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Claimed By My Ex-Fiancé's Alpha Uncle

Claimed By My Ex-Fiancé's Alpha Uncle

Author: Nathaniel Stone
Genre: Romance
On the eve of my grand wedding, I was supposed to marry Clemont, the man I thought would help protect my family's legacy. But minutes before walking down the aisle, an anonymous text led me to a guest room. Pushing the door open, I saw my fiancé tangled in the sheets with my stepsister, Kaylen. Through the crack in the door, I didn't just witness their betrayal; I heard their entire vicious plot. "After we're married, the trust is as good as mine. I'll liquidate the assets and leave her with nothing." Clemont laughed, promising to throw me out on the street the moment he got control of my mother's company. They thought I was just a weak, wolfless bride they could easily crush. My heart shattered, but the grief was quickly swallowed by a burning rage. My father was in a coma, and I had agreed to this marriage to save our estate. How could they be so cruel as to steal everything my family built and leave me for dead? I didn't scream or cry. Instead, I pulled out my phone and recorded every disgusting word. When the priest asked if I took this man to be my husband, I looked at the crowd, played the video on the cathedral's massive screen, and walked right into the arms of the one man Clemont feared most-his uncle, the ruthless Alpha of the Blackstone Pack.
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Chapter 1

Annemarie POV:

The silk of my wedding dress whispered against the plush red runner of the hallway. Tomorrow is the wedding I've been looking forward to for so long.

But just now, my wedding rehearsal is in progress, my husband disappeared without a trace. In the chaos of the rehearsal site, an unknown number sent me a message.

Not the bridal suite. Second door on the right. Your future is in there.

A cold dread, sharp and sudden, washed over me. It wasn't just nerves. It was a premonition. I hesitated for a heartbeat, the organ music a distant, mocking hum. Then, I changed direction.

The second door on the right was slightly ajar. My heart hammered against my ribs, a frantic bird trapped in a cage. I didn't want to look. I had to.

The sounds from within were unmistakable. Wet, rhythmic, punctuated by low groans. My breath hitched. My fingers, already cold, went numb as they curled into a fist.

I pushed the door open just a fraction of an inch.

The first thing I saw was his profile. Clemont. My fiancé. His eyes were closed, his head thrown back in pleasure. My lungs seized, refusing to draw air.

Then my gaze dropped. I saw the tangle of blonde hair, the white dress of a bridesmaid bunched around a familiar waist. Kaylen. My stepsister.

A strangled sound escaped my throat, and I slapped a hand over my mouth to stifle it. The world tilted, the ornate wallpaper swimming before my eyes. Betrayal wasn't a strong enough word. This was a violation. A desecration of everything I thought this day meant.

Rage, pure and hot, burned through the shock.

My hand, shaking with a violence I didn't know it possessed, raised my phone. I found the camera icon, my thumb hovering over the record button.

I pressed record.

"...just a little longer." Clemont was panting, his voice thick. "After we're married, the Frost Legacy Holdings trust is as good as mine. Her mother's shares, the estate... everything."

"And what about her?" Kaylen's voice, sickly sweet. "What will you do with your dear, wolfless bride?"

"Annemarie?" He laughed, a cruel, ugly sound. "She's a means to an end. Once I have control, I'll file for bankruptcy, liquidate the assets, and leave her with nothing. She'll be out on the street where she belongs."

The words were like fists, pummeling the air from my lungs.

On the eve of my wedding, my future husband was having an affair with my half-sister, and they even discussed ways to commit murder for money! I will never let these despicable people get their way!

My vision narrowed to the glowing red dot on my phone screen. Every tremor of my hand, every stolen breath, was captured.

Three minutes. An eternity. I saved the file, my chest heaving as if I'd just run a marathon.

I had to get out.

I stepped back, my heel catching on the thick carpet. The sound was a dull scrape, but in the charged silence, it was as loud as a gunshot.

The sounds inside the room stopped.

"Who's there?" Clemont's voice was sharp, alert.

Panic clawed at my throat. I didn't think. I just ran.

I burst through the grand front doors of the estate and into a wall of water. The sky had opened up, a furious, cleansing downpour. The rain was ice-cold, instantly plastering my hair to my scalp and soaking the delicate lace of my dress.

My car was parked near the entrance. I fumbled with the keys, my hands shaking too hard to fit the key in the lock. Finally, it clicked. I threw myself into the driver's seat, slamming the door against the storm.

