
After My Mate Chose My Best Friend Over Me
Chapter 1
Pain tore through my lower abdomen, sharp and unforgiving. I gasped, gripping the edge of the sterile examination table until my knuckles turned white.
"Breathe, Vivienne. Just breathe," Elara Voss murmured.
The head healer of the Ironvale Pack wiped a damp cloth across my forehead. Her voice was calm, but when I looked up, her eyes quickly darted away. Her hands lingered on my bare shoulders. It was a heavy, guilty hesitation. A beat that lasted just a second too long.
I filed that look away in my mind. I didn't have the energy to question it right now.
"Another failed cycle," I whispered, my voice hoarse.
Elara sighed softly. She began packing away the silver instruments and glass vials. "Your body needs a break, Luna. The treatments are too aggressive. Your wolf is suffering."
She was right. Deep inside my chest, my inner wolf gave a faint, pathetic whimper. She used to be a towering, fierce presence. Now, after three brutal years of healer-assisted fertility treatments, she was barely a flicker. All to give Alpha Raymond Mitchell an heir. All to fulfill my duty as his mate.
"I'll be fine," I said flatly. I forced myself to sit up. My legs trembled, but I planted my feet on the cold floor.
"Let me call for a stretcher," Elara offered, stepping forward.
"No." I held up a hand. "I can walk."
I left the clinic and stepped into the cool night air. The Ironvale pack house loomed ahead, massive and quiet under the moonlight. I walked slowly, keeping one hand braced against the stone wall of the corridor. Every step sent a dull ache through my pelvis.
I just wanted my bed. I wanted my mate. I wanted Raymond to wrap his strong arms around me and tell me we would try again.
I pushed open the heavy oak doors of the pack house and made my way down the dimly lit hallway. The house was silent. Most of the pack was already asleep. I passed the grand staircase and headed toward the Alpha suite.
But halfway down the corridor, I stopped cold.
A scent drifted through the air. It didn't come from our bedroom at the end of the hall. It came from the guest wing to my left.
I closed my eyes and took a shallow breath.
It was Raymond. Dark pine and crisp ozone. It was a scent I knew better than my own. A scent I had worn like a second skin for over a decade.
But it wasn't alone.
Tangled tightly with his scent was something else. Sweet honeysuckle and warm vanilla. Mara. Mara Webb, my childhood friend. The woman I had invited into my home to stay as a guest.
The scents weren't just passing each other. They were woven together. Thick, heavy, and intimate. It was the unmistakable, musky warmth of two bodies that had been pressed close for hours.
I stood frozen in the dark hallway. My hand was still pressed flat against the floral wallpaper.
For a moment, the world stopped spinning. My heart stopped beating. The mate bond inside me gave a violent, agonizing throb. It felt like someone had driven a silver stake straight through my ribs.
My mate. And my best friend.
Under my own roof.
Most she-wolves would have screamed. They would have shifted, torn the guest room door off its hinges, and drawn blood. They would have let the pain shatter them into a million pieces.
I didn't shatter. I went completely, terrifyingly silent.
The tears didn't come. Instead, a cold, numb armor wrapped around my heart. I lowered my hand from the wall. I turned my back on the guest wing, walked to my empty bedroom, and quietly locked the door.
I didn't confront Raymond the next morning. When he walked into the dining room for breakfast, looking fresh and relaxed, I poured his coffee just like I always did.
"Morning, Viv," he said, kissing my cheek. His lips felt like poison against my skin.
"Good morning, Ray," I replied. My voice was steady. Smooth. Perfect.
A few minutes later, Mara bounced into the room. She wore a soft pink sweater and a bright smile. "Morning, you two! Viv, you look a little pale. Are you feeling okay?"
"Just tired," I said, offering her a small, polite smile. "The pack alliance letters kept me up late."
I watched them. I watched the way Raymond's eyes flicked to Mara's lips when he thought I wasn't looking. I watched the subtle brush of their knees under the table. Every stolen glance was another brick in the wall I was building between us.
For the next few days, I played the perfect Luna. I attended pack meals. I reviewed border patrol schedules. I smiled at the elders. I projected total normalcy.
But when the sun went down, I went to work.
I am the Luna of Ironvale. For ten years, I have been the operational spine of this pack. I organized regional banquets, managed complex supply chains, and tracked every cent in our treasury. Raymond wore the crown, but I built the kingdom.
Setting up a surveillance network was child's play.
I ordered high-definition micro-cameras under a fake vendor account. I waited until 3 AM, when the pack house was dead silent. Moving like a ghost, I installed the tiny lenses in the smoke detectors of the guest wing. I tucked them into the crown molding of the kitchen corridor. I placed them in the shared common spaces Mara liked to use.
I worked with cold, mechanical precision. Every wire I hid, every lens I adjusted, was a step toward my freedom.
By the end of the week, I had my trap fully set.
Now, I sat alone in my private office, the heavy oak door locked tight. The only light in the room came from the glow of my laptop screen.
I clicked open the hidden folder.
Timestamp: Tuesday, 01:14 AM.
The screen showed the dark hallway. Raymond's tall figure slipped out of our bedroom, walked quietly down the hall, and opened Mara's door. She was waiting for him in a sheer nightgown. She pulled him inside by his collar.
Timestamp: Thursday, 03:45 AM.
The kitchen camera. Mara sitting on the marble counter. Raymond standing between her legs, kissing her deeply, his hands roaming over her body.
I watched the footage with dead eyes. My inner wolf curled into a tight ball, too exhausted to even howl. But my mind was sharper than it had ever been.
I dragged the video files onto a secure encrypted drive. I had the dates. I had the times. I had irrefutable, undeniable proof.
Raymond thought I was just a failing vessel. Mara thought I was just a blind, trusting fool. They both underestimated me.
I closed the laptop with a soft click. The sound echoed in the dark room like the cocking of a gun.
I was ready.
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