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After My Alpha Called My Stepsister His True Mate Novel Cover

After My Alpha Called My Stepsister His True Mate

The great hall smelled like blood and candle wax. Killian stood at the head of the room with his shirt still torn at the shoulder, a bandage wrapped around his forearm from the ambush. The wound was already healing — Alpha metabolism, nothing serious. But he wore it like a prop. Like a man who understood the value of looking like he had survived something. I stood in the third row. Luna of Ironveil Pack. His mate. I could feel the bond right then, warm and insistent in the center of my chest, the way it always was when he was close. Seven years of that warmth.
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Chapter 2

Arielle moved into the Luna's quarters on a Tuesday.

She didn't ask. She didn't wait for Killian to formally reassign the rooms. She simply appeared one morning with two pack omegas carrying boxes, and by afternoon, the pale curtains I had chosen three years ago were in a pile in the hallway.

I was still sleeping in those rooms. Technically.

She knocked on the open door while I was at my desk, not looking up from my laptop. "I hope you don't mind," she said, in the voice she used when she very much hoped I did. "I thought we could start transitioning the space. Fresh energy, you know?"

I saved my file. Closed the laptop. Looked at her.

Arielle had always been pretty in a way that required an audience. She needed someone watching to fully activate it. Right now she had two omegas behind her and me in front of her, and she was performing for all three of us simultaneously.

"Take whatever you need," I said. "I'll be out by the end of the week."

Something flickered across her face. She had wanted a reaction. A flinch, a protest, anything she could carry back to Killian as evidence that I was struggling.

I gave her nothing, and watched her recalibrate in real time.

"That's very gracious of you," she said finally.

"Isn't it," I agreed, and opened my laptop again.

She left. I listened to her footsteps fade down the corridor and then I pressed my thumb against the inside of my wrist, held it there for three seconds, and went back to work.

---

The pack run that Thursday was the first time I saw it clearly.

Killian led from the front, the way he always did — large dark wolf, powerful stride, the kind of presence that made younger wolves instinctively give ground. But halfway through the eastern ridge loop, something stuttered. His aura, that constant low-frequency pressure that every Alpha carried like a second skin, flickered. Just once. Just for a moment.

Most of the pack didn't notice. They were running, focused on the trail, the cold salt air coming off the coast.

Marcus noticed. I saw it in the way his wolf's head turned — a fraction, barely anything — tracking Killian's stride before looking away again. Filing it. The way a Beta files things he isn't ready to name yet.

I filed it too.

The bond in my chest burned steady as ever. His wolf was already paying the price for what he'd done, and he didn't even know it yet. The Moon Goddess, it turned out, had her own accounting system.

I ran the rest of the loop at the back of the pack and said nothing.

---

By the end of the week, the pack house walls felt like a coffin.

I had moved into one of the guest suites — smaller, facing north, no view worth mentioning. I had my laptop, my mother's journal, and twenty-three files of evidence that were going to dismantle Killian Ward's entire world. I should have felt steady. I did feel steady, mostly.

But there is a particular kind of restlessness that comes at two in the morning when you have done everything you can do for the day and the silence is too loud and the bond in your chest is burning and you are very, very tired of performing composure for an audience that doesn't deserve the show.

I got in my car and drove.

Cedar Hollow was forty minutes from pack territory — neutral ground, the kind of town that existed in the gaps between pack borders, where wolves from different packs could move without politics. I had been there twice before, both times for pack business. I knew the layout. I knew which bar the wolves used.

I wasn't sure why I was going there. I told myself I needed air. I told myself I was scouting. I told myself a lot of things.

I parked on the main street and got out, and that's when it hit me.

Dark pine. Rain-soaked leather. Something underneath both of those things that was warm in a way I didn't have a word for — not sweet, not sharp, just dangerously, specifically warm.

My wolf went absolutely still.

Not the careful stillness I had trained into her over the past week. Not the controlled quiet of a wolf holding herself back from grief. This was different. This was the stillness of an animal that has just scented something it cannot categorize and is using every sense it has to figure out why.

I stopped walking.

He was standing outside the bar's side entrance, arms crossed, watching the street with the easy patience of someone who had nowhere better to be. Tall. Dark jacket. No pack tattoo on his neck, none on his forearms where his sleeves were rolled up. A jaw that looked like it had been in at least one argument it had won.

He looked at me.

The scent hit harder when his eyes landed on mine, and my wolf surged forward so fast I had to physically lock my knees.

I had felt the mate bond before. I knew what it felt like — the warmth, the pull, the recognition. I had spent seven years with Killian's bond burning in my chest.

This was not that. This was something older. Something that didn't ask permission.

I told my wolf, very firmly, to sit down.

She did not sit down. She pressed against my ribs like she was trying to walk through them.

He pushed off the wall and came toward me, unhurried, like a man who had already decided how this conversation was going to go. "You look lost," he said. His voice was easy. Warm. Slightly amused.

"I'm not," I said.

"Okay." He stopped a few feet away. Close enough that the scent was almost overwhelming. He didn't seem affected — or he was very good at not showing it. "You're also not from Cedar Hollow."

"No." I looked at his neck again. No tattoo. No rank marking. "You're packless."

Something moved in his expression. Not offense. More like a man deciding how much of a hand to show. "Something like that."

I needed an operative outside Killian's network. Someone with no pack loyalty, no political stake, no reason to report back. Someone who could move across pack borders without triggering territorial protocols. I had been thinking about this problem for four days and had not found a clean solution.

My wolf was currently trying to climb out of my skin because of this man's scent, which was a problem I was going to deal with separately.

"I have a job," I said. "Cross-border tracking. Rogue alliance networks, eastern corridor. I need someone who can move without a pack flag."

He looked at me for a moment. "That's a fast pivot from 'you look lost.'"

"I told you I wasn't lost."

The corner of his mouth moved. Not quite a smile. "What's the pay?"

"Enough to matter. And I pay on delivery, not on promise."

He was quiet for a beat. The scent between us sat in the air like something alive, and I kept my face completely neutral and my thumb pressed hard against the inside of my wrist where he couldn't see it.

"Kaden Bishop," he said, and held out his hand.

I shook it. His hand was large and calloused and warm, and my wolf made a sound in the back of my mind that I was absolutely not going to acknowledge.

"Olivia," I said. Just the first name. He didn't need the rest yet.

He nodded, like that was fine. Like he already knew there was more and was willing to wait for it.

That should have been a warning sign. I noted it and filed it away, the same way Marcus had filed Killian's flickering aura on the ridge.

The professional arrangement was clean. I told myself that twice on the drive home, with the windows down and the cold air doing nothing at all to clear the scent of dark pine from my memory.

The scent pull between us was something else entirely. I didn't have a file for it yet.

I was going to need one.

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