My hands slipped on the steering wheel as I jammed the key into the ignition. The engine roared to life. I stomped on the gas, the tires screeching on the wet asphalt as I peeled away from the house, away from my life.

The grand estate, my home, shrank in the rearview mirror until it was just a blur of lights in the rain.

The windshield wipers fought a losing battle against the deluge. I was on the winding mountain road that led away from the property, my knuckles white on the wheel.

A sob tore from my chest, raw and ragged. Tears streamed down my face, mingling with the rain that dripped from my hair. I slammed my fist against the steering wheel, a sharp pain shooting up my arm. The physical sting was a welcome distraction from the gaping wound in my chest.

I took a sharp turn, my tires hydroplaning for a terrifying second. My headlights cut through the darkness, illuminating a scene of utter destruction.

A black SUV was wrapped around a massive oak tree, its front end crumpled like a tin can. Smoke or steam billowed from the mangled hood.

I slammed on the brakes. My car skidded, the tires screaming in protest, and came to a halt just behind the wreck.

For a moment, I just stared, my own problems forgotten. The engine was still smoking. Someone could be hurt. Trapped.

My conscience, the part of me that Clemont and Kaylen hadn't managed to kill, took over. I had to help.

I threw open my door and plunged back into the storm. The wind tore at me, nearly knocking me off my feet. I struggled toward the SUV, my wedding dress now a heavy, sodden weight.

The driver's side door was jammed, twisted into a grotesque shape. I grabbed the handle with both hands and pulled, my muscles screaming. The metal groaned, resisted, then with a final, wrenching shriek, it tore open.

The scent hit me first. Blood, sharp and metallic. And something else. Something primal and intoxicating. Cedarwood and pine, like a deep forest after a storm. It resonated somewhere deep in my soul, a strange, terrifying hum.

A man was slumped over the steering wheel. He was huge, his broad shoulders filling the driver's seat. Blood matted his dark hair and trickled down his temple. I couldn't tell if he was breathing.

I leaned in, reaching for the seatbelt buckle. It was bent, stuck fast. I clawed at it, my manicured nails scraping against the hard plastic. One of them bent back, splitting with a sickening crack of pain.

I cried out, but pressed on, finally hitting the release button with my thumb. The belt snapped away.

Now the hard part. I hooked my arms under his, trying to drag his dead weight out of the car. He was impossibly heavy, a mountain of a man. My feet slipped on the wet asphalt, and I went down, my knees hitting the ground hard.

Pain shot through me, but I ignored it. Gritting my teeth, I heaved again, pulling with every ounce of strength I had. His body slid from the seat, and we tumbled onto the muddy shoulder of the road together.

I scrambled to my feet, my hands searching for a pulse at his neck. The moment my fingertips touched his cold skin, a jolt, like static electricity, shot up my arm. It was sharp, shocking, and made my entire body tingle.

His eyes snapped open.

Before I could scream, before I could even process what was happening, his hand shot out, his blood-slicked fingers clamping around my wrist like a manacle of steel.

He was not unconscious. He was not weak. And I was trapped.

Chapter 2

Annemarie POV:

I tried to yank my arm back, but his fingers were an iron cage around my wrist, unyielding and impossibly strong. Panic, cold and sharp, pierced through my shock.

A flash of lightning illuminated the sky, and for a split second, his face was thrown into stark relief. High cheekbones, a strong jaw, and eyes that burned with a terrifying intensity. In that brief, blinding light, I saw something shift in their depths-a flicker of wild, possessive recognition that made the breath catch in my throat.

Then, as quickly as they had opened, his eyes closed. His head lolled to the side, and the crushing pressure on my wrist vanished.

He had let me go.

I scrambled backward, falling into the muddy puddle on the side of the road. My dress, my beautiful, ruined dress, was now caked in dirt and blood. I stared at him, my heart hammering against my ribs. He looked unconscious again, but I knew better. He had been awake. He had seen me.

My first instinct was to run. To get back in my car and drive away as fast as I could. But I couldn't. I couldn't leave him here to die, no matter how much he terrified me.

Shaking, I crawled back to his side. His forehead was still bleeding freely. I looked down at my dress was stained and torn. Without a second thought, I ripped a long strip from the hem of my skirt. The fabric tore with a satisfying sound.

