
After My Mate Chose Her, I Lost Our Pup
Chapter 3
She hadn't been gone two minutes when I heard boots on the front path.
Not Natalie's — hers had been soft, deliberate, the kind of steps that know they're being watched and perform accordingly. These were different. Faster. And then Tate was in the doorway, taking in the scene with one quick sweep — Natalie still visible on the path, the canvas bag swinging from her wrist, the small cluster of pack members who had slowed to watch — and something in his expression went very still.
He stepped inside without being invited. Not past me, not around me. Just beside me, close enough that his shoulder was level with mine, and he turned to face the path.
"Natalie."
His voice carried. Not loud — he didn't need loud. She stopped and turned, and for just a moment, the gracious composure she'd worn through the entire visit flickered at the edges.
"Tate." She recovered fast. "I was just—"
"I know what you were doing." He said it without heat. That was the thing about Tate — his anger didn't run hot. It ran precise. "You're not Luna yet. You hold no authority over pack members on these lands. Not this one, not any other."
A few of the passing wolves had stopped entirely now. I felt their attention like a physical weight.
Natalie's chin lifted a fraction. "I was simply collecting—"
"The bag is empty," Tate said. "It was empty when you arrived."
The silence that followed was the loudest thing I had heard all morning.
Natalie looked at him for a long moment. Then she looked at the small audience on the path — the warriors, the two women from the communal kitchen, the young Delta who had frozen mid-step — and I watched her calculate. Watched her decide that the scene she had come to stage had turned into a different scene entirely, one she had not written and could not control.
"I'll see you at the ceremony," she said. To him, not to me. Her voice was still smooth. Still gracious. But the warmth was gone from it, and what was left underneath was something cooler and more honest.
She walked away down the path. The pack members parted for her and then stood there for a moment, uncertain, before drifting on.
Tate watched until she was out of sight. Then he turned and looked at me.
"You all right?"
I almost laughed. The question was so ordinary. So completely, simply ordinary, in the middle of all of this.
"I don't know," I said. Which was the most honest thing I had said to anyone in weeks.
He nodded like that was a reasonable answer. Then he stepped past me into the kitchen.
---
He found the kettle without asking. Found the tea on the second shelf, the cups on the third. He moved through the small space with the quiet efficiency of someone who had been paying attention from a distance for a long time, and I stood in the doorway and watched him and felt something loosen in my chest — not relief exactly. Something more fragile than that.
He set a mug in front of me and sat down across the table.
I wrapped both hands around it. The ceramic was warm. Outside, the wind moved through the pines, and the cabin was very quiet, and for a while neither of us said anything at all.
"I should have left a long time ago," I said finally.
The steam rose between us. Tate looked at his own mug. He didn't agree. He didn't disagree. He didn't offer me a reason to stay or a reason to go or any of the things people usually reach for when someone says something true and painful in a quiet room.
He just stayed.
I finished the tea. He waited until I did.
---
The bonfire was Tate's, technically — a welcome-back gathering the pack had been planning since before he returned, the kind of easy, informal thing that Ironveil did well when it wasn't performing for outside eyes. Someone had dragged logs into a wide circle near the eastern tree line. There was food, and music from a speaker balanced on a cooler, and the particular looseness that comes over a pack when the Alpha isn't standing in the center of it demanding gravity.
Colton was there. Of course he was. But he was at the far side of the fire, Natalie beside him, and the distance felt manageable in a way it hadn't inside the pack house.
I had almost not come. I had stood in the cabin for twenty minutes after getting dressed, my hand on the back door latch, telling myself I was tired, telling myself it didn't matter, telling myself that the version of me who used to love a bonfire was someone I wasn't sure I still had access to.
Then I went anyway. I don't know why. Maybe because staying in the cabin felt like letting Natalie's visit be the last thing that happened there today.
The game started the way pack games always do — someone's idea, someone else's enthusiasm, a loose set of rules that everyone agreed to and no one fully followed. It involved pairs, and proximity, and a lot of laughing at people who lost their balance. I ended up beside Tate without quite deciding to, and when the game required him to steady me — his hand at my waist, my body turning toward him — it happened with an ease that surprised me.
I laughed.
Actually laughed — not the polite, managed kind I had been producing for weeks, but something real and unguarded that came up from somewhere I had forgotten was still there. Tate grinned, and the firelight caught the side of his face, and for a moment the whole thing felt almost normal. Almost like a life I was actually living rather than surviving.
I felt it before I saw it.
That pressure. The air going dense and directional, the way it does when an Alpha's aura pushes outward without control. Nearby, a young Delta instinctively dropped his gaze. Someone else took a small step back without seeming to know why.
I looked up.
Colton was standing at the far edge of the fire, completely still. Not watching the game. Watching Tate's hand on my waist. His jaw was set, his expression unreadable, but the aura rolling off him was not unreadable at all — it was territorial and raw and entirely at odds with the man who had stood at his window three days ago and announced his chosen mate without turning around.
Natalie said something beside him. He didn't respond.
Tate's hand was still at my waist, steady and warm, and I made a decision — small, quiet, mine — not to step away from it.
I turned back to the game. I let myself laugh again.
Across the fire, I felt Colton's stillness like a held breath. Like something that had not yet decided what it was going to do.
I didn't look back.
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