
After My Alpha Cheated, I Took Our Son and Left
Chapter 3
I found Maggie in the border woods, her body crumpled against the base of an ancient oak. Blood trickled from a cut above her eyebrow, staining the collar of her training shirt. Her breathing came in shallow gasps, each one punctuated by a wince of pain. The scent of her attackers—three distinct male wolves with the unmistakable Vasquez family markers—lingered in the air around her like a taunt.
Sable howled in rage within me. *They dared to touch our friend. Our sister.*
'Maggie,' I whispered, dropping to my knees beside her. 'Who did this to you?'
She tried to smile, but it twisted into a grimace as she shifted her weight. 'Just some of Kaden's loyal pups,' she managed. 'Said I needed to learn my place. That I should convince you to back down. They knew, Evie. They knew you gave up your suite for my program.'
My fingers curled into fists as I helped her sit up. 'They'll pay for this. All of them.'
'No,' Maggie grabbed my wrist, her grip surprisingly strong despite her injuries. 'That's what they want. They want you to break. To fight dirty so they can justify getting rid of you.'
I looked down at my best friend, her face swollen and bruised but her eyes clear and defiant. In that moment, something crystallized within me—a cold, sharp clarity. 'Then I'll fight clean,' I said, my voice steady. 'And I'll still win.'
I helped Maggie to her feet, supporting most of her weight as we made our way back toward the packhouse. She leaned heavily against me, her breathing gradually steadying as we walked. The moonlight cast long shadows across our path, and I could feel Sable's presence strengthening within me, lending me her power.
'Luna Evelyn,' a young Delta wolf called out as we approached the main grounds. 'The Alpha council is meeting now. Beta Darius sent word that you should come immediately.'
I nodded, adjusting my grip on Maggie. 'Perfect timing.'
The council chamber doors loomed ahead, carved with the Silverfang Pack's emblem—a wolf with bared teeth. I didn't knock. I kicked the doors open, Maggie's blood staining my hands as I supported her.
Conversation died instantly. Kaden sat at the head of the long table, flanked by his parents and the pack elders. His eyes widened as he took in Maggie's condition, then narrowed as he realized what this meant.
'Luna Evelyn,' he began, his voice carrying that false concern he'd perfected. 'What's happened here?'
I let Maggie's weight shift slightly, making her wince again. 'Your supporters attacked my friend. My pack sister. They beat her in the woods and told her to convince me to step down.'
The council erupted in murmurs. Kaden's mother leaned forward, her perfectly manicured hand covering her mouth in a show of shock. 'How terrible,' she said, her tone suggesting it was anything but.
Kaden stood, his Alpha aura flaring. 'This is pack business, Evelyn. We can discuss it privately.'
'No.' I stepped closer, my own aura rising to meet his. 'We discuss it now. In front of everyone.'
'She was probably just roughhousing during training,' Kaden said dismissively, his eyes flicking to the elders. 'You know how the younger wolves can get carried away.'
Maggie made a sound of disbelief that turned into a pained laugh. 'Roughhousing? I have a broken rib, Kaden. And a concussion.'
I felt something snap inside me—the last thread of respect I'd been clinging to. 'You're dismissing this? After what they did to her?'
Kaden's jaw tightened. 'What would you have me do, Evelyn? Hunt down every wolf who gets too aggressive during training?'
'Yes,' I said simply. 'If that wolf is your Luna's best friend. If that wolf was attacked because of your mate's actions.'
The silence that followed was deafening. Kaden looked trapped, caught between his pride and the growing realization that he'd just revealed his true nature to the entire council.
I turned away from him, my decision made. 'Since you won't act,' I said, my voice carrying to every corner of the room, 'I will.'
I guided Maggie to a chair and knelt before her, pulling healing supplies from the council room's emergency kit. As I began to clean the cut above her eye, the lower-ranked wolves who had gathered at the door stepped forward, their eyes filled with a mixture of shock and something else—loyalty. Not to Kaden, but to me.
'You're right, Maggie,' I said softly as I worked. 'This isn't about fighting dirty. It's about showing them what real leadership looks like.'
Behind me, I could feel Kaden's stare burning into my back. But I didn't turn. I didn't need to. The tide had shifted, and we both knew it.
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