I pressed the makeshift bandage against the gash on his temple. The white silk turned crimson almost instantly. His skin was hot beneath my trembling fingers.

As I held the cloth in place, I could feel the raw power radiating from him, even in this state. The scent of cedar and pine was stronger now, wrapping around me, seeping into my senses. It was overwhelming, and for a terrifying moment, my body felt like it didn't belong to me. A strange, dormant part of my soul stirred, drawn to him against all logic.

I had to get him to a hospital.

I hooked my arms under his again. "Come on," I grunted, pulling with all my might. "You have to help me."

He was dead weight, a solid mass of muscle. I dragged him inch by painful inch across the wet asphalt, my bare feet slipping, my body screaming in protest. It felt like an impossible task, but the image of him bleeding out on the side of the road spurred me on.

Finally, after what felt like an eternity, I reached my car. Getting him into the back seat was another Herculean effort. I somehow managed to shove and lift his heavy frame onto the leather, his long legs tangled awkwardly. I slammed the door shut, panting, my body trembling with exhaustion.

I scrambled back into the driver's seat, locking the doors and turning the heat on full blast. The car filled with the smell of his blood and that intoxicating forest scent. I kept glancing at him in the rearview mirror as I sped toward the town hospital, my tires spraying water.

He was lying still, his head against the window. But once, I saw his eyelids flutter. He was watching me. A tiny, almost imperceptible smile touched his lips before he went still again. A chill ran down my spine that had nothing to do with the cold.

I screeched to a halt under the covered entrance of the emergency room, the tires leaving black marks on the pavement. I threw open my door and ran inside, screaming for help.

"There's been a car accident! A man is hurt, he's in my car!"

Nurses and orderlies rushed out with a gurney. They carefully lifted him out and onto the stretcher. As they wheeled him away, his hand brushed against the ruined fabric of my dress, a fleeting, deliberate touch.

I watched them disappear through the double doors, the red light above the entrance to the trauma unit flashing. And then, the adrenaline that had been coursing through my veins vanished. My knees buckled, and I slid down the wall, landing in a heap on the cold linoleum floor. The events of the night crashed down on me-the betrayal, the flight, the accident, the terror. It was too much.

I didn't know how long I sat there, shivering in my wet dress, until the sound of heavy, synchronized footsteps echoed down the hallway.

A group of men, all dressed in identical black suits, marched into the waiting room. They moved with a purpose that was both intimidating and efficient. They looked like Secret Service agents, their faces grim, their eyes scanning the room.

Leading them was a man with sharp features and an air of absolute authority. His gaze swept over the few people in the waiting area before it landed on me. He walked directly toward me, his presence sucking the air out of the room. He was a Beta, I could feel the power rolling off him, second only to an Alpha.

I felt a primal urge to flee. I started to push myself up, intending to slip away unnoticed, but it was too late. He was in front of me, blocking my path.

"You're the one who brought him in?" he asked, his voice low and dangerous.

I nodded, unable to speak.

"You'll come with us," he said. It wasn't a request.

Before I could protest, a doctor came out of the trauma unit. "He's stable," the doctor announced. "A concussion and some lacerations, but he's going to be fine. He's a very lucky man."

The man in the suit, Dyllan, didn't even thank the doctor. He and his men pushed past him and into a private VIP suite down the hall. Two of the guards stayed behind, flanking me. I was a prisoner.

A few minutes later, Dyllan emerged and gestured for me to enter. I was escorted into the room, my heart pounding a frantic rhythm against my ribs.

The man from the car was sitting up in the bed. The blood had been cleaned from his face, and the cut on his forehead was neatly stitched. He looked less like a victim and more like a king on his throne.

"Alpha Hunter," Dyllan said, his voice filled with reverence. "She's here."

The words hit me like a physical blow. Alpha Hunter. My mind raced, trying to connect the dots. The power, the authority, the name. There was only one Alpha Hunter it could be.

Joel Hunter. The reclusive, ruthless head of the Blackstone Pack. The CEO of Hunter Industries. And... Clemont's uncle.

I felt the blood drain from my face. I had saved the one man my fiancé feared more than anyone in the world.

Joel waved a dismissive hand, and Dyllan and the other men exited the room, closing the door behind them. We were alone. The silence was thick with an unspoken threat. The air crackled with his power.

