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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 4

I found the back hallway by accident — or I told myself that. The truth was that the bar had gotten loud and warm and I needed thirty seconds of not performing, not cataloguing, not being the future Luna who smiled at the right moments and laughted at the right jokes. I slipped past the restrooms and around the corner where the noise dropped to a muffled thrum, and I leaned against the wall and let myself breathe.

Then the scent hit me.

Black pine and smoke. Rich and dark and immediate, cutting straight through the stale bar air like it had been looking for me. My wolf didn't hesitate — she turned toward it the way she always did, that compass-finding-north pull that bypassed every rational thought I had and went straight to something older and more honest. I had three seconds of warning before I heard his footsteps.

Damon came around the corner and stopped when he saw me. He didn't look surprised. He never looked surprised.

"You followed me," I said.

"You walked in the direction I was already going." He moved closer, unhurried, and the hallway was narrow enough that there wasn't much room to negotiate. His aura was a low, constant pressure — not aggressive, just present, the way a storm front is present before the rain starts. "How are you holding up?"

"Fine."

"You've said that word more times tonight than any person who is actually fine would need to."

I opened my mouth to say something precise and deflecting, and then his shoulder brushed the wall beside my head as he leaned in, and his scent was everywhere, and my wolf surged forward so hard I felt it physically — a wave of heat and want and recognition that had absolutely nothing to do with strategy and everything to do with something I still didn't have a name for.

He was close. Too close. His body was a cage of heat and Lycan authority, and the rational part of my mind was still running calculations — hallway, sightlines, who might come around that corner — but the rest of me had gone very quiet and very focused on the exact distance between his mouth and mine.

His eyes dropped to my face. Something moved in them. His wolf, surfacing.

"Madeline."

My name in his voice, low like that, did something I was not prepared for.

I put both hands flat against his chest and pushed.

He let me. That was the thing about Damon — he was strong enough that letting me push him back was a choice, and we both knew it. He stepped back two paces, and the air between us cooled by several degrees, and I pressed my thumbnail hard into my wrist and held it there.

"We have a deal," I said. My voice came out steady. I was proud of that. "The deal requires us to be functional in public spaces."

"I'm perfectly functional."

"Your wolf is in your eyes."

He blinked. Looked away for a moment. When he looked back, the gold had receded. "Better?"

"Better."

We stood there for a beat, the hallway quiet around us, his scent still wrapped around my wolf like something she had decided was hers. I was going to have to deal with that eventually. Not tonight.

Then I saw Jordan.

He was at the far end of the hallway — maybe twenty feet back, framed by the light from the main bar. He had come looking for me, probably, or come looking for the restroom, and instead he had found this: me against the wall, Damon two feet away, the specific geometry of the scene telling a story that wasn't quite accurate but wasn't entirely wrong either.

He couldn't have seen clearly. The hallway was dim and the distance was real. But he saw enough.

I watched his jaw tighten. Watched his shoulders go rigid. Watched the particular stillness of a man whose territorial instinct had just fired and was trying to decide what to do with it.

I stepped away from Damon and walked toward Jordan, keeping my expression soft and slightly confused, like a woman who had been cornered by an unwanted conversation and was relieved to be rescued. "Jordan. I was just coming to find you."

His eyes went past me to Damon, who had turned to face the wall and was checking his phone with the absolute ease of a man who had nothing to explain.

"What was that?" Jordan's voice was low.

"He wanted to talk about the territory boundary near the eastern ridge." I touched Jordan's arm. "Pack business. Boring." I tilted my face up toward his. "Can we go? I'm tired."

He looked at me for a moment. Then at Damon's back. Then back at me.

The territorial instinct won.

---

It started in the parking lot.

I don't know exactly what was said between them — I was still inside when I heard the shift in the air, that particular pressure drop that meant wolves were about to stop using words. By the time I reached the door, they were already in the lot.

