Follow
Chapters
Share
After My Mate Claimed His Mistress, I Planned My Revenge Novel Cover

After My Mate Claimed His Mistress, I Planned My Revenge

The Silvercrest pack house healing wing smelled like sage and antiseptic. I stood in the corridor, one hand pressed to my lower belly, feeling the faint flutter inside. My wolf stirred—cautious, guarded, but for the first time in five years, warm. Junior healer Cayson appeared from the examination room and smiled. "Luna Cassandra," he said quietly. "We're ready for you." "Thank you, Cayson." I tried to return the smile. He was young, maybe twenty-three, with kind eyes and careful hands. He treated me like I mattered. Not because I was Luna. Because I was a wolf carrying a pup who deserved to survive.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

They moved me to the Omega recovery room sometime before dawn. I know because the window faced east, and when I finally opened my eyes, the sky was the color of a bruise healing wrong—purple fading into something sickly and pale.

The cot was narrow. The blanket smelled like pack laundry soap and nothing else. No cedarwood. No rain.

I lay there and pressed two fingers to the inside of my wrist. Felt my own pulse. Steady. Still here.

The pup was not.

I didn't cry. My wolf was too quiet for crying. She sat somewhere deep inside me, very still, the way she'd gone still in that corridor when the jasmine-and-ash hit the air. Not broken. Watching.

So I watched too.

Cayson came to check on me that first morning. He stood in the doorway for a moment before he came in, like he wasn't sure he had the right. His hands were clean now. No trace of what they'd held the night before. But his eyes carried it.

"Luna," he said quietly.

"Cayson." I kept my voice even. "Thank you. For what you did."

His jaw worked. "I didn't—" He stopped. Started again. "I didn't do enough."

"You did everything you could." I meant it. He needed to hear that I meant it. "That's not the same thing as enough. But it's not nothing, either."

He left without saying anything else. But something shifted in his face before he turned away. I filed that too.

I was good at filing things now.

I spent three days in that room. Not because I was too weak to leave—by the second day I could walk the corridor without holding the wall. I stayed because the recovery room had a window that looked directly onto the pack house's main courtyard, and the courtyard was where everything happened.

I watched.

The warriors who'd been in the healing wing corridor that night—Bren, the broad-shouldered Delta who'd been first to respond to Cayson's shout, and two others whose names I was still learning—they crossed the courtyard every morning for training. They never looked up at my window. That was how I knew they knew which window it was.

Petra, the Omega who'd carried the moonflowers, walked past my door twice on the second day. She didn't knock. But she slowed each time, and once I heard her stop completely, just standing in the corridor outside, before her footsteps moved on.

Guilt has a specific texture in a pack. It's not loud. It's the averted eye. The conversation that stops a beat too early when you enter a room. The way a wolf's body angles away from you even when their face is turned toward you.

They'd all been there. Jackson's Alpha tone had locked their bodies in place, but it hadn't touched their consciences. And consciences, I had learned, were patient things. They waited.

I filed every face. Every flinch. Every hesitation.

On the fourth day, I walked out of the recovery room.

I didn't go to the Luna suite. I already knew what I'd find there. Jaylani's jasmine-and-ash scent soaked into my pillows, my curtains, the cedar-lined closet where I'd kept the mating ceremony shawl my mother had given me. I didn't need to see it to know. My wolf had already catalogued the loss.

I went to the pack dining hall instead.

Jackson was there.

He stood at the head of the long table, not eating, just present—the way Alphas are present when they want the room to feel their authority. Jaylani sat three seats down. Not at his right hand. Not yet. But close enough that his body was angled toward her, one shoulder turned in her direction, a posture so instinctive he probably didn't know he was doing it.

Possessive. Unmistakable.

He didn't introduce her as anything. He didn't have to. The positioning said everything pack law didn't yet allow him to say out loud.

I took a seat near the far end of the table. A few wolves shifted uncomfortably. No one spoke to me directly. I picked up a piece of bread and ate it slowly and watched Jackson's face while he talked.

He was good at this. I'd always known that. The easy authority, the measured warmth, the way he could make a room feel like it was being held rather than commanded. He spoke about the pack's upcoming harvest exchange with the Pinehaven territory. He spoke about the warrior rotation schedule. And then, with the practiced gravity of a wolf who had rehearsed the moment, he said:

"Silvercrest has faced difficulty this week. Loss. But the Moon Goddess does not give us burdens without purpose. We move forward in unity. In Her grace."

Her grace.

I set down my bread.

My wolf noted it with cold, clinical precision: he invoked the Goddess's name most when he was furthest from Her law. It was a tell. I'd seen it before and not recognized it for what it was. Now I did.

Jaylani's eyes found mine across the table. Just for a moment. Her expression was soft. Carefully, perfectly soft.

I looked back at her without expression and watched her look away first.

That evening, I sent a message through the dead-drop system Silas and I had established three weeks ago—a specific arrangement of stones near the eastern boundary marker that meant *expand the search*. I'd prepared the secondary instruction set before the miscarriage, because I had always known, somewhere in the part of me that hired a rogue tracker instead of confronting my mate, that I would eventually need it.

I needed the bite mark documented. The unsanctioned marking Jackson had put on Jaylani's neck—the one that violated pack law so fundamentally that even the elder council would have no choice but to act once it was proven. I needed it photographed, timestamped, witnessed.

And I needed Jaylani's history confirmed. Every pack she'd passed through. Every Alpha she'd positioned herself near. Every attempt she'd made before Silvercrest.

