Home / Werewolf / Marked By The Rogue Alpha / Chapter 3: The Arrangement I Ran From

Share

Chapter 3: The Arrangement I Ran From

Author: Retroferd
last update publish date: 2026-05-05 07:47:51

Meredith

The Benic estate looked exactly the way I remembered it. Grand iron gates, sprawling gardens that someone else maintained, and the main house rising three stories high with windows that caught the late afternoon sun. I'd grown up here, spent eighteen years learning how to be the perfect daughter of House Benic, and then I'd left it all behind for Alarick.

Coming back felt like admitting I'd made a mistake.

Hayley pulled up to the front entrance and killed the engine. She looked at the house, then at me, her expression somewhere between concern and barely contained anger.

"You don't have to do this," she said. "You can stay with me. My apartment's small, but it's better than whatever's waiting for you in there."

"I need the arrangement." I unbuckled my seatbelt and reached for the door handle. "It's the only way to stabilize my wolf without crawling back to Alarick."

"Your father's a bastard, Mer."

"I know." I pushed the door open and stepped out onto the gravel driveway. "But he has options I don't."

Hayley got out and pulled my suitcase from the trunk, but she didn't walk me to the door. We both knew this was something I had to do alone. She gave me a long look, the kind that said she'd come get me the second I called, then got back in her car and drove away.

I watched her leave, then turned toward the house.

My father was waiting at the top of the front steps.

Aldric Benic stood with his hands clasped behind his back, dressed in a dark suit like he'd just come from a business meeting. His silver hair was perfectly combed, his posture rigid, and his expression completely neutral. He looked at my ruined wedding dress, my suitcase, and my face, taking in everything without saying a word.

He didn't ask if I was alright. He didn't move to hug me or offer comfort. He just stood there, watching me climb the steps toward him like I was a business associate arriving for a meeting.

"Come inside," he said finally.

I followed him through the front door and into the foyer. The marble floors gleamed under the chandelier light, and the familiar scent of old wood and expensive furniture wrapped around me. Nothing had changed. The paintings were still on the walls, the antique vases still sat on their pedestals, and the house still felt more like a museum than a home.

"Meredith."

I turned toward the voice and found Clover standing in the doorway to the sitting room. She wore a cream-colored dress that accentuated her colours, her brown hair fell in perfect waves over her shoulders. She looked comfortable here, more comfortable than I'd ever felt even when I lived here.

I hadn't expected to see her so soon. She must have left Bloodmoon right after the wedding collapsed. The thought made my stomach turn. Just how devious was this woman?

Her smile was small and sharp.

"I heard about the wedding," she said, her tone dripping with false sympathy. "I'm so sorry things didn't work out."

I set my suitcase down beside me and met her gaze. "Are you?"

Clover's smile widened slightly. "Of course. It must be so embarrassing, coming back here without a husband. Everyone knew Alarick would choose me eventually, but I suppose you had to see it for yourself."

I'd expected this. Clover had spent years using Alarick to hurt me, always making sure I knew she could take him whenever she wanted. She expected me to cry or argue or defend him like I always had before.

I didn't.

"If you want him that badly," I said calmly, "you can have him."

Clover's smile faltered for just a second. "Excuse me?"

"Alarick. He's yours." I picked up my suitcase again and started toward the stairs. "I'm done fighting you for a man who doesn't know how to choose anyone but himself."

"You're just running home because you have nowhere else to go," Clover called after me, her voice rising with frustration. "You think Father will fix everything? You're desperate, Meredith."

I stopped halfway up the stairs and looked back at her. She stood in the foyer with her arms crossed, her expression tight with an anger I'd never seen before. She wanted me to break, to give her the satisfaction of seeing me fall apart.

"Maybe I am desperate," I said. "But at least I'm not wasting my time on a man who left me at the altar."

Clover's face went red, but before she could respond, my father's voice cut through the tension.

"Meredith. My study. Now."

I turned away from Clover and continued up the stairs, leaving her standing there with whatever insult she'd been preparing. My father was already heading toward his study on the second floor, and I followed him down the familiar hallway with my suitcase dragging behind me.

