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Three Alpha Bikers Wants An Open Marriage by Constance Luna

Three Alpha Bikers Wants An Open Marriage  by Constance Luna

Riley gave everything to her marriage until she walked in on her husband and his stepsister cheating on her.

The betrayal shattered her… but only for a moment as she proposes to the one thing he’s always wanted: an open marriage.

He thought she’d crumble. Instead, she chose revenge.

And nothing stings more than the fact that she picked his three best friends to help her get it.
Three ruthless bikers. Three men who don’t share unless it’s worth the risk.

Three Alphas who made Riley theirs the moment she said yes to them.

Now every night, she gives them what her husband took for granted-moans, surrender, and something dangerously close to love.
He watches from the sidelines. Burning. Regretting but it’s too late.

Because she’s not just taking back her power-she’s making sure he feels what it’s like to be replaced.

And the worst part?

He never expected she’d fall for them.
And that they’d fall for her.
He broke his vows. They’re breaking every rule.
And Riley? She’s only just started.

Three Alpha Bikers Wants An Open Marriage Chapter 1

“I’m sorry, Miss Riley… but your son didn’t make it.”

The surgeon’s words still echoed in my head as I gripped the steering wheel harder, driving faster, the leather digging into my palms. I could still see his face-the sadness in his eyes, the quiet way he spoke, like even he couldn’t find the right words to soften the blow he dropped.

But there is no gentle way to tell a mother her baby is gone.

He was eight months old.

Eight months of fighting.

Eight months of hoping.

My baby boy.

My little fighter who came into this world with weak lungs and tiny hands, but a heartbeat that stole mine the first time I held him. He had been sick since day one. One infection after the other. Hospital visits. Medication. Sleepless nights. I lived my life between the company and the NICU.

And now last night was the worst. He had trouble breathing again, and his oxygen levels dropped dangerously low. I had rushed him to the hospital in my pajamas, cradling his burning little body against mine, whispering to him that it would be okay.

But it wasn’t.

The doctors said he needed emergency surgery. I sat alone all night in the hospital hallway, praying. Begging. Holding onto hope like it was the only thing keeping me from falling apart.

I called Ethan, my husband. I told him what was happening. I told him it was serious-that this time it felt different. I told him I was scared.

I needed him. Our son needed him.

But he didn’t come.

He didn’t answer the second time. Or the third.

And hours later, he picked up the call…His reply?

“I’m busy. Just take care of it and make sure nothing happens to him.” But now something has actually happened to him.

And now… here I am. Dressed in black. Not just because I buried my son this morning, but because something inside me died with him.

I should’ve stayed home. I should’ve been in bed, or curled up somewhere holding onto the last onesie he wore, crying until I couldn’t breathe. But I wasn’t allowed that kind of peace. Not in this life. Not when I had a company to run and a reputation to keep intact.

So I showed up.

Because today wasn’t just the day I buried my own child, today was also the day some so-called “important” investors, according to Ethan, were supposed to meet us-his friends, men he’d been talking to for years, trying to get them to invest in the company. He said it was crucial that I be there. That we couldn’t afford to mess it up.

And not even grief was a good enough excuse.

Our company sits at the edge of Crescent Hollow, a city where humans live alongside packs-mostly in an uneasy truce. It’s a place where dominance can be sensed in the air, and hierarchy matters more than laws. You can feel it in the way people move. In the subtle nods exchanged between us. In the silent rules that separate humans from wolves.

The car came to a slow stop outside the building in front of our company-the one we built together, though only one of us truly kept it standing. I run it every day while he… does whatever he pleases.

I took a deep breath, wiped at the corners of my eyes, and stepped out. The city didn’t stop for my pain. The sun still rose. The street was still loud, filled with the mix of humans and shifters going about their business. A pair of wolves in human form passed by on motorcycles, scents trailing behind them-sharp, wild, unmistakable.

And me? I was pretending to live.

I walked in through the main entrance. I could feel eyes on me. Inside, conversations died mid-sentence as people noticed me. The receptionist’s hand froze over the keyboard. Her eyes glossed, her lips parted, like she wanted to offer condolences but didn’t know if she was allowed to. No one spoke. Maybe out of fear. Maybe out of respect. Maybe because no one knows what to say to a woman who has just buried her child, yet still walks into work.

