
After My Mate Chose His Mistress Over Me
Chapter 3
The surgery light was still on.
I'd been staring at it so long it had burned a ghost into my vision — that pale orange glow that meant someone I loved was still on the other side of a door I couldn't open. Sawyer had retreated to the far end of the hallway with the pack elders. He kept looking at me the way he used to look at contested territory: like something that belonged to him and had forgotten it.
I turned away from him and stared at the floor.
Then something appeared in my peripheral vision. A cup, held out in a steady hand.
I looked up at Elliot. He wasn't watching me with that careful, cataloguing gaze Sawyer always used. He was just — there. Relaxed. Like waiting in a hospital corridor in the middle of the night was exactly where he'd planned to be.
'Chamomile-honey-spice blend,' he said quietly. 'The place on the Silverfang border started making it again. I grabbed one on the way.'
I went completely still.
He said it the way you'd say something unremarkable. Like he hadn't just named the exact order I'd stopped placing years ago because no one around me ever remembered it anyway. The very specific flavor I'd mentioned once — once — at some inter-pack gathering when we were barely teenagers, to no one in particular, into the open air.
'How do you—' My voice came out smaller than I meant it to.
'You described it to a vendor at the autumn gathering,' he said. 'You were twelve, maybe thirteen. You told him it tasted like something your mother made on cold mornings.' A small pause. 'I remembered.'
I took the cup. My fingers wrapped around the warmth of it, and for one terrible, embarrassing moment I thought I was going to cry in a hospital hallway over a cup of tea.
I didn't. But it was close.
Down the hall, I felt the temperature change before I looked up. Sawyer was watching us. His aura had shifted — tighter now, sharper at the edges, the way it got when something in his territory moved without his permission. His jaw was set, and his eyes had dropped to the cup in my hands with an expression I recognized.
He had never once, in two years, asked what I liked to drink.
I looked back at the surgery door and lifted the cup to my mouth.
That was when the corridor exploded.
The impact came from the side stairwell — a crash, then the clatter of an overturned supply cart, then a sound that cut through every other noise in that building: a rogue's snarl, close and wild and wrong in a way that put every wolf instinct I had on full alert. I spun around.
The rogue came through the stairwell door in partial shift, faster than anything had a right to move in a hospital hallway, and it was coming straight at me.
I didn't have time to run. I barely had time to register the space collapsing between us before two bodies hit it from different angles simultaneously.
Sawyer, from the left.
Elliot, from the right.
They took it down in under ten seconds — pack coordination that didn't need words, two wolves operating on pure instinct, slamming the rogue into the wall hard enough to shake the frames off the bulletin board above us. By the time the rogue stopped moving, the hallway was chaos — nurses pressing back against the walls, pack elders shouting orders, warriors flooding in from the entrance.
I stood in the center of it, heart slamming against my ribs, the tea somehow still in my hand.
Sawyer straightened first. There was a gash on his forearm — deep, already bleeding through his jacket sleeve — and he was already scanning the hall, reasserting control with his aura, shifting back into Alpha mode the second the threat was down. He turned and found my eyes and something in his face said: you see? You see what I do for you?
Elliot was slower to rise. I saw why when he turned — three parallel claw marks across his left side, below his ribs, bleeding freely through his shirt. He noticed me noticing and shifted his weight like he was going to say it was nothing.
Then Gracie arrived.
She came through the main entrance in a rush, still in her off-pack jacket, eyes going straight to Sawyer with that unerring instinct she apparently had for him. She made a sound — something high and anguished — and crossed the hall and took his injured arm in both hands, touching it with the kind of frantic, claiming tenderness that made the elders nearby look away.
'Sawyer, oh god, you're bleeding—'
He let her fuss. He didn't push her away. His eyes stayed on me for a moment, unreadable, and then a nurse was there, and Gracie was steering him toward a treatment room, and the moment closed like a door.
I stood there.
Then I looked at Elliot.
He was pressing his hand against his side, jaw tight, not complaining. Just waiting, like he'd wait in a hospital corridor all night, like he'd memorize a tea order from a throwaway comment made a decade ago, like it was all just — obvious. What you did.
'Come on,' I said. My voice came out steady. 'There's a private room down here. Let me look at that.'
He didn't argue.
I set the tea down on the corridor cart and guided him by the elbow toward the door at the end of the hall. My hands weren't shaking this time.
Behind us, I heard Gracie laugh at something Sawyer said. Soft and private. The sound of a woman making herself at home in a space that wasn't hers.
I didn't turn around.
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