The study looked exactly the way it always had. Dark wood furniture, floor-to-ceiling bookshelves, and a massive desk that dominated the center of the room. This was where my father handled business, where alliances were negotiated and deals were made. It had never felt like a place for family conversations, and today was no different.

I sat down in one of the chairs across from his desk and waited.

My father settled into his own chair and folded his hands on the desk between us. He didn't speak right away, just studied me with that same neutral expression he'd worn at the front door.

"Word of your failed wedding has already reached me," he said finally. "Bloodmoon contacted me this afternoon. Others have called as well. The humiliation is no longer private."

I kept my expression steady. "I didn't come here for a lecture."

"Then why did you come?"

"The arrangement." I met his gaze directly. "The one you set up before I met Alarick. Does it still stand?"

My father's eyebrows rose slightly, the first real reaction I'd seen from him since I arrived. "You rejected that arrangement. You called it archaic and told me you'd rather marry for love."

"I was wrong."

"You chose Alarick Holt over your family's alliance." My father leaned back in his chair, his eyes never leaving mine. "You walked away from House Benic's interests for a man who abandoned you at the altar. And now you want the arrangement back?"

The words stung because they were true, but I didn't let myself flinch. "Does it still stand or not?"

My father was quiet for a long moment, studying me like he was trying to figure out if I was serious. Then he nodded once.

"It still stands."

Deep inside me, my wolf shifted weakly, as if even she understood what that meant.

Relief flooded through me so fast I almost felt dizzy. "Who is he?"

"I won't tell you that."

I blinked. "What?"

"The arrangement was sealed under strict privacy," my father said, his tone completely businesslike. "The Alpha's identity will only be revealed at the formal introduction. You'll meet him when he arrives."

"You expect me to marry a stranger without even knowing his name?" My voice rose despite my best efforts to stay calm. "That's insane."

"You rejected this arrangement once and left me with limited options." My father's expression didn't change. "The man who agreed to this alliance did so under the condition of privacy until the formal meeting. If you want the protection of this marriage, you accept the terms. If you don't, you're free to leave."

I clenched my hands in my lap. "Why the secrecy?"

"Because he requested it, and I agreed." My father reached for a folder on his desk and opened it, scanning whatever documents were inside. "House Benic is weaker than it looks, Meredith. The southern lands are still recovering from the border fever that swept through the southern lands three years ago. Trade agreements have fallen through. Several allied packs have stepped back from helping us. This marriage will restore political strength and secure resources we desperately need."

I stared at him, the weight of his words sinking in. This wasn't just about stabilizing my wolf. This was about saving House Benic from collapse.

"So I'm a bargaining piece," I said quietly.

"You're my daughter." My father closed the folder and looked at me. "And you're also useful. Both things can be true."

The casual cruelty of it should have hurt more than it did, but I was too tired to feel anything beyond resignation. My father had always treated family like business, and I'd been naive to think he'd change just because I came home heartbroken.

I thought about Alarick walking away from the altar. I thought about my wolf growing weaker every day. I thought about the Bloodmoon staff whispering that I had nowhere else to go.

Marrying a stranger was terrifying. But going back to Alarick would be worse.

"Then send word," I said. "I'll meet him."

My father nodded once, something that might have been approval flickering across his face before disappearing behind his usual mask. "The formal introduction will be arranged within the week. Once he arrives and the documents are signed, the agreement will be binding."

"Can you tell me anything about him?" I asked. "Anything at all?"

My father considered this for a moment, then shook his head. "He's powerful enough to help us, and dangerous enough that you should not mistake this for rescue."

That wasn't reassuring.

I stood up from the chair, suddenly desperate to be out of this room and away from my father's cold assessment. "Is that all?"

"That's all."

I grabbed my suitcase and left the study without another word. The hallway was empty when I stepped out, but Clover appeared before I made it three steps toward my old room. She must have been waiting, listening at the door or lurking nearby.

"A blind marriage?" Clover's voice was filled with mock sympathy and barely hidden delight. "You're so desperate you're willing to marry a stranger? That's pathetic, Meredith."

I kept walking.