They’ve all heard. In Crescent Hollow, news travels faster than gossip. Maybe word had already spread that Riley Grayson-CEO, human, mated to a high-ranking wolf-had lost her baby and still showed up to work hours after his funeral.

I didn’t care.

My heels clicked against the tile floor as I headed toward the elevators, each step heavier than the last. Grief sat in my chest like a weight, pressing against my ribs, but I kept my chin up. My back straight. No one would see me crumble.

Never! Not yet.

I should go straight to the boardroom right now. I knew they’d be waiting. I knew they were all probably whispering behind closed doors, wondering what version of Riley would show up today.

But instead, I turned toward the executive wing because I needed to see Ethan-just for a moment.

I didn’t even know why. Maybe I was looking for something in his face. Some sign that he cared. Some flicker of guilt. Or maybe I just wanted to hear him say something-anything that proved I wasn’t the only one drowning in this and perhaps give me the courage to face the board despite the sadness that gripped my entire system.

Three Alpha Bikers Wants An Open Marriage Chapter 2

Riley’s POV

I pushed the door open slowly, my hand trembling around the handle. For a second, I thought my mind was playing tricks on me. Maybe I was hallucinating from exhaustion and heartbreak.

But no.

The moment the door widened enough for me to see inside, reality slammed into me with brutal clarity.

Ethan-my husband-was inside. Inside Wendy. On his desk.

Her body was arched over, her blouse pushed to her shoulders, skirt bunched around her hips. His hands were gripping her waist, pulling her back into him, driving into her like he had no shame, no hesitation, no fear of being caught. Like he had done this a hundred times before.

Her moans were loud, echoing off the office walls, breathy and unrestrained. She wasn’t even pretending to be quiet. She wasn’t afraid of anyone hearing. She wasn’t afraid of anyone walking in.

And why would she be?

No one walks into the Alpha’s office without knocking.

No one except me.

They noticed me at once. Wendy’s head snapped toward me so fast her hair whipped across her cheek. Her face drained of color, lips still parted around a moan that died in her throat.

Ethan didn’t freeze, but he didn’t pull away. He didn’t even bother to reach for his pants.

He just turned his head lazily toward me, still buried inside her, and stared like I’d interrupted him on something important.

His expression, instead of guilt, was filled with pure irritation, like I were an inconvenience.

My heart stopped. My mind blanked, and my vision tunneled.

For a moment, all I could hear was my own heartbeat slamming against my ribs.

Thud.

Thud.

Thud.

I opened my mouth, but the words fought against the grief strangling my throat.

“Our son…” I whispered, barely audible. “He died today, Ethan.”

Tears instantly filled my eyes, spilling over my cheeks in silent, panicked streams as Wendy’s hands scrambled to pull her blouse together, covering herself with trembling fingers.

Ethan finally, slowly, slipped out of her and pulled up his pants like he had all the time in the world. Like I was standing there asking him what he wanted for lunch. He moved with the same sluggish confidence he always had when he knew he was untouchable-the way most Alphas did.

I swallowed hard, but it felt like glass in my throat. “And you’re here,” I continued, my voice barely holding together, “With Wendy? Your own stepsister?”

Wendy shook her head, stumbling away from the desk. “Riley-Riley, I’m so- I didn’t- I swear I thought-“

Her words tangled, collapsing over each other, but I couldn’t look at her yet. I couldn’t look at the woman who stood by the hospital bed just last night and only left very early this morning. The woman who held me when they took my baby into surgery. The woman who hugged me each time my baby was having one sickness or another.

She was family.

My best friend.

My confidant.

The person I trusted with everything I had left.

The betrayal cut deeper than any knife ever could. But then Ethan scoffed, and my attention snapped back to him.

“You think I care about your dead kid, Riley?” he said, irritation slicing through every syllable.

He continued, stepping closer as if I were the problem.

“That’s all you’ve been for months-a walking tragedy. I’m tired of it. Tired of your crying. Tired of the hospitals. Tired of pretending I give a damn. You’re too boring, Riley!”

