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After His Mistress Bore His Secret Child, I Plotted Revenge Novel Cover

After His Mistress Bore His Secret Child, I Plotted Revenge

The Ironveil council chamber smelled like old leather and cold coffee. I sat at the far end of the long table, in the seat I had occupied for ten years, with the Luna's crest carved into the wood under my right hand. My husband, Alpha Alexander Bell, sat at the head. Between us stretched twelve of his senior wolves, two Gammas, and a map of the eastern trade corridor I had drawn myself three winters ago. I was speaking when my phone buzzed against my thigh. "—which means we renegotiate the timber terms with Crescent Hollow before the frost," I said, not looking down. "They'll concede six points if we offer the east ridge access. I've already drafted the language." Alexander nodded without really hearing me. He was scrolling through something on his own phone under the lip of the table, the way he always did in meetings he thought were beneath him. I used to find it charming once.
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Chapter 1

The Ironveil council chamber smelled like old leather and cold coffee. I sat at the far end of the long table, in the seat I had occupied for ten years, with the Luna's crest carved into the wood under my right hand. My husband, Alpha Alexander Bell, sat at the head. Between us stretched twelve of his senior wolves, two Gammas, and a map of the eastern trade corridor I had drawn myself three winters ago.

I was speaking when my phone buzzed against my thigh.

"—which means we renegotiate the timber terms with Crescent Hollow before the frost," I said, not looking down. "They'll concede six points if we offer the east ridge access. I've already drafted the language."

Alexander nodded without really hearing me. He was scrolling through something on his own phone under the lip of the table, the way he always did in meetings he thought were beneath him. I used to find it charming once. A man too busy building a kingdom to sit still.

My phone buzzed again. Then a third time.

I slid it into my lap and tilted the screen just enough to read. A file transfer notification. From Alexander's device to mine — he had our phones linked on the pack's private channel for documents. His thumb must have slipped.

I tapped it open.

A photograph filled the screen.

Kennedy Harper in a soft cream sweater, her hair loose the way she never wore it in pack meetings. Alexander beside her, one arm around her waist, the other cradling a small boy — maybe two years old, maybe a little older. The pup had Alexander's jaw. Alexander's dark eyes. That specific crease at the corner of his mouth when he smiled for real, the one I used to believe belonged only to me.

Inside my chest, my wolf — the wolf I had barely felt in years, the wolf I had mourned as broken — went completely, perfectly still. Not a whimper. Not a growl. A silence so absolute it felt like a held breath underwater.

I pressed my thumb against the inside of my wrist.

"Luna?" The Gamma to my left was looking at me. "You were saying about the timber?"

I lifted my eyes. I smiled the small, measured smile I had perfected at sixteen in Alpha training camps, when boys twice my size tried to stare me down.

"Six points," I said. My voice was even. "Access in exchange for priority haul rights through spring. I'll have the draft on everyone's desk by tomorrow morning."

I set the phone face-down on the table.

The meeting ran another forty minutes. I spoke three more times. I laughed once, softly, at something the Beta said about the quarterly surplus. I watched Alexander across the length of the table — watched his mouth move, watched him gesture with the hand that had been around her waist — and I did not tremble. Not once.

When it ended, I gathered my papers. I let him kiss the top of my head on the way out. His lips were warm. My scalp did not register it.

---

I waited until he was asleep.

Alexander sleeps the way Alphas who have never been truly threatened sleep — flat on his back, one arm thrown wide, mouth slightly open. I lay beside him for an hour, counting his breaths, until the rhythm went deep and slow.

His phone was on the nightstand, face-down, charging.

I slid out from under the duvet without disturbing the mattress. My bare feet made no sound on the rug. I lifted the phone, carried it into the walk-in closet, and closed the door behind me before I pressed the home button.

Passcode.

I typed six digits without thinking. The pack founding date. The date I stood in front of the Silverfang council and renounced my place in my father's pack so that a young Alpha with more ambition than territory could build something of his own. The date I signed away my bloodline standing in ink.

The screen unlocked on the first try.

He never even changed it.

I sat on the floor of the closet, the phone glowing blue against my knees, and I worked through it the way I had worked through every crisis of the last decade: methodically, from the top down.

Mind-link transcripts first. Alexander kept backups of everything — an arrogance I had always teased him about. There were years of them. *I miss you. Three more days. She left for the Silverfang summit this morning, come over tonight. He's asking about you again, what do I tell him.* I scrolled until the dates blurred. I did not stop to feel anything. Feelings could come later. Feelings were a luxury I would schedule for after.

Then the financial records. Transfers out of the pack treasury account, disguised as vendor payments, routed through two shell companies and into a holding account I did not recognize. I traced the amounts. Three hundred thousand here. Eight hundred there. Over four years, the total crested seven million.

Property documents. A twelve-acre estate in the southern edge of Blackriver territory — a rival pack, a pack Alexander had publicly called 'parasites' at last year's regional summit — registered in Kennedy Harper's name. Paid in full. Pack funds.

I took photographs of everything with my own phone, one careful frame at a time. I emailed the images to a private account Julia had set up for me three years ago, back when she first started worrying about me and I had laughed her off.

I was not laughing now.

I wiped Alexander's phone history of the transfer notification, returned it to the nightstand at exactly the angle I had found it, and walked down the hall to my study.

---

I did not turn on the overhead light. The desk lamp was enough.

I opened the leather notebook I kept locked in the bottom drawer — ten years of alliance maps, political debts, favors owed, pressure points. My handwriting is small and crabbed; no one else can read it. I had never intended anyone else to.

I found Alexander's name in the index. I turned to the page.

I drew a single line through it. Thin. Clean. Final.

Beneath the line, I began a new list.

*Crescent Hollow — owe me timber concession, renegotiable.*

*Ridgemoor — Beta's sister, healer debt from the winter fever, three years unpaid.*

*Silverfang — Dominic. Blood still counts.*

*Nighthollow — unknown. Survey.*

I wrote until the sky outside the study window began to gray. My thumb stayed pressed against the inside of my wrist the entire time, a small steady pulse I could count when nothing else in my body felt like mine.

When the first bird called from the garden, I closed the notebook, locked it away, and went upstairs to shower.

---

Margaret Voss was already in the kitchen when I came down, the way she had been every morning for four years. Late fifties, soft-spoken, a careful quiet Omega with the faintest resemblance to Kennedy around the eyes — a resemblance I had, with astonishing stupidity, never once examined.

She was reaching for the blender.

"Margaret," I said gently. "Leave the smoothie. Sit down a moment."

She turned, smiling the practiced smile of a woman who had smiled at me every morning while feeding me poison. "Luna? Is everything all right?"

"Perfectly." I poured myself a glass of water from the tap and sipped it. "I'm restructuring the household staff this week. Nothing personal — just a rotation. Your services won't be needed after today. Pack HR will handle your reassignment."

Her smile faltered for half a second. Half a second was enough.

"Of course, Luna," she said. "Whatever you need."

"Thank you, Margaret." I set the glass down. "That will be all."

I watched her gather her coat. I watched her leave through the side door. I watched the blender sit unused on the counter, the small glass jar of powdered supplement she always added still sealed beside it.

I did not touch it. I would need it later, intact, for the people who would know exactly what to look for.

Upstairs, Alexander was just beginning to stir. I heard him call my name, sleepy and affectionate, through the open bedroom door.

I pressed my thumb against my wrist one more time.

Then I climbed the stairs to kiss my husband good morning.

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