
Fated and Knocked Up by the Alpha King
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She left her past behind when her world crumbled—betrayed by love, abandoned by her pack, and burdened by loss. One wild night in Europe changed everything: a s*xy stranger, stolen kisses, and her first time… that left her with a surprise she never expected. Now a full-time writer and single mom, Elara returns to her old pack after years away, only to walk straight into the wedding of the century—the Alpha King’s wedding. But when the groom turns to her, their eyes lock, and he growls one word that stops the ceremony cold: “Mine.” Oh. Crap. Worse? He just noticed her toddler. And growled again: “My pup.” Let the chaos begin. Weddings, werewolves, jealous exes, awkward family dinners, steamy revenge kisses, and fated mate drama collide in this uproarious, s*xy, and heart-melting ride of second chances, found family, and unexpected love.
Prologue
The first mistake was parking two blocks away.
The second was letting Cassia carry the “emergency snack tote,” because she ran like an Olympic sprinter while I tried to keep up in heels, dragging a two-and-a-half-year-old who thought every snowdrift was an invitation to stop and dig for treasure.
We didn’t just arrive at the Ashthorne great hall — we stormed it.
The doors swung open so hard the chandeliers rattled. Warm candlelight spilled over us like the place had been holding its breath for our entrance.
Cassia led the way, red dress snapping at her heels, hair shining like she’d just stepped out of a perfume ad. She looked like trouble. Deliberately dressed trouble.
I came second, dark dress hugging me against the winter chill, hair wind-tossed but refusing to be tamed — Aeron balanced on my hip like a biscuit-crumbed prince. He had one shoe on, a suspiciously damp pant leg, and was waving Mister Dwagon like a conquering hero.
The hall went dead silent.
Aeron broke it with all the confidence in the world: “TA-DA!”
Somewhere in the second row, someone choked on champagne.
Cassia grinned like we’d rehearsed it. “Sorry we’re late,” she announced to no one in particular, her voice carrying easily over the hush. “Had to fight a snowstorm, a parking crisis, and a toddler dictatorship.”
“I win!” Aeron shouted proudly, then blew a kiss to a table of startled Omegas. “Hi peoples!”
We started down the aisle, our footsteps echoing in the stunned quiet. Every pair of eyes followed us — some curious, some cold, and others lit with that special gleam that meant tonight’s gossip just wrote itself.
The air smelled of winter roses and politics.
At the altar, the bride was perfect in lace and frost. The groom stood beside her, tall and broad in a dark ceremonial coat, gold eyes sweeping the crowd with the relaxed ownership of a man who never questioned his place at the top.
Until those eyes found me.
Everything in the room went still — no music, no whisper, just the electric punch of recognition. His expression didn’t change at first, but the stillness in him roared.
And then the heat hit me, memory crashing in: Paris. Low light. Whiskey. His mouth on mine. The way I’d let myself forget reality for one reckless night, only to run before sunrise.
The Alpha King.
My wolf surged. My pulse tripped. And then—
“Mommy,” Aeron said in the stage voice of a toddler who has never learned the art of subtlety, “dat man’s shiny.”
The Alpha King’s nostrils flared. His jaw tightened. And in a voice that rolled through the room like thunder, he growled—
“Mine.”
The quartet screeched to a halt. The priest’s mouth snapped shut. The guests erupted into a low, shocked buzz.
Aeron startled at the sound, then peered at the man at the altar. He pointed a crumb-dusted finger. “Mine too. Mommy mine. Dwagon mine. You… mine?” His head tilted. “You Daddy?”
The collective gasp could have lifted the roof.
Something in Thorne Valen’s — the Alpha King’s — face cracked. Softened. Lit. He took a step down from the altar.
“Don’t you dare,” the bride hissed, clutching his arm. He didn’t look at her.
“Cokie?” Aeron tried again, because priorities.
Cassia, goddess among wingwomen, produced one from the tote without breaking her smirk.
The Alpha King kept coming, each step deliberate, and when he was close enough for his voice to drop into something private but still lethal, he looked at my son.
“My pup.”
The sound in the room tilted. My pulse went wild.
Aeron considered him seriously, then nodded. “I pup. You big.”
“Very big,” Cassia stage-whispered.
“Cass,” I warned.
“What? He is.”
Sera — the bride — swayed on her heels, her grip on the ceremony unraveling. “This is a sacred—”
“We won’t be continuing,” Thorne said without looking away from us.
It was official. The wedding was over.
Sera’s voice rose, sharp and brittle. “You are humiliating me in front of every Alpha in the Northern Territories—”
“No,” Thorne cut in, his voice like steel wrapped in velvet. “You’ve been spared a far greater humiliation. Now step aside.”
Gasps scattered through the hall like thrown beads. The priest closed his book.
Sera’s glare slid to me. “You. Always you. Crawling back for scraps—”
“Dwagon says no,” Aeron announced suddenly, brandishing his plush like a tiny executioner. “No yelly lady.”
Cassia choked on a laugh, earning herself a death glare from Sera.
Thorne reached us, close enough that the heat of him rolled over my skin. Without asking, he took Aeron from my arms — and my son went willingly, tiny fingers curling into his coat like he’d been there before.
I stared up at him, fury and heat tangling in my chest. “You can’t just—”
“Yes,” he said, eyes locking on mine, “I can. And I will.”
Julian appeared at Cassia’s side like he’d been waiting for this moment his entire life. “Your Majesty, shall I clear a side room?”
Thorne didn’t look away from me. “Do it.”
Cassia bumped my shoulder, her grin unrepentant. “Well,” she murmured, “that was subtle.”
Chapter One – One Year Too Many
Elara’s POV
Snow had been falling since morning, soft and heavy, turning the Montana mountains into powdered sugar peaks. The Ashthorne Pack’s territory looked like something out of a postcard — all crisp air, frosted pines, and curling smoke from lodge chimneys.
It should have been the perfect night.
I was supposed to meet Kaleb Morvan at the pack lodge’s private dining room for our first anniversary. He’d been insistent about making it “special.” His exact words: Dress up for me, Elara. I want tonight to be unforgettable.
So I had.
My long, dark hair was swept into loose waves that brushed the open back of my deep green dress — the one that hugged at the waist and flared just enough to make me feel like my hips might be worth noticing. My bright gray eyes, framed with a little more mascara than usual, looked back at me in the reflection of the lodge’s polished glass doors with a mix of nerves and hope. A light d