Wendy gasped, covering her mouth, horrified.

But he wasn’t done.

“You wanted sympathy? You wanted me to fall apart with you because of a child you managed to have but couldn’t even take care of? Sorry.” He shrugged. “I’ve got better things to do.”

The coldness in his voice seeped into my bones like ice water. It froze whatever warmth I had left. I stood there, staring at him, barely breathing, every cell in my body trembling from shock and rage and devastation.

“You…” I choked on my words. “You’re disgusting,” I whispered.

He smirked-the same arrogant Alpha smirk he used when belittling employees or dismissing problems he didn’t want to deal with. “You know you always hated how I was lazy, how I didn’t act like your fantasy perfect husband. Well, guess what? I’m done pretending.”

My nails dug so deeply into my palms that I felt something wet. I didn’t know if it was blood or sweat or both.

“Because that’s what you are, Ethan,” I said, voice breaking with each word. “I held everything together. Everything. Our child. Our business. Our home. While you-“

“While I what?” he cut in sharply. “Did nothing? Yeah. That’s right. And you yet stayed. So what does that say about you?”

I took a shaky breath.

He wasn’t finished.

“And honestly…” He leaned against the desk, folding his arms, eyes cruel. “You were always the pathetic one, Riley. Everyone knew it. Everyone felt sorry for me because of it. Maybe that’s why he died. Maybe the kid just wasn’t meant to survive with you.”

The world tilted in my head at once. The air was sucked from my lungs. My knees nearly buckled. A sound escaped me-something raw, wounded, inhuman. Something I had never heard myself make before.

“Ethan…” Wendy whispered, horrified. “Stop. Stop it-“

But he didn’t care.

He didn’t care about my shattered chest or the milk stains still on my dress from the last time I held my baby. He didn’t care that he had just used the death of our child-a child he barely acknowledged-to hurt me deeper than any man ever should.

Something snapped inside me at once, my hands moved before I could think, and I gave him a heavy slap!

The slap echoed across the room like thunder. A sharp, vicious crack.

His head whipped to the side from pure, unfiltered shock.

“Are you crazy?” he snapped, touching his cheek.

“No, Ethan,” I said, stepping closer, my voice steady for the first time since I walked in. “I’m done being crazy this time.”

He scoffed. Like I’d crumble again, the way I always did to keep peace, to keep the marriage functioning, to keep appearances.

Wendy’s voice trembled. “Riley, I’m sorry… I didn’t mean to… I thought you and he-he said you two weren’t-“

I held up my hand sharply, and she stopped talking instantly.

“You were supposed to be my friend,” I said quietly. “You were supposed to stand by me-but you’ve shown me you are nothing,” I said.

I turned back to Ethan. “You think you’ve won, right?” I choked.

But he rolled his eyes. “Are you done? We have investors waiting. You can scream later.”

The audacity. I clenched my fists, trying to stop my shaking hands. My grief didn’t disappear, but it rearranged itself-solidifying into something resolute.

I stared straight into his eyes and spoke calmly, clearly, deliberately.

“You’ve always wanted an open marriage, right, Ethan?”

He blinked, confused by the sudden shift.

“Well,” I continued, “you can have it now.”

The silence that followed was suffocating. Wendy gasped softly. Ethan straightened, his eyebrows lifting, but I didn’t break eye contact.

The words tasted like victory. Bitter, cold victory-but victory nonetheless.

Ethan opened his mouth, ready to argue, ready to mock me, ready to say something cruel, but I didn’t give him the chance.

“For the first time since I married you,” I said, walking past him toward the door, “you’re going to see exactly what you pushed me into.”

I reached the handle, pulled the door open, and looked back one last time.

“You don’t get to hurt me anymore, Ethan.”

Three Alpha Bikers Wants An Open Marriage Chapter 3

Riley’s POV

I don’t even remember storming out of the building.

One moment, I was staring at Ethan like I didn’t know him, as I’d never known him.

Next, my feet were carrying me through the lobby, past the glass doors, out into the cold outside, without a single glance at anyone. I didn’t care if the important investors were waiting. I didn’t care what rumors would spread.

Let them talk.

