
After My Mate Chose His Mistress Over Me
Chapter 2
The mind-link hit me like cold water in the dark.
I was sitting on the edge of the border cabin's narrow bed, watching rain streak down the window, when the alert tore through my head — not words at first, just raw pack-wide panic, the kind that bypasses thought and goes straight to your spine. Then a voice I recognized, one of the pack's sentinels: rogue raid, eastern border, casualties, healer down.
Mom.
I was out the door before I'd finished the thought.
The drive back to Moonveil took twenty minutes. It felt like twenty years. I kept one hand on the wheel and one pressed flat against my sternum, where the severed bond still ached like a bruise that hadn't decided whether it was healing or deepening. The rejection pain had been a constant companion for four days — not sharp anymore, just present, this low, hollow throb that reminded me with every breath that something had been cut away.
I didn't let myself think about what I was driving toward. I just drove.
The pack hospital smelled like antiseptic and wolf-fear — that particular, metallic edge that fills a building when a whole pack is holding its breath. The waiting area off the surgery wing was crowded: pack elders in a tight cluster near the far wall, warriors with dried blood still on their arms, a few Omegas pressed together near the door like they weren't sure they were allowed to be there.
I knew how they felt.
I'd barely gotten through the entrance before I felt it.
His aura.
Sawyer was standing near the elders, still in his patrol gear, jaw tight, eyes scanning the room with the flat precision of an Alpha cataloguing a situation. The moment he saw me, something shifted in his expression — something complicated that I didn't want to name — and then his aura pressed outward. Steady and deliberate, like a hand placed on the back of your neck.
Submit. Stay. You are mine.
I stopped walking. My wolf flinched, old habit firing before I could stop it, and I hated that. I hated that two years of conditioning could still make my body answer a command my heart had already rejected.
'Lena.' He crossed the room in four steps, stopping close enough that I could smell cedarwood and cold night air still on his jacket. His voice was low, controlled. Pitched for me but audible enough for the elders to hear. 'You're here. Good. Come sit with me while we wait for the report.'
Not a question. Not a request.
I wanted to say something sharp. Something clean and final that would make him take a step back. But the surgery light above the double doors was on, and behind it my mother was on a table, and my chest was so full of fear that I couldn't find the words.
So I stood there, and he let his aura settle over me like a second skin, and I breathed through it and tried not to shake.
The elders were watching. I could feel it.
'She's in surgery,' I said quietly. 'I want to wait by the door.'
'You'll wait with me.' The Alpha tone was subtle, threaded through his voice like wire through silk. It pressed against my will like a thumb on a wound. 'We present a unified front to the pack.'
Unified front. Two years of mate bond and he'd never once held my hand, and now, in front of witnesses, with my mother bleeding on the other side of that wall, he wanted to stand beside me and perform.
My hands curled into fists at my sides.
Then the front doors opened, and cold air moved through the room, and I heard a voice I recognized say, with perfect, unhurried calm: 'Excuse me. Coming through.'
Elliot.
He walked in with two other Silverfang wolves behind him, all of them carrying supply cases — medical-grade, the kind with the Silverfang Pack seal on the side. He spoke briefly with the nurse at the intake desk, set the cases down, and then turned and found me in the room with the ease of someone who had already known exactly where I was.
His eyes moved from my face to Sawyer, just once, and something in his expression settled.
He walked over. Not quickly. Not dramatically. Just with that steady, unhurried purpose that seemed to be his only speed. He stopped at my side — slightly between me and Sawyer, though you'd have to be paying attention to notice — and looked at me.
'Hey,' he said quietly. Just that.
And then, gentle as a door closing on a storm: his mind-link, careful and unhurried, asking for permission before it entered.
Lena. Are you alright?
The question sat in my head like something warm.
Sawyer's aura was still pressing. But for the first time since I'd walked through those doors, I could breathe around it.
I hadn't answered Elliot yet. I didn't know how to answer honestly without falling apart.
But he was still there, standing at my side, and he wasn't going anywhere.
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