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Dumped the Alpha, Mated to the Lycan

Dumped the Alpha, Mated to the Lycan

Ivy is the last heir of the fallen Highmoor Pack. At sixteen, she entered Silvercrest Pack by a blood contract and became the partner of Alpha heir Julian. For three years, she was loyal and silent, but never loved. In a crisis, Julian abandoned her and chose Selena. Heartbroken, Ivy insisted on ending the contract. She refused Julian's gifts and threats, determined to regain freedom. When Ivy was attacked, silver-eyed Silas Blackwood saved her. He is the powerful Lycan King, above all Alphas. Ivy's wolf awakened and recognized Silas as her real fated mate. Escaping Julian's control, Ivy broke free from her painful past. Protected by the Lycan King, she regained dignity and strength. The abandoned Luna finally rises, embracing her true destiny and love.
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Chapter 3

Ivy POV Selena's mouth opens. Closes. Opens again. Nothing comes out. I've watched her work every kind of room. She always finds the soft spot. She always knows what to press. She doesn't know what to do with a question that has no safe answer. I let the silence run. Long enough for Meredith to shift in her seat and look away from both of us. Then I stand and look at Meredith directly. "Thank you for the tea," I say. Neither of them says anything as I walk to the door. I take the long corridor back. Past the east arcade, two packmates talking in the alcove at the bend, voices easy, not expecting anyone. "Lancaster girl. Pack's been carrying her for three years. Meredith won't let her near the accounts, scared she's bleeding them dry, sending it all home to her mother." "Julian chose Selena in the middle of that fight the other day. Should've done it the day Ivy walked in." I come around the bend. They see me and stop. I walk straight past. Don't give them anything to add to the story. These rumors didn't start on their own. They go back to the bonding ceremony, three years ago. The gift on the floor in pieces. Selena's tears arriving right on time. Julian's face when he turned to look at me, already decided, not interested in my side. Two weeks I spent trying to get anyone to listen. Two weeks were long enough for her version to become the only one. There's no point saying any of this. Not to anyone in this pack. I just need to get out. Back in my room, I go to the bottom drawer and pull it open. The blood-sealed contract on top. The silver underneath, saved coin by coin. Two canvases in linen at the back, both finished, both sitting here for months because sending them means I've decided. I count the silver. I already know it isn't enough. I count it anyway because I need the real number. Not enough. I reach for the canvases. Two sharp raps at the door. Julian's knock. I look at the open drawer, the contract, the silver, the canvases half-unwrapped. I close it. "Come in," I say. Julian opens the door and Selena comes in ahead of him, a covered cup in both hands, steam at the rim. She crosses straight to me. "I made this for you myself," she says, holding it out. "I know you haven't been eating. I wanted to do something." Made it herself. I know exactly what this is. The performance of warmth, designed to be witnessed. Julian is watching from the doorway. This cup isn't for me. It's for him. I look at it and don't reach for it. Julian steps forward. He wraps his fingers around my wrist and presses the cup into my hand. His grip is harder than it needs to be. "Don't embarrass me in front of her," he says, low. I look down at the cup. Then up at Selena. "Not worried I'll drop it?" I say. "Like that gift at the bonding ceremony. The one that ended up on the floor." The warmth leaves her face. Color draining slowly, her expression slips for just a second, and what I see underneath isn't panic. She knows exactly what she's going to do next. Julian looks from her to me. "Apologize." I set the cup on the desk. "No." Selena's eyes fill, right on cue. "Julian, it's okay. She doesn't have to." There it is. The gracious forgiveness that makes me the problem without her having to say the word. Julian's whole body turns toward her, automatic, the way it always does. He goes soft in a way he has never once been soft with me. "She's not feeling well," he says to Selena. "Let me walk you out." He steers her to the door. She goes. He follows without looking back at me once. I hear them in the hallway. His voice, low and careful. Hers, softer. A door further down opens and closes. Then his footsteps again, coming back. He stops in the doorway. Stands there looking at me, one hand on the frame, mouth opening slightly. I wait. That old reflex, holding my breath, trying to read which version of him this is. He swallows whatever it was. Turns. Leaves. I let out a slow breath. He came back. Stood in that doorway long enough to say something and chose nothing. Three years of that. I'm still holding my breath every time. Still letting it cost me something. I'm so tired of waiting. I get up and open the bottom drawer again. I unwrap both canvases and set them against the wall. Landscape pieces. Quiet and formal, exactly what moves steadily at the gallery in the lower quarter. I've known the commission rate for months. My mother's face comes up without my permission, smaller than the last visit, the illness taking up more space where she used to be. Together with the silver, it's enough. Passage south. First month. The healers she needs. 'Not enough for anything to go wrong,' I think. But enough to start. I wrap the canvases back up, sit at the desk, and write a short note to the gallery, both pieces, ready to sell. I fold it before I can find a reason not to and set it by the door. Sylvie goes still inside me. The settled kind of still. A gift box arrives the next morning. Pale fabric at the edges of the lid, luminous even in the flat morning light. Julian's seal on the card. Nothing written. A moonsilk cloak. My chest does something I don't want it to do. Just for a second. I know this move. Every time I've come close to actually leaving, something arrives. A gesture. A gift shaped like an almost-apology. Julian knows exactly when I'm closest to gone, and he always finds a way to drop something in my path. It has worked before. More times than I want to count. Two years ago he received two moonsilk cloaks from a commission up north. One to Meredith at dinner. One to Selena, and I watched her hold it up to the window light and turn it. I asked Julian afterward, quietly, whether there was a third. He walked away without answering. I told myself it was a small thing. I got very good at telling myself things were small. I hold the box out to the packmate at my door. "Return it. Exactly as it came." She hesitates. "The Alpha sent it personally—" "Exactly as it came." She takes it and goes. I close the door. 'Not this time,' I think. Julian comes himself. Less than an hour later, the returned box under his arm. Whatever surface he keeps polished for the pack is gone. His jaw is set. His eyes are flat. "Explain this," he says. "I don't want it." "I had it commissioned—" "Too late," I say. "I don't want it anymore." The muscle in his jaw moves. "You've been at this long enough," he says. "Last night with Selena. Now this. I have been more than patient, and I'm telling you it stops." My pulse kicks once. "I'm filing for Severance," I say. "The dissolution clause. Formally." Julian stares at me. Then he moves. His hand closes around the back of my neck and he walks me into the wall, fast and controlled, hard enough that the stone meets my back before I've registered he's moved. My palms press flat. His face is close. "You're testing my patience," he says. "You'll regret this." My heart slams. Sylvie shoves forward in my chest, not frightened, past frightened, something coiled there for three years finally pushing up hard. "Thirty days' notice," I say. My voice comes out even. "That's the clause. Today is day one." His grip tightens on my neck. I feel it in my jaw. "You're not filing anything." "I don't need your permission. I need thirty days." "You have nothing." Something ugly surfaces under his voice. "Your pack is gone. Your name means nothing outside these walls. You walk out of here and you have nowhere to go. Nobody in this territory takes your side over mine." That lands exactly where he means it to. The place that has been quietly afraid of that truth all along. "Let go," I say. He holds on for ten more seconds. Making sure I feel it. Then his hand drops. He steps back. He's breathing harder than he wants me to see. "You go through with this," he says, "and I make every day you have left here a problem." I look at him. This face I've spent three years trying to matter to. I'm done. "I'm invoking the clause," I say. "Check the contract." I move to step past him. His hand shoots out and catches my arm. He spins me back into the wall, forearm pressing across my collarbone, face inches from mine, something dark and unraveling in his eyes. "Are you done?" he says.

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