specific attention to which alliances had been secured through my connections versus his. Every clause that gave a Luna independent standing upon formal rejection of the mate bond — highlighted, cross-referenced, annotated.

By the time the first gray light came through the window, I had my strategy.

Half of Ironveil's territorial holdings. Three allied pack contracts that had been secured through my family's name and my personal negotiations. Full independent governance rights under the Pacific Northwest regional charter.

It was clean. It was legal. It was devastating.

I closed the last file and sat back in my chair. My neck ached. My eyes burned. Sera stirred inside me for the first time in hours.

"Are you sure?" she asked.

"I'm sure."

"The bond — "

"I know what the bond costs."

Silence. Then: "He'll fight."

"He'll sign," I said. "His pride won't let him do anything else. Not in front of the whole pack."

I touched the unmarked side of my neck. Not with grief. With something harder. Something that had been forming inside me since I was fourteen years old, watching my mother lose everything because she believed the bond would protect her.

I would not be Adelaide.

I stood, locked the files back in the drawer, and went to shower. When Dominick woke an hour later, I was in the kitchen making coffee, dressed in a white blouse and dark jeans, my hair down, looking like any other morning.

"Morning, beautiful." He came up behind me and kissed my shoulder. I could still smell it — faint now, beneath his own cedar-and-rain scent, but there. Magnolia. Vanilla.

"Morning," I said. "Sleep well?"

"Like the dead." He poured himself a cup. "What were you working on last night?"

"Pack logistics. The coronation generated a lot of follow-up."

He nodded, already distracted by his phone. "Reid says the Ashfall delegation wants a formal meeting."

"Actually," I said, keeping my voice casual, "I wanted to talk to you about scheduling. I think we should hold a full pack banquet this week. All ranked wolves, allied pack representatives. Mandatory attendance."

He looked up. "Another banquet? We just had the coronation."

"Exactly. The momentum is there. People are energized. It's the perfect time for a formal follow-up — solidify the alliances, let the ranked wolves feel included in the new era." I sipped my coffee. "I can handle the planning. Just have Reid send the formal invitations."

Dominick studied me for a moment. I held his gaze and let him see what he expected to see: his Luna, composed and capable, doing what Lunas do.

"You're right," he said. "That's smart. I'll tell Reid today."

"Thank you."

He kissed my forehead again and left for his morning meetings. I listened to his footsteps fade down the hall. Then I set down my coffee and picked up my phone.

I had preparations of my own to make.

The banquet would be in six days. Every ranked wolf in Ironveil would be there. Every allied representative. Every witness I would ever need.

And when I stood before them, I would speak the words that no Luna in the Pacific Northwest had ever spoken from a position of strength.

I opened my contacts and scrolled to Caden — my personal Gamma, the only wolf in Ironveil who reported to me before he reported to Dominick.

"Caden," I typed. "I need you at the east wing study tonight. Come alone. Tell no one."

The reply came in under a minute.

"Yes, Luna."

I set the phone down and looked out the kitchen window at the dark line of forest that marked the edge of Ironveil territory. My territory. Half of it, at least. In six days.

Sera stirred.

"Six days," she echoed.

I touched my neck. The unmarked side.

"Six days."

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