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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 3

We found him on the way back.

I almost missed him — a small, dirty shape half-hidden in the weeds beside a drainage ditch, shivering so hard his whole body vibrated. Golden fur, or what was left of it under the mud. Ribs showing. Eyes too big for his face, watching us with the particular wariness of something that had learned not to trust movement.

I handed Pierce the first aid kit I'd grabbed from the training ground supply room and stepped off the road without thinking.

"Maia." Pierce's voice. Low, careful. He'd barely spoken the whole drive.

"One second."

I crouched at the edge of the ditch. The puppy pressed himself flat into the weeds, trembling. I held out my hand and waited. Didn't reach. Didn't make sounds. Just waited, the way you do with something that has been hurt enough to stop believing in outstretched hands.

After a moment, a cold wet nose touched my fingers.

I scooped him up. He was almost nothing — a handful of bones and dirty fur and desperate warmth. He tucked his chin against my collarbone and stopped shaking, just slightly.

"Barnaby," I said.

I don't know where the name came from. It arrived fully formed, the way some things do, and I didn't question it.

I turned back to the car. Pierce was standing beside it, watching me with an expression I couldn't read — not quite confusion, not quite something else. His face was still swollen on one side, the cut above his eyebrow dark and crusted. He looked at the puppy in my arms the way he'd looked at my outstretched hand in the alley: like he was running a calculation he didn't have enough data to finish.

I got in the car. After a beat, he got in too.

Barnaby slept on my lap the whole drive back, twitching occasionally, his paws moving like he was running somewhere better in his dreams.

---

The Silverfang pack house guest quarters were on the east wing — three rooms, private bathroom, a window that looked out over the tree line. I'd had them prepared before we left that morning. Pierce stood in the doorway and looked at the room the way people look at things they're not sure they're allowed to want.

"This is yours," I said. "For as long as you need it."

He didn't say anything.

"No one will touch you here." I kept my voice flat. Not soft — soft would have felt like pity, and pity was the wrong currency. "You're under Silverfang protection. My father made the formal declaration. It's on record."

Pierce looked at me. Something moved behind his eyes — that same careful recalibration I'd seen in the alley, the slow, reluctant adjustment of a calculation that had already been run to its worst conclusion.

"Why," he said.

One word. Not ungrateful. Just honest. The question of a man who had learned that nothing came without a price and was trying to find where this one was hidden.

"Because you needed it," I said. "That's all."

He didn't believe me. I could see that clearly. But he stepped into the room, and that was enough for now.

I set Barnaby down on the floor to explore. The puppy sniffed the baseboards, the bed frame, the corner by the window. Then he crossed the room with the absolute confidence of something that had already made its decision, walked directly to Pierce's boots, and sat down on them.

Pierce looked down.

Barnaby looked up.

The silence stretched. Pierce stood very still, like sudden movement might break something. His hands hung at his sides. I watched him look at the puppy with an expression that was almost painful — the expression of someone encountering a form of uncomplicated affection so foreign it registered as a problem to be solved.

Slowly, carefully, he crouched down. His hands hovered for a moment. Then, with the deliberate gentleness of someone who had never been taught how to be gentle but was trying to figure it out in real time, he reached down and touched the top of Barnaby's head.

Barnaby's tail went absolutely insane.

I left them there and went to find my father.

---

The first training session was the following Monday.

I had arranged it with Silverfang's Gamma — a compact, efficient wolf named Torres who ran drills like he was personally offended by inefficiency. I'd funded Pierce's gear myself: proper training clothes, boots that fit, a mouthguard. Small things. The kind of things that should have been provided by his own pack for years and weren't.

Pierce showed up on time. He was moving more carefully than he should have been — the bruising from the alley was still working its way out — but he showed up, and he stood at the edge of the training field with his arms loose at his sides and his face completely neutral, and I recognized that posture. I had seen it in the alley. It was the posture of a wolf who had learned to take up as little space as possible.

The problem wasn't ability. That became clear within the first twenty minutes.

The problem was that every time Torres called a drill — a standard defensive sequence, nothing complicated — Pierce would start it and then pull back. Not from weakness. From something older than weakness. Some deep-wired reflex that said: don't show what you can do, don't let them see Fenris, stay small, stay quiet, do not draw attention to yourself.