I instinctively backed away until my back hit the cold, hard surface of the door. I needed to put as much space between us as possible.

He watched me, his dark eyes tracking my every move. Then, he did something that made my blood run cold. He reached over and ripped the IV needle from the back of his hand, not even flinching as a drop of blood welled up.

He swung his long legs over the side of the bed and stood up. He was barefoot, wearing only the thin hospital pants and gown, but he moved with the silent grace of a predator.

Step by step, he closed the distance between us. He was even taller than I'd realized, a towering figure who blocked out the light from the hallway. He smelled of antiseptic, but underneath it, that wild, intoxicating scent of cedar and pine was still there, stronger than ever.

He stopped right in front of me, so close I could feel the heat radiating from his body. His gaze roamed over me, taking in my ruined dress, my bare, scratched feet, my trembling form. It was an invasive, possessive look that made me feel like prey.

He raised his hand, and I flinched, squeezing my eyes shut. But he didn't strike me. Instead, his thumb, rough and calloused, gently brushed away a smudge of mud from my cheek. The touch was electric, sending a shiver through my entire body.

I held my breath, too terrified to move.

He leaned in close, his lips brushing against my ear. His warm breath ghosted across my skin, raising goosebumps.

"You saved my life," he murmured, his voice a low, gravelly rumble that vibrated through me. "That means you owe me one. I'll come to collect."

He pulled back, his dark eyes boring into mine. Then, he took a step to the side, clearing my path to the door.

It was a dismissal.

I didn't need to be told twice. My hand fumbled for the doorknob. I wrenched it open and fled, running down the sterile hospital corridor as if a wolf was at my heels. And in a way, it was.

Chapter 3

Joel POV:

I watched her run, a frantic deer startled by the hunter. The sight of her fleeing form, the white of her ruined dress a beacon in the sterile hallway, sent a savage thrill through me. My inner wolf paced the confines of my mind, growling with satisfaction. Mine.

Dyllan entered the room, his face a mask of professional concern. "Alpha, are you alright? The scene has been secured. We've planted evidence to suggest a failed assassination attempt by a rival pack. No one will trace it back to us."

"Good," I said, my voice flat. I walked over to the window, watching as her small car sped out of the hospital parking lot and disappeared into the pre-dawn gloom.

I reached up and tore the bandage from my forehead. The stitches pulled, a minor sting. Beneath the gauze, the skin was already knitting itself back together, the gash closing with the rapid healing of my Lycan bloodline. By morning, there would be nothing left but a faint red line.

"Was it worth it, Alpha?" Dyllan asked, his loyalty warring with his confusion. "Staging your own crash, risking injury..."

"It was worth it," I cut him off, my eyes still fixed on the road where she had vanished. I turned from the window and poured myself a glass of whiskey from the decanter on the room's side table. The amber liquid burned on its way down, a welcome fire.

"I needed to get close to her," I said, more to myself than to him. "This was the only way to do it without raising suspicion. To make her come to me."

For ten years, I had watched her from afar. Ten years since that day in Cedar Creek when I first saw her, first recognized her as the other half of my soul. But she was wolfless, unable to feel the bond, and I was a monster, my own wolf a raging beast I could barely control. So I had waited, building my empire, consolidating my power, until I was strong enough to claim her.

Clemont, my foolish, greedy nephew, had provided the perfect opportunity. His engagement to her was an insult, a sacrilege. But it was also the opening I needed.

"She's mine, Dyllan," I said, the words a low growl. "She just doesn't know it yet."

Dyllan is holding a tablet displaying the security layout for the church. "Alpha, shall we intervene at the wedding?"

I held up a hand, a faint, cruel smile playing on my lips. "No."

I took a sip of my whiskey. "Let the little omega have her fun. Let her draw first blood. I'll be there to handle the cleanup."

Annemarie POV:

I drove on autopilot, my mind a chaotic storm of images and emotions. Joel Hunter's face, his voice, his touch-they were burned into my memory. I finally made it back to my small apartment in the city center, the one place that was supposed to be my sanctuary.

I stumbled inside, kicking off my ruined shoes and collapsing onto the sofa. The silence of the apartment was deafening. My head throbbed, the faces of Clemont and Kaylen swimming before my eyes, their laughter mingling with the terrifying intensity of Joel Hunter's gaze.

I had to wash it all away.

