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After My Mate Cheated With My Best Friend Novel Cover

After My Mate Cheated With My Best Friend

I had waited twenty-two years for this night. Most wolves in the Ironveil Pack awakened between thirteen and sixteen. I was twenty-two, and the whispers had followed me for years — quiet, careful whispers that stopped the moment I walked into a room, but I always caught the tail end of them. Late bloomer. Weak bloodline. Maybe she'll never shift at all. I never let them see it land. The Come of Age Ceremony was held in the main hall of the Ironveil Pack house, lit with warm amber light and packed with pack members who had come to witness — or, in some cases, to watch me fail one more time. I stood at the center of the ritual circle in a white dress, my hands loose at my sides, my face composed. Jordan stood near the front of the crowd, tall and golden and perfectly at ease, his dark eyes warm when they found mine.
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Chapter 3

The thing about building power quietly is that no one sees it happening until it's already done.

I started small. That was intentional. The Ironveil Pack ran on a hundred invisible systems — supply rotations, dispute logs, the scheduling of border patrols, the coordination of pack meals during high-attendance gatherings. None of it was glamorous. None of it was the kind of work that got you noticed at pack dinners or praised in front of the Alpha Council. It was the kind of work that, when it ran smoothly, nobody thought about at all.

That was exactly why I wanted it.

I volunteered for logistics coordination the week after the ceremony, framing it to Jordan as a way to prepare for my Luna duties. He thought it was sweet. Industrious. He patted my shoulder and said something about how thorough I was, and I smiled and nodded and went back to learning exactly how the pack's resources moved, who controlled what, and where the pressure points were.

Within two weeks, I had reorganized the supply rotation so that three lower-ranked families who had been consistently shorted on their allocations were receiving their full share. It wasn't a dramatic gesture. I didn't announce it. I just fixed it, quietly, and the families noticed, and they remembered.

That was how it worked. Not speeches. Not performances. Just competence, applied consistently, in places where it actually mattered to people.

Ethan Cole noticed.

He was the pack Beta — steady, observant, the kind of man who had spent years watching Jordan perform leadership while quietly doing the actual work himself. We had never been close. He was loyal to the pack first and the Alpha heir second, which meant he had always been polite to me but never particularly warm. I understood that. I hadn't given him a reason to be warm.

I was giving him reasons now.

The first time he deferred to my judgment was over a border dispute between two Delta families — a long-running argument about territory markers that had been escalating for months. Jordan had been putting it off. I sat down with both families separately, listened to the full history of the dispute without interrupting, and proposed a resolution that gave each side something concrete. When I brought it to Ethan to formalize, he read through my notes and was quiet for a moment.

"Jordan know you handled this?" he asked.

"I'll mention it to him," I said.

Ethan looked at me for a beat longer than necessary. Then he signed off on the resolution without another word.

I filed that moment away. It was small. But small things had a way of accumulating.

---

Lillian Reynolds was a different kind of project entirely.

She was sharp, imperious, and absolutely certain of her own judgment — which made her, paradoxically, one of the easiest people I had ever managed. All I had to do was confirm what she already believed about herself.

I started asking for her advice on ceremony planning. Not in a way that was obviously flattering — Lillian was too intelligent for transparent flattery. I asked specific questions, framed as genuine uncertainty, about the kind of details she cared about most: the correct order of precedence for seating Alpha Council representatives, the traditional Luna's role in the autumn pack blessing, the etiquette around gift-giving at formal pack gatherings. I took notes. I implemented her suggestions. I reported back on how they had been received.

She began to look at me differently.

Not warmly — Lillian Reynolds did not do warm, exactly. But with something that functioned like approval, which in her vocabulary was essentially the same thing. She started including me in conversations she had previously conducted around me. She began referring to me, in front of others, as "Jordan's Luna" rather than "Jordan's girl" — a distinction that carried real weight in pack hierarchy language.

And she started talking.

To the Alpha Council representatives. To the pack elders. To every allied pack contact she had cultivated over thirty years of Reynolds family politics. I heard the reports secondhand, through Nora, through Ethan, through the ambient social current of pack life. Lillian was telling people the union was settled. That the Reynolds heir had chosen well. That the Ironveil Pack's future was secure.

Every endorsement she made was a nail in a coffin she didn't know she was building.

I listened to each one and added it to my mental ledger, and I kept my expression warm and grateful whenever she looked at me, and I pressed my thumbnail into my wrist once, lightly, in the moments when the weight of it all sat too heavily in my chest.

I was fine. I was always fine.

---

The bar was called Anchor — a downtown place that the pack used for informal gatherings, loud enough to feel social and private enough that pack business could be conducted without human attention. Jordan had organized the evening himself, which meant it was partly a social event and partly a performance of his own ease and confidence. He was good at those.

I arrived with Nora, who was already scanning the room with the cheerful, uncomplicated energy of a woman who had found her mate young and had no ongoing psychological warfare to manage. I loved her for it. I also envied her, in the quiet way I envied anyone whose life was exactly what it appeared to be.

"You look like you're doing math," she said, handing me a drink.

"I'm always doing math," I said.

She laughed and thought I was joking.

The gift arrived forty minutes in.

A server brought it to my table — a sleek black box, ribbon-tied, with a card that had Jordan's name on it in clean, unfamiliar handwriting. I recognized the brand from the packaging alone. It was the kind of gift that cost more than most pack members made in a month, the kind that announced itself before it was even opened. Several heads turned. I felt the shift in the room's attention like a change in air pressure.

I opened the card first, keeping my expression soft and pleased. The handwriting was not Jordan's. I knew Jordan's handwriting. This was precise and slightly angular, and it told me exactly who had sent it without telling anyone else anything at all.

I looked up and found Damon across the room.

He was standing near the bar, a glass in his hand, talking to someone I didn't recognize. He didn't look at me. He didn't need to. The corner of his mouth moved, just slightly, and then he turned back to his conversation.

I set the card down and opened the box.

Adriana saw it from across the room. I watched her see it — the way her eyes went to the packaging first, then to the card, then to Jordan, who was standing near the pool table and had not yet registered what was happening. Her expression did something complicated and fast, cycling through surprise and calculation and something that looked very much like fury before she locked it down.

She crossed the room to Jordan in twelve steps. I counted.

They moved toward the back hallway together, and I picked up my drink and turned slightly in my chair, angling myself so I had a clear sightline to the hallway entrance without appearing to watch. Nora was talking about something — a pack event, a friend's new pup — and I made the right sounds and kept my eyes soft and unfocused in her direction while my attention was entirely elsewhere.

Adriana's voice didn't carry words, but it carried tone. Sharp and low and insistent. Jordan's response was quieter, the particular register of a man trying to de-escalate without admitting anything. I caught fragments from the nearest pack members — a she-wolf named Cara, who had the hearing of someone who had spent years paying attention to things she wasn't supposed to hear, went very still at the table beside me.

Promises. That word made it through clearly. And: you said.

Jordan's voice, lower: not here.

I sipped my drink.

Around me, I catalogued the faces. Cara, who had gone still. Two Delta males near the bar who had exchanged a glance. A she-wolf named Priya, who was looking at the hallway with an expression of careful neutrality that meant she had heard more than she was showing.

Four witnesses. At minimum.

I set my glass down and smiled at something Nora said, and the first crack in Jordan's perfect surface widened by exactly the amount I needed it to, and nobody in the room could have said I had anything to do with it.

I added four names to my mental ledger.

The evening was going very well.

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