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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 4

I was still standing at the counter with the folded napkin in my hand when I heard River remove his apron.

Not loud. Just the soft snap of the tie coming loose, the quiet fold of canvas, the particular silence of a man who has made a decision and is no longer in a hurry about it.

I didn't turn around. I kept my eyes on the napkin and waited.

His footsteps crossed the floor without rushing. He came to my side — not in front of me, not behind me — exactly beside me. And then I felt the weight of his coat settle across my shoulders.

Not draped carelessly. Deliberately. One unhurried movement, like he'd done it before in some version of this moment he'd already worked through.

The cedar and cool-water scent of him wrapped around me, and Sera — who had gone so quiet I'd almost forgotten she was still there — exhaled.

I looked at him.

River was already looking at Knox.

"I'd like to formally propose a mate ceremony," he said. His voice was low and even and carried to every corner of the silent dining room without him raising it at all. "To Riley. Here. In front of witnesses." A brief pause. "I'd like her answer."

The dining room didn't breathe.

I don't know what I expected to feel. Something large, maybe. Something that would knock the composure I'd been maintaining for the last twenty minutes sideways.

What I felt instead was simpler than that.

I turned and looked at Knox.

He was still at the table. Still seated. But something had happened to the flatness he'd been wearing all afternoon — it had developed a crack, fine as a hairline fracture in concrete, running from his jaw to somewhere behind his eyes. His weight had shifted forward. Barely. The kind of shift you'd only notice if you'd spent years learning to read him.

I had spent years learning to read him.

I looked at him for exactly one second.

Long enough to see Dagger moving underneath the surface — that massive, charcoal shape pressing against the inside of Knox's control like something trying to get out. Long enough to see Knox register that I was seeing it, and go even more still.

Long enough to know exactly what my answer would cost him.

I turned back to River.

"Yes," I said.

Simple. Level. The same voice I used to quote menu prices.

Something shifted in River's face — not surprise, but a quiet, specific relief that he didn't perform. He just nodded once, like we'd confirmed something that had been pending for a while.

Behind me, I heard Knox's chair move.

I didn't look back.

---

River walked Knox and Kendall out. I don't know what he said. I stayed at the counter and refilled the water pitcher and wrote up the check for table six and did not think about anything until the door closed and the dining room slowly remembered how to talk again.

Mr. Hale caught my eye from his corner table. He gave me a small nod — the nod of a man who has lived long enough to recognize when someone has just done something that will have consequences, and who approves of them doing it anyway.

I nodded back.

---

Knox's silence was the loudest thing in Ashriver that night.

I knew that silence. I'd grown up adjacent to it — the particular quality of an Alpha processing a loss he hasn't decided to call a loss yet. The strategy session he'd be running behind closed eyes. The way he'd reorganize every piece on the board until he found the shape that still gave him the outcome he wanted.

I didn't sleep well. But I slept.

Sera stayed close all night. She still smelled him on the edges of things — that cold iron and pine-resin trace that five years hadn't managed to make neutral. I noticed it the same way I noticed the photograph behind my phone case. Catalogued it. Filed it somewhere that wasn't the present.

I had made my choice. What came next was Knox making his.

I already had a rough idea what it would be.

---

Thursday came gray and close, the sky the color of old concrete, the air carrying the first suggestion of rain.

I finished my morning shift, changed out of my uniform in the back room, and walked the six blocks to Chase's rehabilitation clinic. My usual Thursday afternoon. He had his language session at two, the one with the therapist who'd started last month and who Chase had — miracle of small mercies — actually taken to. Afterward we usually walked to the corner store and he picked out something terrible from the candy aisle and told me about whatever documentary he'd watched that week.

The front desk was staffed by a woman I didn't recognize.

That was the first thing.

The second thing was the door to Chase's hall standing open at an angle it was never left at.

I said his name at the desk. The woman typed something. She had the expression of a person who has been told what to say and is going to say exactly that and nothing more.

"Mr. Foster was transferred this morning," she said. "To a supervised neurological management facility upstate. The order was processed through the county Alpha authority channel. We have the paperwork on file if you'd like to—"

"What facility."

She slid a printed sheet across the desk.

I looked at the name stamped at the top of the forwarding address.

I knew it. I'd heard of it the same way you hear of places by reputation — in lowered voices, in the careful avoidance of specifics, in the way people who knew it said the name and then went quiet. An Omega correctional facility. Built, officially, for behavioral management. Built, actually, for containment. Understaffed. Unreported. The kind of place that accepted court-issued commitments and asked very little else.

The paperwork was signed. Official. A forged psychiatric evaluation with a pack-affiliated physician's name at the bottom, framing Chase's brain injury as a supervisory risk.

I stood at the desk and read every line of it.

My hands did not shake. My voice, when I thanked the woman and took my copy, was completely level.

I walked out into the gray afternoon and stood on the sidewalk for a moment.

The rain started. Small, cold drops that didn't commit to anything.

Sera was quiet again. Not the grief-quiet of the bistro floor. Something else. Something that felt less like loss and more like the moment before a decision that doesn't need to be made twice.

I put the forwarding address in my pocket.

And I started to think about the Ironclaw Pack banquet I'd seen circled in Declan Marsh's calendar three weeks ago, when I'd clocked him outside the hotel and he hadn't known I was paying that close attention.

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