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After My Mate Chose My Best Friend Novel Cover

After My Mate Chose My Best Friend

I woke up gasping. My hand flew to the right side of my neck — the spot where Leo's mark used to sit, where the skin had been raised and warm for years, where I could press my fingers and feel the bond humming like a second heartbeat. Nothing. Smooth skin. Unmarked. Sunlight poured through the curtains. White curtains with tiny silver threads my mother had sewn before she died. I knew those curtains. I knew this room. The lavender bedspread, the oak desk in the corner, the framed photo of me and my father at the Silverfang summer run when I was twelve.
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Chapter 2

My father left for his border walk at five-fifteen every morning. I knew this the way I knew the Silverfang crest by heart — it was just part of the architecture of him. Thirty years of the same route, the same hour, the same quiet. In my first life, I had slept through every single one.

I was waiting on the pack house steps when he came down.

He stopped. Looked at me — the same searching look he'd given me last night in the ceremonial clearing, like he was trying to find the seam where his daughter ended and whatever this was began.

"You're up early," he said.

"I want to walk with you."

A pause. Then he nodded, and we fell into step together without another word.

The Silverfang territory was beautiful at dawn. I had forgotten that. In the first life I'd left it so quickly — packed my things, followed Leo to Ironvale, told myself I was building something new. I hadn't looked back long enough to remember what I was leaving. The Douglas firs were enormous here, old-growth, the kind that made you feel small in a way that was almost comforting. The morning mist sat low between the trunks. Our breath made small clouds in the cold air.

I waited until we were well past the pack house before I spoke.

"Dad. I've been looking at some of the pack's resource agreements."

He glanced at me sideways. "Have you."

Not a question. Not quite a dismissal either. Just — noting it.

"There are some anonymous transfers I don't recognize. Inter-pack support allocations, filed under general goodwill provisions. They've been running for at least two years." I kept my voice easy. Curious, not accusatory. A daughter who had been doing her homework, not a woman who had memorized the ledgers while waiting to die. "I couldn't find any corresponding benefit documentation. No training exchanges, no alliance reinforcements, nothing that would explain the outflow."

Silence. The crunch of frost under our boots.

"You've been reviewing the financial records," he said slowly.

"I've been reviewing what I could access. I know I'm not formally in an advisory role yet. I just —" I let a small pause sit there. "I want to understand how the pack works. How you've built it. I thought the agreements would be a good place to start."

I watched his face. He was a careful man, my father. He didn't react fast. He turned things over, examined them from multiple angles, and only then decided what he thought. It was one of the things that made him a good Alpha and one of the things that had made him easy to rob.

But I saw it — the exact moment his expression shifted. The indulgent warmth of a father humoring his newly-shifted daughter gave way to something sharper. More attentive. The Alpha underneath the father, waking up.

"I'll look into it," he said.

Those four words. I filed them away like a key.

"Thank you," I said, and let the subject drop, and we walked the rest of the border in comfortable quiet while I memorized the tree line and thought about everything I still had to do.

---

The flowers arrived before noon.

White mountain blooms, expensive, arranged in a tall glass vase with the kind of careful artistry that announced money without saying it out loud. The Ironvale messenger — a young wolf, maybe nineteen, with the slightly pained expression of someone who had been handed an assignment he already knew was going badly — carried them to the pack house door and asked for me by name.

I came to the door. I took the small envelope from the arrangement, opened it, and read the note.

Leo's handwriting. I would have known it anywhere. Slanted, deliberate, the letters of a man who had been taught penmanship as a performance of status.

*Maia — what I felt at the ceremony last night was unlike anything I have ever experienced. I believe the Moon Goddess has given us something rare. I would be honored to speak with you at your earliest convenience. — Leo Evans, Ironvale Pack.*

I read it once. I set it on the kitchen counter. Then I picked up the entire vase — flowers, card, the small Ironvale ribbon tied around the stems — and carried it back to the front door and held it out to the messenger.

He stared at it.

"Please return this to Alpha-heir Evans," I said. My voice was pleasant. Completely pleasant. "No message."

