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After My Alpha’s Mistress Took My Luna Seat Novel Cover

After My Alpha’s Mistress Took My Luna Seat

I've always been good at waiting. Not the patient kind of waiting, where you sit with your hands folded and trust that things will work out. The other kind. The kind where you hold yourself very still because moving might make it real. Dr. Stephen Turner set the lab results on the table between us like he was placing something fragile. His voice was steady — it's always steady — but his eyes stayed on my face a half-second too long when he said the words. Voss-Hemolytic Syndrome. Progressive. Advancing faster than the initial markers suggested.
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Chapter 3

I heard her voice before I saw her.

Mrs. Hughes had a particular way of moving through the pack house — heels on hardwood, decisive and unhurried, like she was inspecting something that belonged to her. Which, in her mind, it always had. I was in the middle of my second hour in the treatment chair when Stephen's phone buzzed on the counter and he glanced at it without picking it up, and I knew from the way his expression didn't change that whatever it said wasn't good.

"What?"

"Nothing that concerns the protocol." He adjusted the line without looking at me. "Lie still."

I lay still.

---

The things you know when you're not there to see them.

Caleb told me later — not voluntarily, not in detail, but enough. He had that particular Beta quality of saying less than he meant and more than he intended, and I'd learned years ago to read the gap between the two.

Mrs. Hughes arrived at the pack house mid-morning and found Mariah in the kitchen. My kitchen. The one that always smelled like chamomile when I was anxious, which meant it had smelled like chamomile for months. Mariah was at the counter with a mug that wasn't hers, in a silk blouse the color of cream, her hair loose the way women wear their hair when they've decided they don't need to try.

Mrs. Hughes looked at her.

Mariah looked back.

And something passed between them that didn't need words — the efficient recognition of two people who wanted the same thing for different reasons.

Damien was in his office, reportedly irritable and distracted, which Caleb said was how he'd been since he'd found the silver moon pendant on his pillow. Not sad. Not frightened. Irritable. The way you get when a situation isn't resolving itself on your preferred schedule.

His mother went in and closed the door.

I wasn't there. But I know her. And I know what she does with silences she's decided to fill.

She would have sat down without being invited — she always does — and she would have looked at him the way she looked at pack ledgers that weren't balancing. Then she would have said something like: Zora is sulking. Chosen mates require management. You know that.

And then, with the practiced timing of a woman who has waited a long time to say something, she would have added: Perhaps the Moon Goddess has a better sense of correction than either of us deserved.

She would have meant Mariah.

Damien didn't argue. Caleb said he just looked out the window. In their family's language, that meant yes.

---

By afternoon, Mariah was in the guest wing.

I learned this in the way I learned most things now — in fragments, at a remove, through the careful neutral faces of the clinic staff who thought they were protecting me. But information finds its way. It always does.

She answered his phone when pack members called. She sat in my chair at the dinner table — the one on Damien's left, the Luna's seat — with the comfort of someone reclaiming a position that had been temporarily misplaced. She organized his schedule with the practiced ease of a woman who had spent years managing a Lycan lord's calendar and found a mid-tier Alpha's diary refreshingly simple.

And the pendant.

Caleb told me about the pendant last, almost like he didn't want to. Like if he held it to the end it would land softer.

She'd found it on the pillow. Picked it up. And she'd put it in a small ceramic dish by the front door — the dish where Damien dropped his keys, where visitors left their phones, where things got set down that didn't have a more specific place. My Luna pendant. In the key dish. Like something found on the floor of a coat closet.

Caleb's jaw had been tight when he described it. He hadn't moved it. He hadn't said anything to either of them. He was a Beta, and his Alpha had not instructed him, and the pack hierarchy was the pack hierarchy.

I pressed my fingertips against the inside of my wrist and looked at the ceiling.

Still there. Still moving.

---

The third hour of the transfusion was the hardest.

My blood pressure dropped without warning — Stephen's monitor spiked its alarm and he was on his feet before the sound finished, hands already moving, voice dropping into that register he used when things required accuracy. The chair was reclined as far as it went. The blanket was on the floor somewhere. I had both hands gripping the armrests because my body had decided that gravity was suddenly doing too much, and if I let go I wasn't entirely sure which direction down was.

"Stay with me," Stephen said. Not urgently. Just as a fact, the way he stated facts. "Eyes on me, Luna."

I looked at him. His face was the most stable thing in the room.

"I'm here," I said. My voice sounded far away to me, which I noted clinically and filed under things to mention once this part was over.

He adjusted something in the line. The pressure started to normalize, slowly, like a tide deciding to come back in. I loosened my hands on the armrests by degrees. There were crescent marks in my palms from my own fingernails. I looked at them without feeling much about it.

Stephen reached over and picked up his phone. I watched him compose a mind-link — the particular stillness that comes over someone when they're pushing a message along pack channels — his eyes going briefly unfocused, his shoulders set.

Then he set the phone down.

"Did you reach him?" I asked.

He looked at me for a beat. "I sent a link."

"And?"

Stephen pulled on a fresh pair of gloves. His voice came out exactly level, which told me everything.

"He blocked it."

I didn't say anything.

The IV pump ticked. Somewhere in the hallway a door opened and closed. The fluorescent light above us hummed its single, indifferent note.

Stephen wrote something in my chart with the focused precision of a man who was choosing, very deliberately, not to say anything else on the subject. But I saw his jaw.

I pressed my fingertips against my wrist and stared at the water-stained ceiling tile above the chair and thought about a man in a territory meeting, registering a healer's urgent mind-link, deciding it wasn't an emergency, and going back to his maps.

Deciding I wasn't an emergency.

Somewhere across the pack grounds, in a kitchen that used to smell like my tea, a woman in a cream silk blouse was answering a phone that wasn't hers.

And in a dish by the front door, a small silver moon sat among keys and forgotten things.

Waiting, probably, for nobody in particular to notice it was there.

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