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After His Mistress Humiliated Me, I Planned My Revenge Novel Cover

After His Mistress Humiliated Me, I Planned My Revenge

Tuesday mornings at the bistro always smelled like burnt sugar and fresh bread. I'd learned to like that. Five years of early shifts will do that to a person — take something ordinary and turn it into something close enough to comfort that you stop noticing the difference. I was at the espresso machine when Mr. Hale came in. Retired schoolteacher, always sat at the corner table by the window, always ordered a flat white with oat milk and a blueberry scone, even though he spent a full minute every single time pretending to look at the menu. He'd been coming in for three weeks. I had his order memorized after the first Tuesday. "The usual?" I called before he'd even sat down. He looked up, surprised and pleased in the way regulars always are when you remember.
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Chapter 3

I found the photograph on Saturday morning.

I wasn't looking for it. I was in the walk-in cooler running through the healer contact list in my head for the fourth time, and my phone slipped out of my apron pocket and hit the floor. When I picked it up, the case had popped loose at the corner, and there it was — sliding halfway out from behind the back panel where I'd wedged it years ago.

Chase. Maybe nineteen in the photo. Before the rogue attack. He was standing in front of a truck that wasn't his, laughing at something off-camera, one hand raised like he'd just said something he found hilarious. His eyes were clear. Sharp. The way they used to be before the injury rewired something essential and irreplaceable in the wiring behind them.

I stood there in the cold and looked at it for a long time.

He was still funny. Still warm. Still Chase, in all the ways that mattered. But that laugh in the photograph — easy and unguarded and completely in the moment — I hadn't seen that exact laugh in four years. And every week I didn't have sixty dollars, every customs flag, every rent hike, pushed his therapist's timeline back another increment I might never fully recover.

I put the photograph back. Case snapped shut.

I wasn't running.

I'd run five years ago because I had no other option and nothing left to protect. Now I had my mother's treatment schedule. I had Chase's weekly sessions. I had a job and a routine and a fragile financial structure that Knox was systematically applying pressure to from three different directions — and if I moved, all of it collapsed.

So I didn't run. I did what I used to do when I ran Ironclaw incursion routes for Knox back when I was seventeen and the pack's perimeter was half what it should have been.

I started paying attention.

Knox's SUV was usually parked on the east side of the main street by nine a.m. He favored the same two-block radius — hotel, coffee place he never went inside, the end of the block with the clear sightline to the bistro. His Beta, Declan Marsh, ran the actual logistics: I'd clocked him twice in four days, both times at the edge of what should have been casual foot traffic if you weren't specifically watching for someone trying not to look purposeful.

Declan was careful. But he had a habit of touching his left jacket pocket when he was checking his phone — a small, automatic gesture, the kind you develop when you carry something you're responsible for. I catalogued it the same way I catalogued Mr. Hale's menu performance and Chase's crosswalk timing.

Knox hadn't been improvising. He'd come to Ashriver with a plan and he was working it methodically, the same methodical patience I'd watched him bring to every territorial problem Crescent Hollow had ever faced.

I'd helped him develop that patience. In a sense, I'd built the exact instrument he was now using against me.

That almost made me laugh. Almost.

---

I learned about the escalation before it arrived.

Not through any inside source. Just through the quality of the silence — the way Declan's sightlines shifted Thursday evening, the way Knox's SUV sat longer than usual outside the hotel, the particular stillness of someone who is waiting for a piece to be placed before they move.

Something was coming. I didn't know its shape yet.

I found out on Friday afternoon.

---

Kendall Dean wore nude heels to a bistro lunch. That was the first tell.

The second was the table she chose — center floor, maximum visibility, the table regulars avoided because the afternoon light from the west window hit it directly and made it hard to read a menu. Kendall didn't intend to read the menu. She intended to be seen.

She had Knox's arm when she walked in. She released it with the casual ownership of someone who does it a hundred times a day. Her jacket was cream-colored, expensive, the kind of thing you wear to places where nothing is supposed to spill on you.

I took their order. Kendall asked for the most expensive bottle on the wine list — we didn't carry it, so she accepted something close — and looked at me through it the way you look at a smudge on glass that you've decided not to clean yourself. Knox didn't look at me at all, which was its own particular statement.

I went back to the counter. River was at the kitchen pass. He didn't say anything. He refilled the water pitcher and set it on the counter where I could reach it.

Ten minutes.

I heard the sound before I registered what it meant — glass against tabletop, a brief pause, and then the wet rush of liquid going somewhere it wasn't supposed to go. A sound that was just slightly too deliberate.

I turned around.

Kendall was examining her nails. The wine was pooled across the table and running in a clean line down onto her shoes — both of them, which would have required the glass to tip at a very specific and practiced angle.

She looked up. Found me across the dining room. Crooked one finger.

"Clean that up." Her voice was bright and carrying. "And the shoes."

The dining room went still. The particular, held-breath stillness of people who can feel a current in the air but can't name its source yet.

I picked up a cloth napkin from the counter and walked over.

I was calculating. Still calculating. Every exit, every option, Chase's session schedule, the medication timeline, the rent notice folded in my kitchen drawer. I was still running numbers when I stopped three feet from her table.

"On your knees." Knox's voice. Quiet. Almost gentle. The Alpha tone underneath it pressed against the base of my skull like a thumb on a bruise. "She's waiting."

Kendall had gone back to her phone.

I looked at Knox for exactly one second. His eyes were flat. Whatever had moved behind them the first day in the crosswalk — that involuntary thing I hadn't been able to name — was gone. Or buried so deep it might as well be.

I went down.

Both knees on the hardwood floor. I pressed the cloth napkin to the first shoe and moved it in short, even strokes. Methodical. The way I did everything now. Kendall's heel was four inches, nude patent leather, not a mark on it except the wine I was removing.

She scrolled something on her phone and didn't look down.

I worked. I kept my breathing even. I kept my face blank and my hands steady and I didn't look at Knox and I didn't look at the dining room, which I could hear not-breathing around me in a wide radius.

Somewhere deep inside, Sera had gone completely silent.

Not frightened. Not howling. Just — gone quiet in the way something goes quiet when it has finished waiting for a thing it hoped would not happen, and the thing has happened, and now it is done hoping.

That was the moment.

Not the knees on the floor. Not the shoes. Not the watching dining room or Knox's flat eyes or Kendall's scrolling thumb.

It was Sera going quiet.

Because I'd still been holding something, somewhere, without ever fully admitting I was holding it. Some last buried thread of the girl who'd stood beside Knox at seventeen and believed that what they were building together was real. That he'd known her. That it had meant something.

That thread snapped. Quietly. Cleanly.

No sound. No drama.

Just — gone.

I finished the second shoe. I stood up. I folded the napkin cloth-side in and set it on the edge of the table where the wine had pooled.

"I'll get something for the table," I said. My voice came out level. It always did.

I walked back to the counter.

And I started planning in earnest.

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