
After My Alpha Replaced Me With His Mistress
Chapter 2
The howl cut through the night like a blade through silk.
I bolted upright in bed, my wolf surging to the surface before my human mind could fully process what I'd heard. A border skirmish. The mental signature carried pain and fear—one of our younger Deltas had been injured.
Instinct took over. Six years of being Luna meant my body moved before thought could catch up. I was already reaching for my phone, pulling up the healer rotation schedule, when my wolf pushed forward with a more primal solution.
The mind-link. I needed to coordinate with Stefan, get the healers mobilized, assess the threat level.
I reached for our bond, that golden thread that had connected us since the moment we'd marked each other seven years ago.
And hit a wall.
Not the natural distance that came from being in different parts of the territory. Not the gentle buffer of someone who was busy or sleeping. This was deliberate. Solid. Like he'd built a fortress in his mind specifically to keep me out.
My wolf recoiled, whimpering. The rejection burned through our chest like acid.
He'd blocked me. Stefan had actually blocked his mate from the mind-link.
I sat there in the darkness of our bedroom—my bedroom now, since he'd been sleeping in his office more nights than not—trying to process what this meant. Alphas and Lunas shared an open link. Always. It was sacred, intimate, the foundation of pack leadership. Blocking your mate was something you did to enemies, to rogues, to wolves you didn't trust.
The pack-wide link suddenly crackled to life, and I instinctively tuned in. Protocol. Even if my mate had shut me out, I was still Luna. I still had responsibilities.
"—nothing to worry about," Stefan's voice echoed through the mental channel, warm and reassuring in a way that made my stomach clench. "Just a couple of rogues testing the eastern perimeter. Marcus has it handled."
Then, impossibly, I heard her.
"Oh, thank the Goddess." Harlee's voice, breathy and relieved, came through crystal clear on what should have been a private channel between Alpha and... "I was so worried when I heard the howls. You're sure everyone's safe?"
My wolf went absolutely still.
He had an open link with her. With Harlee Henderson, the unshifted girl who'd stolen my Council seat, my jewelry, my position. He was maintaining an active, intimate mental connection with her while his actual mate sat alone in the dark, blocked out like a stranger.
"I'm sure, little one." Stefan's tone was gentle, indulgent, nothing like the cold clinical voice he'd used on me in his office. "Go back to sleep. I'll keep you safe."
Little one. The endearment hit me like a physical blow.
I'd keep you safe.
The words he used to whisper to me during our early days, when we'd fought rogues back-to-back and built this pack from blood and determination. Now he was saying them to her, while I sat in the darkness, shut out from my own mate's mind.
The link went quiet. The skirmish was over. Our wolves were safe.
And I was more alone than I'd ever been.
I didn't sleep. Couldn't. My wolf paced inside my skin, agitated and confused, unable to understand why our mate had rejected us. Unable to comprehend how the bond that should have been unbreakable was fracturing more with each passing day.
When dawn finally broke, painting our bedroom in shades of gray and gold, I heard footsteps in the hallway. Heavy. Accompanied by a second set that was lighter, more hesitant.
The door opened without a knock.
Stefan stood in the doorway, still wearing yesterday's clothes. Behind him, Dr. Morrison, our Pack Healer, clutched his medical bag with white-knuckled fingers. The elderly wolf wouldn't meet my eyes.
"Amara." Stefan's voice was flat, emotionless. "The Healer is here to conduct your examination."
I pulled the blankets tighter around myself, my wolf bristling. "What examination? I'm not sick."
"Your fertility needs to be assessed." He said it like he was discussing the weather. "And Dr. Morrison will be conducting a psychological evaluation. Standard procedure for Lunas experiencing... difficulties."
Difficulties. He made it sound like I was the problem. Like my perfectly reasonable reaction to being replaced and humiliated was some kind of mental defect.
"I don't consent to this." I kept my voice steady, even as my hands shook beneath the covers.
"You don't have a choice." Stefan stepped into the room, and his Alpha aura filled the space like smoke. "This is for your own good, Amara. For the good of the pack."
Dr. Morrison finally looked at me, and I saw the apology in his ancient eyes. But he was pack. He was loyal to his Alpha. And his Alpha had given him orders.