"Alarick will come back for you." Clover followed me down the hall, her heels clicking against the hardwood. "Not because you're special, but because men like him hate losing what they think belongs to them. And when he realizes you've thrown yourself at some random Alpha, you'll regret humiliating him like this."

I stopped in front of my bedroom door and turned to face her. "Alarick belongs to whoever he chooses now. And he's already made that choice too many times for me to care anymore."

Clover's smile faltered, her confident expression cracking just slightly. She'd expected some reaction from me. But I didn't have any fight left for a man who'd proven he wasn't worth it.

"You'll regret this," Clover said, but the conviction in her voice was gone.

"Maybe." I opened my bedroom door. "But at least I won't regret it standing at an altar he abandoned."

I stepped inside and closed the door before Clover could respond. The room was exactly as I'd left it five years ago. The same pale blue curtains, the same white furniture, the same bookshelf filled with novels I hadn't thought about in years. It should have felt comforting to be back in a space that was mine, but instead it just felt empty.

I dropped my suitcase on the floor and sank down onto the edge of the bed. My wolf stirred faintly in the back of my mind, still weak and quiet. Time wasn't on my side. If I didn't get a stable bond soon, Hayley's warning would become reality.

I looked out the window at the gardens below and tried not to think about what I'd just agreed to. I didn't know the Alpha's name. I didn't know his pack. I didn't know if he'd be better than Alarick or worse.

But I knew one thing with absolute certainty.

I wasn't going back.

I had agreed to marry a man whose name my father refused to give me. By the end of the week, I would learn why.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • Marked By The Rogue Alpha   Chapter 60: The Name They Buried

    KieranI came back slow, and it wasn't gentle.The pain reached me first, a deep drag under my ribs that pulled with every breath. The bitter smell of silver still hung off the bandages. My wolf was awake under my skin, restless and angry and weaker than it had any right to be, scratching at the inside of me for a fight it couldn't find. The lamps were turned low, and for a moment I didn't know if I was in my own bed or still out on the ridge with the smoke in my eyes.Then I turned my head.Meredith was asleep in the chair beside me.Not gracefully. Not arranged the way a soft bedside wife arranges herself for the picture of it. Her neck was bent at an angle that was going to hurt her when she woke, her hair had come loose from whatever she'd done with it hours ago, and one hand was tucked up near the edge of the mattress, fingers half-curled, like she'd fallen asleep reaching for me and hadn't quite made it. There was still a faint smear of dried blood near her sleeve.My blood.Tha

  • Marked By The Rogue Alpha   Chapter 59: The Call That Did Not Come

    AlarickThe report came in broken, half a sentence at a time, and I sat in the back of the car with the wine going warm and forgotten in my hand.Silverthorn's north ridge. Fire. Gunfire on the ridge road. The pack had sealed its outer routes inside the hour and nobody on the outside knew the shape of it yet.I should have thought about what it meant. Bloodmoon and Silverthorn and the coalition, the borders, what an attack on the Rogue Alpha's ground did to the balance of every territory around it. That was the Alpha's thought, and it should have come first.It didn't come at all."Was she seen?" I said.A pause on the line. "No, Alpha.""Was she hurt?""We don't—" Another pause. "No one's saying. Not because she's clear. Because no one knows yet."That was the part that got its fingers into me. Not she's hurt. Not she's safe. Just nobody knew, and I was three territories away with a glass of wine in my hand.I called her.It rang. Once, twice, the sound of it going out into a room I

  • Marked By The Rogue Alpha   Chapter 58: The One Who Would Undo Them

    MeredithI was already moving, and there was a roar in my ears, and all I could see was his face.I don't remember deciding to cross the floor. One second I was at the table with Kieran's blood drying on my hand, and the next I was halfway across the hall with my whole body aimed at the man in the doorway. His words were still in me, lodged somewhere they wouldn't come loose. Should've stayed dead at the pass. Kieran was bleeding behind me and this man was laughing about it, and my wolf had gone somewhere past thinking, somewhere I couldn't reach to call her back from.Sera caught me, but not easily.My nails cut the air close enough to his face that he jerked his head back before he laughed at me. A guard got hold of my wrist and twisted it facing it down while Sera locked an arm hard around my waist and took my feet right off the floor, and still I strained against both of them, reaching, and for one long breath the whole receiving hall got to stand there and watch their Luna try