I dragged myself into the bathroom and stood under the scalding spray of the shower, letting the hot water sluice the mud, blood, and grime from my body. I scrubbed my skin until it was raw, but I couldn't wash away the feeling of his fingers on my wrist, his thumb on my cheek.

I stared at my reflection in the steamed-up mirror. My face was pale, my eyes wide and haunted. But as I looked deeper, I saw something else flicker to life in their depths. A spark of defiance. A cold, hard resolve.

They thought they could destroy me, leave me with nothing. They were wrong. I thought of my mother, lying in a coma in a long-term care facility, the reason I had agreed to this sham of a marriage in the first place.

Frost Legacy Holdings represents centuries of hard work by my mother's family. If my mother hadn't chosen to marry my father, he wouldn't have the good life he has now. Yet now, my mother lies sick in bed, suffering from illness, while my father, along with his mistress and illegitimate daughter, along with my disgusting fiancé, wants to take all of this away from her.

I had to protect my mother's property.

My phone, which I'd left on the bathroom counter, lit up. Another message from the unknown number.

My hand trembled as I picked it up. It wasn't text this time. It was an encrypted link. My heart pounded as I clicked on it.

It took me to a secure server. There, laid out in neat digital files, was irrefutable proof. Scanned documents, bank transfers, offshore account numbers. Clemont had been systematically embezzling from the Frost Legacy Holdings trust fund for months, funneling money into accounts controlled by his father.

The sheer scale of the theft stole my breath. Millions. He was trying to bleed the company dry before he even had control of it.

A wave of pure, unadulterated fury washed over me. Any lingering thought of retreat, of quietly disappearing, vanished. I smashed my fist against the marble countertop, the pain a distant echo to the rage consuming me.

I would not run. I would fight. I would burn their world to the ground.

I wrapped a towel around myself and went to my study. I downloaded every file, creating multiple backups. I saved them to a thumb drive, and then, for good measure, I emailed encrypted copies to three separate offshore email accounts I had set up years ago for emergencies.

Then I walked to my closet. In the very back, shrouded in a protective garment bag, was another wedding dress. Not the one I was supposed to wear today, but the one my mother had designed for me before she got sick. It was a masterpiece of lace and silk, a symbol of a love I now knew was a lie.

I unzipped the bag and ran my hand over the delicate fabric. I remembered my mother's words, her voice weak but her eyes fierce. "Be strong, my Annemarie. The Frost women are not victims. We are survivors."

A new strength flowed through me. I was a survivor. And I was going to make them pay.

Clemont POV :

In my own penthouse suite, I threw my phone against the wall, where it shattered into a dozen pieces. I'd been calling Annemarie all night, my messages growing increasingly frantic.But she still didn't respond at all.

Kaylen wrapped her arms around my from behind, pressing her body against mine. "Don't worry about her, darling," she cooed. "She's probably just having some last-minute bridal jitters. She'll show up. She has to."

I allowed myself to be soothed, my greed overriding my unease. I turned and kissed her, the image of Annemarie's face already fading from my mind, replaced by dollar signs.

Across the city, I stood on the balcony of my own penthouse, the night wind whipping at my shirt. For the first time in a long time, the beast inside I was quiet, sated by the proximity to its mate.

Annemarie POV:

The next morning, I sat before my vanity mirror as a makeup artist I trusted worked her magic. I was a blank canvas, my face betraying none of the turmoil within. When she was finished, I was flawless, a perfect porcelain doll. A bride ready for her sacrifice.

Just as I was about to put on my mother's dress, the doorbell rang. A courier delivered a small, unmarked black box. Puzzled, I signed for it and opened it.

Inside, nestled on a bed of black velvet, was a silver brooch in the shape of a snarling wolf's head. Its eyes were tiny, glittering rubies. Beneath it was a small, crisp card with two words elegantly calligraphed on it.

Checkmate.

I didn't know who it was from, but I felt a strange sense of reassurance. I wasn't entirely alone in this fight. I pinned the silver wolf to the ribbons of my bouquet.

The sound of car horns from the street below announced the arrival of the wedding limousine. It was time.

I took a deep breath, the air filling my lungs with a cold resolve. I picked up my beautiful, tragic dress and walked out the door to meet my destiny.

As I settled into the plush leather seat of the limo, watching the city streets blur past my window, a slow, cold smile spread across my face.

Let the games begin.

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