He ran the sequence at maybe forty percent of what I could see he was capable of. And then he ran it again. And again. Each time, Torres's expression got a little more neutral in the way that meant he was working hard not to show his frustration.

Caleb Marsh was running drills on the adjacent field. Mid-ranked warrior, solid fighter, the kind of wolf who had earned his position through consistent work and was quietly proud of it. He'd been watching Pierce out of the corner of his eye since the session started.

I heard him, low, to the wolf beside him: "What'd she bring home? Looks like a broke Omega who's never seen a real training ground."

The other wolf snorted.

Pierce heard it. I knew he heard it because his jaw tightened — just slightly, just for a second — and then went smooth again. He didn't look over. He didn't respond. He just reset his stance and ran the drill again, still at forty percent, still pulling Fenris back like a dog on a very short leash.

I watched him do it and felt something complicated move through my chest. Not pity. Something closer to recognition.

I knew what it looked like when someone had been taught that their own power was a liability.

I didn't intervene. Not yet. This wasn't the moment for it. Pierce needed to find his footing here on his own terms, and stepping in to defend him in front of the pack would have cost him more than Caleb's muttering ever could.

But I filed Caleb's name away. And I filed the image of Pierce resetting his stance for the fourth time, jaw tight, eyes forward, running the drill again.

There was something in that image that felt important. The stubbornness of it. The refusal to quit even while refusing to be seen.

Fenris was in there. Waiting.

---

My father called me to his study at midnight.

I had been expecting it. Not the exact night, but the call — I'd known it was coming from the moment I watched his face shift on that dawn walk, the Alpha underneath the father waking up and starting to ask questions.

The study smelled like old paper and cedar wood and the particular quiet of a room where serious things had been decided for a long time. My father was sitting behind his desk, and the desk was covered in documents. Printed ledgers, transfer records, the anonymous inter-pack agreements I had pointed him toward.

He had done the audit himself. I had counted on that. David Ward did not delegate things he considered his personal failure to have missed.

He looked up when I came in. His face was very still.

"Sit down, Maia."

I sat.

He was quiet for a moment. His hand rested on the top page of the stack — a transfer record, two years old, warrior stipends redirected to Ironvale under a goodwill provision that didn't exist in any formal alliance agreement.

"The numbers," he said, "are not ambiguous."

"No," I agreed.

"Warrior stipends. Training supplies. Three border rotation reassignments that I signed off on because they were presented to me as voluntary exchanges." His voice was even. Controlled. The voice he used when he was angry enough that control was the only thing standing between him and something he couldn't take back. "Years of it. Disguised well enough that I didn't see it."

He looked at me.

"How did you know where to look?"

The question sat between us. I held his gaze and thought about everything I could not tell him — the ledgers I had found three years too late in the first life, the numbers I had memorized in the hours before the rogues came, the specific, terrible clarity of a dead woman's memory.

"I've been paying attention," I said.

It wasn't a lie. It was just a very compressed version of the truth.

My father studied me for a long moment. The same searching look he'd given me at the ceremony, at the door of my room, on the dawn walk. Each time, I could see him getting closer to a question he didn't quite have the shape of yet.

Then he picked up his pen.

"I'll have the severance notices drafted by morning," he said. "The transfers stop immediately. I'll want your eyes on the language before I send them."

Something loosened in my chest. Just slightly. Just enough.

"Yes," I said. "I'll be up."

He nodded, already writing. I stood to go.

"Maia."

I stopped.

"The boy you brought back." He didn't look up from the page. "Pierce Knight."

"Yes."

"Roland Knight accepted my request very quickly."

"I noticed that too."

A pause. The scratch of his pen.

"Keep an eye on him," my father said. Not a warning. Something more like an instruction from one strategist to another. "He's going to be important."

I looked at the back of my father's head — the silver threading through his dark hair, the set of his shoulders, the careful deliberate motion of his hand across the page — and felt something I hadn't felt in a very long time.

Safe. Just for a moment. Just enough.

"I know," I said, and left him to his work.

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