Jordan's wolf was large and well-presented — cedar-brown, broad through the shoulders, the kind of wolf that commanded attention in a pack setting. Under normal circumstances, he would have been impressive.

Damon's wolf made him look like a practice run.

Pure black, every inch of him, with that faint iridescent sheen that only showed in direct light — and the parking lot's overhead lamps caught it and turned it into something that looked less like fur and more like authority made visible. He was bigger. Not just bigger in the way that Lycans were generally bigger than pack wolves. Bigger in the way that made the air around him feel different, made the other wolves near the lot's edge instinctively step back without meaning to.

I stood in the doorway with my arms crossed.

Nora appeared at my shoulder. "Should we—"

"No," I said.

"Madeline, they're going to—"

"I know."

They collided. It was brutal and fast and not particularly elegant — this wasn't a dominance display, it was two wolves with real grievances and real adrenaline, and the sound of it carried. Jordan fought hard. I gave him that. He was not a coward, and his wolf was genuinely strong, and he landed hits that would have mattered against anyone else.

Damon absorbed them like weather.

He didn't fight to injure. He fought to demonstrate. Every move was controlled, precise, the kind of fighting that said I could end this whenever I choose and I am choosing not to yet. Jordan's wolf scrambled for purchase and found none. At one point, Damon had him pinned — one massive black paw on Jordan's shoulder, his weight distributed with almost casual efficiency — and he held it for three full seconds before he stepped back and let Jordan up.

I watched Jordan's wolf shake itself. Watched the effort it took to hold his form steady under the residual pressure of Lycan aura. His wolf was trembling slightly at the edges — not from injury, but from the sustained weight of being in proximity to something that outranked him at a cellular level.

I filed that away. Carefully.

Damon shifted back first, unhurried, and by the time Jordan had done the same, Damon was already walking toward his car. He didn't look at me. He didn't need to.

Jordan came to me breathing hard, a cut above his eyebrow already closing. He was flushed and furious and underneath the fury was something that looked, if you knew where to look, like fear.

"I handled it," he said.

"I know," I said. "You were incredible."

He straightened. The fear receded. The ego filled the space it left, the way it always did.

I took his arm and walked him back inside, and I kept my expression warm and admiring, and I thought about the way his wolf had trembled under Lycan pressure and added it to the growing architecture of what I was building.

---

Three days later, I planted the seed.

We were at the kitchen table, late morning, Jordan with his coffee and his phone and the particular restless energy of a man who was anxious about something he wasn't saying. He had been like this since the parking lot — not angry at me, but unsettled, his confidence slightly dented in a way he was working hard to paper over.

I had been waiting for exactly this.

"I heard something at the pack gathering last week," I said, keeping my voice casual, like I was sharing something I wasn't sure was worth mentioning. "About the southern border."

He looked up.

"One of the Delta families mentioned a rogue pack operating near the Harrow territory line. Apparently they've been making contact with some of the smaller packs in the region." I paused. "Ethan probably knows more than I do. But it sounded like the kind of thing that, if someone got ahead of it — formalized a relationship before the Council did — it would be a significant move."

I watched him process it. Watched the anxiety reshape itself into something that looked like opportunity.

"What kind of contact?" he asked.

"I don't know the details. I just thought—" I shrugged, soft and uncertain. "You've been talking about wanting to demonstrate your leadership before the formal ascension. Something independent. Something that shows the Council you don't need their hand-holding." I met his eyes. "This sounds like that kind of thing."

He was quiet for a moment. I could see him building it in his head — the narrative, the optics, the version of this story where Jordan Reynolds secured a strategic alliance that the Alpha Council hadn't even identified yet. The version where he walked into his ascension already proving himself.

"I'd need to move quietly," he said. "Before anyone else gets there."

"Of course," I said.

I picked up my coffee cup and looked out the window, and I kept my face open and encouraging, and I thought about the journal in the bottom drawer and the page I would add to it tonight.

The seed was in the ground.

Now I just had to let it grow.

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