  • Marked By The Rogue Alpha   Chapter 57: The One She Reached For

    MeredithI was crossing the hall before I could even think.They had him up between two wolves, his weight hung off their shoulders, the blood gone dark and stiff on his clothes and smoke worked into his hair. His head hung so low that even now, this close, some last desperate part of me tried to make him into someone else. Then the firelight caught the scar by his left eye, and everything in me dropped through the floor.I was almost at him before I'd decided to move.A healer's aide stepped into my path with his hands up. "Luna, we need space here, you can't—""Move."It came out of me low and flat and cold, nothing like my own voice, and the boy went white and stepped aside without another word.People turned. I felt them turn but honestly? I didn't care who saw it.Elara reached us, and she saw him properly then.Whatever had been in her face went out of it all at once. The warmth, the dry amusement, all of it just emptied, and what was left underneath was so still and so cold th

  • Marked By The Rogue Alpha   Chapter 56: The Door They Opened For Him

    MeredithI was still standing where he'd left me, and the yard had already changed around me.Guards crossed it fast. A vehicle door slammed somewhere off to the side. Orders went from one wolf to the next, low and quick. And underneath all of it, where it had no business being, I was in a stupidly good mood, and I hated myself for it. My wolf was stretched out warm and pleased at the back of me, still humming over the kiss like the rest of the world hadn't just gone loud and wrong.He'd left right after. I knew he'd had no choice. It still sat crooked in me.His laugh kept coming back, the way his whole face had changed around it."Pull yourself together," I muttered. "He's gone to a border alarm and you're standing here thinking about his mouth."Someone cleared their throat behind me.I spun around with a sound I'd deny later. "Fuc—"Elara.She stood there with a small, knowing smile, and heat went straight up my face.I stiffened. "Are you going to say something?""I was being ki

  • Marked By The Rogue Alpha   Chapter 55: The North Ridge

    KieranI was halfway to the vehicles before I realized my hands were on my lips fondling them.I dropped the hand like it had betrayed me. My wolf was still up and pacing and frankly offended, snarling at the back of my skull about the fact that I'd walked away from her, and I couldn't get my hand to forget the curve of her waist or my mouth to forget what she'd said. Kick you so hard you won't father this pack an heir.I caught myself almost smiling at it, in the middle of a border alarm, like a man who'd lost his sense somewhere on that path.I looked up at the sky once on the way to the vans, jaw tight, and wondered whether something over Silverthorn had the worst timing in the world or simply held a personal grudge against me.Then I shoved it down, because the north ridge did not miss a second signal for nothing.---We were moving inside two minutes. I took the lead van with Silas and a small strike team, and the doors were barely shut before he had the report out."North ridge

  • Marked By The Rogue Alpha   Chapter 7: The Challenge He Shouldn’t Have Made

    MeredithThe foyer went silent after Alarick’s declaration.I felt the weight of the challenge even before I fully understood what it meant. I knew enough about pack customs to know that challenges were serious, binding, and not something thrown around casually.Alarick stood there with his wolf pr

  • Marked By The Rogue Alpha   Chapter 5: The Rogue Alpha’s Bride

    Meredith Kieran Croft. The name wouldn’t stop repeating in my head. Stories came with it, the kind whispered across territories when people thought no one important was listening. The Rogue Alpha. The leader of Silverthorn who’d been accused of betraying the coalition. The man other packs avoi

  • Marked By The Rogue Alpha   Chapter 4: What Is Your Name?

    MeredithSix days had passed since I agreed to the arrangement, and I still didn't know the Alpha's name.I'd spent those days imagining every possible kind of man my father could have hidden from me. Old and desperate for an heir. Cruel and looking for someone he could control. Politically dangero

  • Marked By The Rogue Alpha   Chapter 6: The Alpha Who Came Too Late

    Meredith The front door opened, and one of the servants stepped into the foyer with Alarick behind him, looking like he already regretted letting the Alpha inside. His eyes found me immediately. He barely glanced at Kieran standing beside me. His focus was entirely on me, like I was still his pro

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status