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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 2

I lasted two nights before I got in the car.

Not because I had somewhere to go. I had nowhere to go—that was the problem. The pack house was full of Alexander's breathing and Margaret's ghost and the blender sitting on the counter like an accusation I hadn't filed yet. My study felt too small. The notebook felt too finished. I had made my lists, sent my files, dismissed my poisoner, and now there was nothing left to do but wait, and I have never been good at waiting.

So I drove.

Past the eastern border markers, past the neutral trade corridor, out onto the highway where there were no pack wolves and no one who would report back to Alexander that his Luna was driving at midnight with no destination and both hands too tight on the wheel. The road was empty. The sky was that particular winter dark that has no color in it at all.

I was running a calculation about Ridgemoor's healer debt when I hit the SUV.

Not hard. Not catastrophically. But the crunch of my front bumper against his rear panel was loud enough to jolt me fully back into my body, and for a moment I just sat there with my hands on the wheel and the engine ticking and thought: of course.

The driver's door of the other car opened.

He stepped out unhurried, the way people move when they are never surprised by anything. Tall. Dark coat. The kind of stillness that isn't stillness at all but control so complete it reads as stillness. He walked to the back of his vehicle, looked at the damage, then turned and looked at me.

Atlas Hunt.

I had not seen him in—I ran the count automatically, the way I ran all counts—six years. The last regional summit before Alexander stopped bringing me to anything that might remind other Alphas that Ironveil's Luna had a bloodline worth noticing. Atlas had been across the room that night, talking to two Gammas, and he had looked at me once with an expression I had categorized as neutral and filed away.

He looked at me now with the same expression. I was starting to think I had miscategorized it.

I got out of the car.

"Alpha Hunt." My voice came out level. I was grateful for that.

"Luna Bell." He glanced at my front bumper, then back at me. No anger. No performance. Just that steady, unreadable attention. "You all right?"

"Fine." I looked at his rear panel. The dent was mine, clearly, a neat crescent of damage in the black finish. "I'll have Ironveil's insurance contact your Beta by morning."

"Mm." He crouched down and looked at the panel with the focus of a man who had no intention of making this simple. The night air moved between us, and I caught it then—just the edge of it—dark pine and something underneath, something smokier, something that made my wolf stir in her long silence like a dreamer shifting in sleep. I pressed my thumb against my wrist and looked at the road.

"Straightforward repair," I said. "A week at most."

He stood. "Hard to say." He reached into his coat and produced a card—plain, black, just his name and a number—and held it out. "I'll need to run a full assessment before I can authorize anything. Structural integrity, undercarriage, the works." He said it with absolute seriousness. "Could take some time."

I looked at the card. I looked at him.

"It's a dent, Atlas."

"It's a complex dent." He held the card steady. His eyes did not move from my face.

I took the card.

He watched me get back in my car. I watched him in the rearview mirror until the highway curved and took him out of sight, and then I drove home with the card on the passenger seat and my thumb pressed hard against my wrist and my wolf making that quiet, restless sound she had not made in years.

---

He came back three days later.

The neutral trade zone sits at the western edge of Ironveil's territory—a strip of open ground where pack wolves from different territories can meet without triggering border protocols. I used it for supplier meetings, occasionally for diplomatic conversations I didn't want documented inside pack walls. I was there reviewing a timber contract amendment when I heard the crunch of gravel and looked up.

Blacked-out SUV. Still dented.

Atlas got out with two coffees in a carrier and crossed the ground between us like he had been doing it for years.

"Assessment," he said, and handed me one of the cups.

I took it before I thought about it. Black, no sugar. I had not told him how I took my coffee. I looked at the cup and then at him, and he was already looking at the tree line with the expression of a man reviewing structural integrity.

"You're going to keep coming here," I said. It wasn't a question.

"Until I can authorize the repair." He sipped his own coffee. "Responsible ownership."

I should have sent him away. I had a list of things I should have done that week that I had not done, and sending Atlas Hunt back across the border was somewhere in the middle of it. Instead I turned back to the timber contract and let him stand there, and after a moment he sat on the hood of his SUV—still dented, I noticed, not a single attempt at repair—and said nothing.

He came back two days after that. Same time, same coffees. He noticed the slight tremor in my hand when I took the cup—I saw his eyes drop to it for half a second—and he said nothing about it. He did not ask why I was tired. He did not ask what I was working on. He sat on his dented SUV and drank his coffee and watched the tree line, and the silence between us had a quality I did not have a category for yet.

On his fourth visit, I realized I had started leaving the trade zone meeting twenty minutes later than I needed to.

I did not write that down in my notebook. Some calculations I was not ready to complete.

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