Let them say “Riley Grayson lost her mind.” They’d be right.

I got into my car, slammed the door shut, and drove. I didn’t check where. I didn’t plan. I just kept my foot on the gas and my hand clenched around the wheel, my vision swimming with the weight of betrayal.

My baby…

My beautiful boy.

Gone.

And Ethan… God. Ethan did this?

“You’re boring, Riley.”

Those words wouldn’t stop ringing in my head. The same man who took my virginity. I married at twenty when I thought love was enough to build a future on. I gave him three years. Three years of my youth, my body, my time, my soul, and now he stood in a glass office, buried in my best friend, telling me I was boring.

I blinked to wipe my tears, to see it clearly with my destination. It’s the clubhouse. Downtown in Crescent Hollow.

It was not just any club, though. Not the type you can walk into unless you have a reason. This place wasn’t built for humans like me. It was owned, run, and ruled by shifters, mostly werewolves of high rank like the Betas and Gammas. Pack Dangerous elites. Powerful and untouchable.

Let them throw me out. Let them tear me apart if they want. I needed air. I needed noise. I needed to forget.

I pulled the car into a side lot, got out, slammed the door behind me, and walked straight for the entrance with no hesitation. My black dress clung to me, wrinkled from hours of wear, tear-stained at the collar, but I held my head high as I stepped inside.

The scent of thick musk hit me first, mixed with sweat, leather, alcohol, and forbidden. The thrum of music pounded through my bones. The place was alive with movement. Dancers grinding against each other.

The low-ranking wolves-omegas in seductive forms with flashing smiles as they laughed, flirted, fought. No one noticed me at first. Maybe no one expected a human to walk in alone.

Definitely not a grieving one.

I made a beeline walk towards the bar.

The bartender, a tall shifter with silver rings in both ears and tattoos crawling up his neck, blinked at me like I was a hallucination.

“Tequila,” I said.

He raised a brow but said nothing and poured a shot for me. I downed it in one go. He blinked in confusion and poured another. I downed. Third, Fourth. Fifth.

Ethan’s voice was still echoing in my skull like a curse I couldn’t shake.

After everything… after every night I held that man’s business together… after every moment I managed to take care of our boy while he “couldn’t be bothered.”

Seven shots in, I slammed the empty glass on the counter and opened my mouth to ask for another, but the bartender hesitated.

“I’m sorry, miss,” he said, glancing at me with narrowed eyes. “I can’t give you more. You’re wasted.”

“What?” I frowned. “Are you the one who’s going to tell me how much I want to drink? Do you even know how I’m feeling right now?”

I wasn’t yelling. But my voice was loud, thanks to the music pounding through the club. The lights felt like they were spinning. My pulse buzzed in my ears.

“Pour me another.”

“I’m serious,” he said. “I’ll get in trouble if I give you one more. I won’t leave this place in one piece.”

I snorted bitterly. “Says who?”

His eyes darted past me over my shoulder. “Says them.”

I turned slowly, and my eyes landed on them.

Three men.

Three impossibly large, devastatingly handsome men were sitting at the far corner of the club in a booth no one else dared to come near. I hadn’t noticed them when I came in – how could I have missed them? It was like the aura shifted around them. Like the room moved differently in their presence.

Their eyes were on me now. Watching intently. All three of them.

One with a jaw carved from stone and hair pulled into a loose knot at his nape.

Another leaned back lazily, fingers tapping against his glass, his eyes molten gold even from this distance.

The third seemed darker – danger seemed to curl around him like smoke, his unreadable expression fixed right on me.

They looked familiar somehow. Too familiar.

I squinted, rubbing my eyes. The tequila had definitely caught up to me, but something told me I’d seen them before. Somewhere. Somehow.

They were still staring, and all of a sudden, heat prickled hot across my skin.

What the hell did they want? Why were they looking at me like that? And what kind of sick twisted joke is that I have to listen to them?

Do they own this club or what? I slammed my palms on the counter, making the bar guy jerk in shock as I straightened up, wobbling slightly on my feet.

“They’ll have to tell me who they’re to tell me not to have more drinks,” I said as I clenched my palms and walked up to them.

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