The young wolf's throat moved. He was trying very hard not to look as uncomfortable as he felt. "Miss Ward, I — he specifically asked that I —"

"I know," I said. "No message."

He took the vase. I watched him carry it back down the pack house steps to the waiting car, the white flowers bobbing slightly with each step. I stood on the steps until the car pulled away, my expression easy and empty, and then I went back inside and washed my hands at the kitchen sink for no reason I could have explained.

Seraphina was quiet. Not the tense, coiled quiet of suppression — just still. Watching.

Good, I told her. We're done with that.

She didn't argue. But she didn't fully relax either. Neither did I.

---

The regional training ground was forty minutes east, on neutral territory between three pack borders. My father had agreed to the visit easily — he liked that I was showing interest in allied relations, he said. It was good instinct for a future Luna.

I didn't correct him about which pack I intended to be Luna of.

The training ground was a sprawling complex — open sparring fields, a weapons barn, a long barracks building where visiting wolves could bunk during extended exchanges. Several packs used it on rotating schedules. Today it was Blackridge's rotation, and I could see their warriors on the main field running drills, their grey-and-black training gear moving in tight formations.

I had told my father I wanted to observe the allied warriors. That was true. I just hadn't told him what I was actually looking for.

I found it in the alley behind the barracks.

Three Blackridge wolves. One on the ground.

I heard it before I saw it — the specific, rhythmic sound of a beating that had been going on long enough to become almost routine. No shouting. No taunting. Just the dull, methodical sound of boots and fists against a body that had stopped trying to protect itself.

Pierce was on his hands and knees in the dirt. His dark hair was matted with blood on one side. His shirt was torn across the shoulder. He wasn't fighting back. He wasn't even flinching anymore — he had gone somewhere else inside himself, somewhere flat and unreachable, and the three wolves standing over him were barely even paying attention, talking to each other between blows like this was just a task they were finishing up.

Seraphina went absolutely rigid.

My father's hand came down on my arm — not restraining, just present. He had seen it too.

He stepped forward, and his aura came with him.

Alpha David Ward's aura was not a subtle thing. It filled the alley like a pressure change, like the air before a lightning strike, and all three Blackridge wolves froze mid-motion. The one with his boot raised slowly lowered it. They turned. They saw who was standing at the alley entrance, and every one of them dropped their eyes.

"Alpha Ward." The tallest one found his voice first. Barely. "We were just — disciplinary —"

"I see what you were doing," my father said. Quiet. Precise. The voice he used when he was angry enough that volume would have been redundant.

Pierce hadn't moved. He was still on his hands and knees, head down, breathing in careful, controlled increments. He hadn't looked up. I wasn't sure he knew yet that the beating had stopped for a reason other than boredom.

I stepped around my father.

"Pierce Knight," I said.

His head came up slowly. His eyes found me — dark eyes, guarded, the flat emptiness of someone who had learned not to read too much into unexpected kindness because the cost of being wrong was too high. There was a cut above his left eyebrow. His lip was split. He looked at me the way a wolf looks at something it cannot yet classify as safe or dangerous.

I crouched down so I wasn't standing over him.

"My name is Maia Ward," I said. "Silverfang Pack. I'd like to request a cross-pack training exchange — you, with us, starting today." I kept my voice even. Practical. Not pitying. Pity would have been the wrong thing. "If you're willing."

Something moved behind his eyes. Not hope — he was too careful for hope. More like the very first, tentative recalibration of a calculation he had already run to its conclusion.

Behind me, I heard my father speak to the Blackridge wolves in a tone that left no room for interpretation. And then, because my father was David Ward and his word carried the weight of twenty-six years of Alpha authority, I heard him make the formal request to Alpha Roland Knight by phone — a brief, courteous call that Roland Knight accepted with a speed that told me everything I needed to know about how much he wanted Pierce gone.

Pierce was still looking at me.

"Okay," he said. His voice was low. A little rough. One word, offered carefully, like he wasn't entirely sure yet that it was safe to spend it.

I stood up and held out my hand.

He looked at it for a moment — just a beat too long, the hesitation of someone who had learned that extended hands usually meant something was about to be taken. Then he took it, and I pulled him to his feet, and that was how it started.

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