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After My Alpha Left Me for His Sick Mistress Novel Cover

After My Alpha Left Me for His Sick Mistress

The Ironcrest banquet hall glittered like something out of a magazine spread. Crystal chandeliers. White roses on every table. A long ribbon of candlelight running down the head table where I stood beside Alpha Julien Dunn in full Luna regalia — silver gown, pearl pins, the mating pendant at my throat heavy as a stone. I had arranged every detail myself. The seating chart. The toast order. The honored placement of the visiting Beta from the Northpoint Pack — a man named Aldous who had worked with "S" through encrypted channels for two years and had no idea "S" was the woman currently smiling at him from across the room. Three years I had been Baylee Lawson, contract Luna of Ironcrest. Three years I had stood at this man's side and signed pack treaties under another name in the dark.
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Chapter 3

I knew they would search my room.

Not because Julien would think to order it — not at first. His mind in those early hours would be moving through grief and fury and the particular, nauseating disorientation of a man who has just discovered the floor beneath him was never his. But eventually the Alpha instinct would kick in, the one that says *find the problem, locate the source, seal the breach* — and the breach, in his mind, would still have a forwarding address.

I had packed three weeks ago. Not in a hurry. Methodically, in the late evenings after Julien's study light went dark, moving my things in small, unremarkable loads to a storage unit off Route 9 that connected to nothing with my name on it. By the time I walked out on the night of the ceremony, my quarters at the Ironcrest pack house contained exactly what I had chosen to leave behind.

Which was nothing. And one note.

I heard about the search from Cole at half past seven, over coffee in my new study while the ward-map behind us still showed four dark pins on Ironcrest's northern face.

"Two warriors," he said, setting his tablet down. "Your old quarters. They were in and out in under ten minutes."

"The healer's cabinet?"

"Found the note."

I nodded and drank my coffee.

I had written it a month ago, which was the truth. I had stopped brewing Julien's post-shift tonics on the fifteenth of November, quietly, after leaving a six-week supply already bottled in the cabinet and watching him work through them without once asking where they came from. He had never asked. Not in three years. The tonics simply appeared, the way the treaty drafts simply appeared and the ward schematics simply appeared and the banquet seating charts simply appeared — absorbed into the texture of his life like oxygen, noticed only in the absence.

Let him notice now.

Cole was watching me with that particular attention he had — not intrusive, just present, the way a good commander reads a room.

"He'll feel it in the bone ache," he said. "Three days post-shift without the tonic, his wolf's going to be raw."

"I know," I said.

"You brewed it for the whole Gamma unit too, for two years. Some of the boys are already asking if—"

"I'll write down the formula," I said. "Your healer can brew it. It's not complicated. I just had the time."

Had the time. That was one way to say it.

Cole nodded and picked up his tablet and did not push further. That was one of the things I had always appreciated about him — the man understood exactly where a sentence ended.

---

Marcus Reid worked through the night.

I knew this not through the mind-link, which I had sealed, but because I knew Marcus. I had worked alongside him for three years in the particular invisible way that "S" worked alongside anyone — present in every outcome, absent from every room. I knew how he thought. I knew what he would do the moment Julien turned to him and said *find everything connected to S.*

Marcus would not sleep. He would sit at the war table with every archived channel communication, every signed ward schematic, every treaty correspondence the pack had received in three years, and he would lay them out in chronological order and go through them line by line. He was that kind of Beta. The kind who had always been slightly too observant for Julien's comfort and slightly too loyal to ever say so out loud.

He would reach the same conclusion around dawn.

I sat at my desk at 6 a.m. and thought about the exact moment he would pick up the User Manual and set it beside the file. The handwriting aligned on the first line. I had written both documents with the same pen, the same hand, the same clean measured script I had used since I was sixteen years old and stopped trying to make myself harder to read on paper.

I thought about Julien's face when he looked at those two stacks of paper side by side.

I allowed myself that. Just the image of it. The moment his Alpha certainty — the absolute, unexamined confidence that he had built the thing he stood on — cracked from crown to root.

Then I let it go and pulled up the border report Cole had left on my desk.

Ironcrest's north wall had been stripped to patch the east. It would hold another forty-eight hours before the stress fractures showed. I had designed the ward sequencing specifically for that timeline — not to destroy them outright, but to demonstrate. Every collapse in a particular, legible order. A signature, for anyone who knew how to read it.

Marcus would read it. He would understand it was a message.

I was not sure Julien would. Not yet.

---

By the third day, I felt it.

Not through the mind-link. The mind-link was a wall. This was something older — the raw thread of a fated bond running beneath all architecture, the part that predated contracts and choice and the careful sealed letters I had left on desks.

The rejection-fever had set in.

I recognized it by the quality of the pressure. It was different from the frantic knocking of that first night, different from the howl that had pressed against my chest at 4 a.m. with his wolf's voice in it. This was sustained. Low. The specific vibration of a man holding himself upright through sheer discipline while something inside him burned.

My wolf felt it too. She lay still, but her ears were forward.

*He's in pain,* she said quietly.

*Yes,* I said.

*We could—*

*No.*

She went quiet. Not wounded by the answer. She had known what the answer would be. She was simply doing her due diligence, the same way I had done mine — checking once whether the door was open, accepting once that it was not.

I pulled my coat from the hook by the window and walked out onto the Silvermoon grounds in the early afternoon gray. The air tasted of coming snow. The ward-anchors I had set in the fence posts hummed faintly as I passed them — warm, steady, mine.

My territory. My borders. My name on every line.

Fifty feet behind me, through a wall and across twenty miles of winter road, a man was sitting at a desk with two identical handwriting samples in front of him, learning the shape of what he had never seen.

Let him look.

I turned my face into the wind and breathed, and the cold was clean, and the ground beneath my feet was solid, and every ward in this territory held.

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