"Please, Luna," the old healer said softly. "Let's just get through this quickly."
The examination was humiliating. Clinical hands prodding and testing while Stefan stood guard at the door like I might try to escape. Questions about my cycle, my wolf's stability, my emotional state. All delivered in that careful, neutral tone that made everything sound like evidence of my inadequacy.
Finally, after what felt like hours, Dr. Morrison stepped back. He pulled a small vial of herbs from his bag, the liquid inside a murky green that made my wolf recoil.
"Luna's Melancholia," he announced, not quite meeting my eyes. "Common in females whose wolves become... overactive. These herbs will help suppress the aggression, calm the animal instincts that are causing your distress."
Luna's Melancholia. A fancy name for a Luna who dared to question her Alpha.
"Take them three times daily," Stefan ordered. "Starting now."
I took the vial with numb fingers. Watched them leave. Listened to the door lock click behind them.
Then I walked to the bathroom and poured every drop down the sink.
If they thought I was going to drug myself into submission, they didn't know me at all.
That night, I pretended to sleep. I'd learned the pattern of Stefan's movements through the Pack House, the way he'd check on me once before disappearing to wherever he actually spent his nights. I kept my breathing even, my heartbeat slow, playing the part of the sedated, compliant mate.
His footsteps paused outside my door. I felt his presence, heavy and watchful. Then he moved on.
I waited twenty minutes before slipping out of bed.
The Pack House was quiet, most wolves already asleep or out on patrol. I moved through the shadows like a ghost, following the one sense that had never failed me.
Scent.
Stefan's scent was as familiar to me as my own—pine and leather, earth and rain. But tonight it was contaminated. Twisted. Mixed with something floral and cloying that made my wolf bare her teeth.
Harlee's perfume. That sickly-sweet scent that she wore like a weapon, dousing herself in it until it clung to everything she touched.
The trail led to the guest wing. The part of the Pack House reserved for visiting dignitaries and allies. The part where Harlee Henderson had been staying since her father's last visit, three months ago.
Three months. She'd been living under our roof for three months, and I'd been too blind, too trusting, too stupid to see what was happening.
I stopped outside the door at the end of the hall. Light spilled from beneath it. And voices.
"—don't understand why she has to make everything so difficult." Stefan's voice, rough with frustration. The way he used to sound when dealing with rebellious pack members. Never with me. Never before.
"She's probably just scared." Harlee's voice was soft, soothing, intimate in a way that made my claws extend. "Change is hard, Stefan. Especially for someone who's used to being in control."
Stefan. Not Alpha. Just his name, spoken with the familiarity of a mate.
"You're too understanding." I heard him move, heard the creak of furniture. "She should trust me. Trust that I know what's best for the pack. For her."
"Maybe she just needs time." A pause. Then, softer: "You're doing the right thing. I can see how much you care about her, even when she can't."
The tenderness in her voice was obscene. She was comforting him. Soothing him. Playing the role of the understanding partner while his actual mate stood on the other side of the door, listening to her bond shatter into pieces.
"Thank you." Stefan's voice dropped lower, more intimate. "I don't know what I'd do without you right now. You make all of this easier."
My wolf howled.
Not out loud. Inside my chest, inside my soul, a sound of pure anguish that no one else could hear. This was the boundary. The sacred line that should never be crossed. You didn't seek emotional comfort from another female. You didn't create that kind of intimacy, that kind of dependence, with anyone but your mate.
This wasn't politics. This wasn't alliance-building.
This was betrayal.
I turned and walked away before I could do something I'd regret. Before my wolf could take over and tear that door off its hinges. Before I could confront them and hear whatever lies Stefan would spin to make me the villain of this story.
Back in my room—my cage—I stood at the window and stared out at the territory we'd built together. The land I'd bled for. The pack I'd given everything to protect.
And I realized something with absolute, crystalline clarity.
I was done.
Done being gaslit. Done being controlled. Done being made to feel crazy for recognizing the truth my wolf had been screaming at me for months.
Stefan Knight wanted a submissive, obedient Luna who would produce heirs and stay silent?
He could have Harlee Henderson.
Because I was finished playing this role.
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