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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 3

The banquet hall of the Ashford Pack's neutral estate was the kind of room that rewarded patience. High ceilings, candlelight, the low murmur of Alphas performing goodwill at each other across white linen. I had attended forty dinners like this one. I knew exactly how they worked.

Kennedy arrived on Alexander's arm at seven-fifteen.

She was wearing a deep burgundy dress I had never seen before—new, expensive, the kind of choice that takes research. Her hair was up. She moved through the entry with the careful confidence of someone who had rehearsed the room in her head before walking into it, and she held Alexander's arm the way a woman holds something she is still deciding whether to keep.

Alexander did not look at me when they entered. That told me everything I needed to know about how the evening had been planned.

I was already seated at the head table between the Ashford Alpha and his Beta, my wine untouched, my expression pleasant. I watched Kennedy scan the room, locate me, and recalibrate. Her smile did not waver. She was good. I gave her that.

Dinner moved the way these dinners move—slow, deliberate, everyone performing slightly better versions of themselves. Kennedy worked the table. I watched her do it. She had positioned herself two seats down from the Alpha of the Greywood Pack, a broad, cautious man named Harlan who controlled three timber routes I needed for the alliance squeeze I was quietly constructing. She was telling him something about Ironveil's eastern expansion, gesturing with her wine glass, laughing at exactly the right intervals.

I waited until she finished.

'Harlan.' I set my fork down and turned toward him with the unhurried attention of a woman who has nowhere else to be. 'I want to make sure you have the accurate figures on that expansion. The eastern corridor project was filed under provisional status in the second quarter—it hasn't cleared the Gamma council review yet.' I smiled. 'I'd hate for you to make any decisions based on incomplete information.'

Harlan looked at Kennedy. Kennedy's smile had gone very still.

'Also,' I continued, just as pleasantly, 'I believe there was a small confusion about pack protocol on the resource-sharing clause Kennedy mentioned. The current framework actually requires Luna-level authorization for any inter-pack resource commitments—not Beta-trainee sign-off.' I paused. 'I'm sure it was just an oversight.'

The table was quiet for exactly two seconds.

Then Harlan turned back to me and said, 'Of course, Luna. I'd welcome the correct documentation whenever it's convenient.'

'I'll have it to your Beta by morning,' I said.

Kennedy did not speak again for the rest of dinner. I did not look at her directly. I did not need to.

---

Alexander found me in the east corridor twenty minutes after the plates were cleared.

I heard him coming—the particular weight of his footsteps when he is angry and trying not to show it. I was standing near the window at the end of the hall, my wrap around my shoulders, looking at nothing.

'Seraphina.'

I turned.

His face was composed. His eyes were not. He stopped two feet from me and when he spoke, his voice had that low, resonant drop I had felt in my chest a hundred times—the Alpha tone, the one that pressed against the back of your skull and told your body to comply before your mind had finished processing the command.

He had never used it on me. Not once in ten years.

'You will stop undermining my Beta-trainee,' he said. 'In public. In front of allied Alphas. You will not do it again.'

I looked at him.

The tone pressed. My wolf—my quiet, diminished, barely-there wolf—stirred somewhere deep and furious, and I felt the effort of it move through my whole body like a current I had to hold back with both hands.

I pressed my thumb against the inside of my wrist.

'I corrected a factual error,' I said. My voice was even. 'Harlan needed accurate information. That's my function as Luna.' I tilted my head slightly. 'Was the information I gave him incorrect?'

His jaw tightened.

'That's what I thought.' I pulled my wrap a little closer and stepped around him. 'Goodnight, Alexander.'

I walked the length of the corridor without hurrying. I did not look back. I did not let myself feel anything until I turned the corner and the sound of the banquet swallowed the space between us, and then I stood alone in the next hallway with my thumb grinding into my wrist and my wolf pressing at the inside of my ribs like something trying to remember how to breathe.

Not yet, I told her. Not yet.

She subsided. Barely.

---

Julia arrived at my suite at ten-thirty with a bottle of Malbec and the expression of a woman who has been waiting a long time to do something useful.

'You were extraordinary tonight,' she said, setting the bottle on the side table and dropping into the chair across from me. 'Harlan looked at Kennedy like she'd personally misled him about his taxes.'

'She did personally mislead him.' I pulled the cork. 'About his trade options, which amounts to the same thing.'

Julia watched me pour. 'How are you?'

'Working.' I handed her a glass.

She took it and was quiet for a moment—the particular quiet Julia uses when she is deciding how to say something. I have known her long enough to let it run.

'I found you an advisor,' she said finally. 'Lycan-trained. Legal background, strategic background, significant territorial resources. No political ties to Ironveil, no reason for Alexander to flag the connection.' She swirled her wine. 'He's already agreed to meet. Tonight, if you're willing.'

I looked at her. 'Who?'

She smiled into her glass. 'Someone who asked me not to say ahead of time.'

That should have been a reason to decline. I noted that it wasn't, and filed the observation away without examining it.

'Where?' I said.

Julia stood and nodded toward the small meeting room adjacent to my suite—a room I used for private pack business, windowless, soundproofed, accessible only through my quarters. 'He's already inside,' she said. 'I let him in while you were in the corridor with Alexander.'

I set my wine down.

I crossed the room, put my hand on the door, and opened it.

Atlas Hunt was seated at the far end of the table, both hands resting loose in front of him, watching the door with the expression of a man who had been prepared for exactly this moment for a very long time.

Neither of us spoke.

Behind me, I heard Julia take a slow, satisfied sip of her wine.

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