Sometimes the hardest part of watching a vertical isn’t the plot twists, the secret babies, or the random billionaire reveal. Sometimes it’s having to type the title with a straight face.
My Alpha Boss Gave Me Triplets is one of those titles.
But honestly? The title tells you exactly what you’re getting. There’s an alpha. He’s a boss. There are triplets. No false advertising here.
The series is a werewolf romance packed with fated mates, billionaires, secret pregnancies, family drama, and enough misunderstandings to fill an entire season of network television. We’re talking like CW level season drama. If you’ve ever wondered what would happen if every popular romance trope got tossed into a blender and set to “chaos,” with a side dose of “werewolf” this is your answer.
THE CHARACTERS
Abigail Fawn stars as Evie Florentine, a young woman desperately trying to make it in the city. She’s fighting to secure a permanent position at work because the alternative is returning home, where her family seems oddly committed to marrying her off to a farmer like we’re living in a historical horror film versus living in modern times.
Fawn has become a familiar face in the vertical drama world, and she continues to excel at playing characters whose kindness and optimism somehow survive circumstances that would have most of us rage-quitting life. We could not be her.
Then there’s Mark McClafferty, also known as Mark Vega, as Alpha Leo. After Evie is drugged and spends a night with him, Leo can’t stop thinking about her. That’s partly because she’s his mate and partly because, apparently, fate looked at this situation and decided things weren’t complicated enough already.
When they finally reconnect, things don’t exactly go smoothly.
After their night together, Leo tells Evie she can have anything she wants. Her response? A job.
A job.
Not his money. Not a mansion. Not designer handbags. Not a luxury car. She wants employment.
Naturally, Leo immediately suspects she’s a gold digger.
Sir, respectfully, what?
The woman literally asked to work for a living.
CAN WE TALK
One of the ongoing frustrations with My Alpha Boss Gave Me Triplets is how determined Leo is to misunderstand absolutely everything. It’s almost impressive, but instead is mostyl
The plot gets even messier when we learn Leo is cursed. He’ll die young if he doesn’t find his mate, and once he does, he’ll physically feel what she feels. This leads to one of the more ridiculous—and admittedly entertaining—story developments when Leo starts experiencing pregnancy symptoms and realizes Evie must be carrying his children.
Honestly, it’s one of the few times a romance hero has been forced to participate in the pregnancy experience, and I appreciated the commitment to the bit.
Unfortunately, things go downhill from there.
Because Evie is human, she’s told that the werewolf elders are horrified by the idea of her becoming Luna. Everyone constantly reminds her that she doesn’t belong, which only adds to her growing list of problems.
Then comes the inevitable misunderstanding. Evie lies about being pregnant, Leo gets angry, and instead of acting like a functioning adult, he throws her out of the building he owns. Never mind that she’s pregnant. Never mind that she has nowhere to go. He’s upset, and apparently that’s enough justification.
Again, sir, WHAT?
LORD A WOMAN DOESN’T ALWAYS NEED TO BE SAVED
This is where the show fully embraces one of my least favorite romance tropes: the male savior who creates half the problems and then expects applause for fixing them.
It’s causing me to want to tell him to sit the hell down.
When danger appears, Leo swoops in, throws Evie over his shoulder, and carries her back to his house. The show clearly wants viewers to see this as romantic and protective. I perceived him to be an a**.
I mostly found myself wondering if anyone had considered asking Evie what she wanted.
That’s my biggest issue with Leo throughout the series. His protective instincts aren’t inherently bad, but they often come packaged with an overwhelming need to make every decision for Evie. The story repeatedly frames his controlling behavior as proof of love, and that’s where it loses me.
I understand it’s a staple of the genre. Vertical dramas love an overprotective alpha who believes solving problems means taking complete control. But after watching countless versions of the same story, I’d love to see more heroines who get to save themselves occasionally.
Women can be capable and still be loved. Those things aren’t mutually exclusive.
CHEMISTRY
The chemistry between Mark and Abigail is there. The chemistry between Evie and Alpha Leo is there, but it’s buried beneath endless bickering, assumptions, and communication failures. So many of their problems could have been solved with a single honest conversation. Instead, they spend most of the story reacting emotionally, jumping to conclusions, and creating new disasters for themselves.
At some point, I found myself rooting less for their romance and more for both of them to discover basic communication skills.
Still, if you’re looking for a vertical packed with werewolves, secret babies, fated mates, billionaire drama, and enough chaos to keep you entertained, My Alpha Boss Gave Me Triplets delivers exactly what its wonderfully ridiculous title promises.