Silas would go to Ironclaw first. Then Duskhollow. Then Thornfield.

He asked no questions. That was why I'd chosen him.

I walked back to the Omega recovery room—I wasn't ready to claim different quarters yet, not until I was ready to claim everything—and sat on the narrow cot and pressed two fingers to my wrist again.

Still here.

My wolf stirred. Not warm, the way she'd been when I first felt the pup flutter. Something colder. Sharper.

Ready.

You may also like

After My Alpha Abandoned Me for My Sister Novel Cover
8.7
The morning light streamed through the kitchen windows as I carefully placed the last strawberry on top of the chocolate cake. Three years. Three whole years since I'd been bound to Austin as his chosen mate, and today I wanted everything to be perfect. I stepped back to admire my work. The cake looked beautiful—Austin's favorite dark chocolate with fresh strawberries and a drizzle of honey. My hands trembled slightly as I adjusted the single candle in the center. "Is that for Alpha Austin?" Elena, one of the pack's cooks, asked as she passed by. Her eyes held that familiar mixture of pity and curiosity that I'd grown accustomed to over the years. "Yes," I replied softly, unable to suppress the small smile that formed on my lips. "Today marks three years since our bonding ceremony." Elena's eyebrows rose.
After My Alpha Chose His Mistress Over His Mother Novel Cover
9.1
The grand ballroom of the Silverwood packhouse glittered with crystal chandeliers and polished marble, a stark contrast to the darkness brewing in my heart. I stood at the entrance, my fingers nervously adjusting the strap of the silver sequined gown Ryan had demanded I wear. The fabric scratched against my skin, uncomfortable and restrictive—much like my life as Luna of this pack. "You'll wear this, and you'll smile," Ryan had ordered earlier, his Alpha tone leaving no room for argument. "The pack expects their Luna to look the part." Now, as we entered the Anniversary Gala, he didn't even glance my way. His hand rested on the small of Alaina's back instead, guiding her through the crowd as if she were his Luna, not me. "Sylvia, you look... interesting," Alaina said, her voice dripping with false sweetness as she passed me. Her emerald gown flowed effortlessly around her curves, custom-made to perfection. "I'm surprised you found something that could accommodate your...
Alpha’s Betrayal, Luna’s Redemption Novel Cover
8.2
My mate had chosen my half-sister, and before I could even step into his pack as his Luna, he had demoted me to a chosen mate. They acted as though they were my saviors, as if allowing me into their lives was some grand act of mercy. Jalen Nelson, the Alpha of the Blue Moon Pack, looked at me with pity in his eyes. "Allowing you to join the pack is already unfair to Ariella," he said, his voice heavy with condescension. "But if you bring your dowry, we won’t mistreat you." They were so deeply entangled in their affection for each other that I felt like an intruder in their world. I decided to let them have their happiness—and I would take my substantial inheritance with me when I left. ============================== Today, the Silva family came to formalize the mark ceremony. I was giddy with excitement, hiding behind the grand hall’s decorative screen to watch the proceedings. Everything seemed normal at first. Then, my half-sister, Ariella Gray, rushed into the hall, her presence immediately commanding everyone’s attention.
Betrayed by the Mate Who Claimed My Heart Novel Cover
9.3
On the way back to the pack, I complained to Raiden about Giovanna pushing me to the ground. He accused me of faking it for sympathy and sent me to the rogue lands for "training." Two years of hardship left me emaciated, barely clinging to life. I thought he would come to take me back, but instead, he dragged me out to donate blood for Giovanna. "Two years of training haven’t humbled you yet? Still playing the victim!" "Giovanna is severely anemic, and you’re the only one with a matching scent in the entire pack. If you delay and make her condition worse, you’ll regret it!" He didn’t listen to my explanations and forced me into the car. He didn’t know that two years in the rogue lands had left me with a rare illness. I had only a month left, and forcibly donating blood would cut that down to five days. --- Raiden dragged me into the hospital, his aura cold and unyielding. Not a single word of concern passed his lips.
Bound to the Alpha, Crowned as Luna Novel Cover
9.7
She was born to be nothing.He was born to rule everything.Ariella Moonshade is the most despised wolfless girl in the Silver Fang Pack—mocked, beaten, and treated as a disgrace beneath the Alpha’s roof. In a world where strength defines worth, she has none… or so they believe.On the night of her long-awaited awakening, fate binds her to the one man who should never have been hers—Alpha Kael Blackthorn, the ruthless ruler of the strongest pack in the realm.He rejects her without hesitation.But rejection does not break destiny.Instead, it awakens an ancient power buried in Ariella’s blood—the Moonborn Luna, a force feared and worshipped in legends long forgotten. The Moon Goddess binds their souls with a bond stronger than pride, law, or rejection.Forced to protect the woman he cast aside, Kael watches the “weak” girl rise into a queen no Alpha can command.As rival packs scheme, hidden betrayals surface, and the realm teeters on the edge of war, Ariella must choose: submit to the Alpha who rejected her…or claim the crown fate prepared for her.Because she was never meant to stand beside the throne.She was meant to own it.
He Chose My Sister Over His True Mate Novel Cover
9.7
The lavender scent clings to my skin like a second layer, artificial and cloying. I hate it. It's Lainey's scent, not mine, but that's the point. I'm supposed to be her tonight. My hands shake as I stand at the altar, the Pierce Pack house looming behind me like a fortress. Hundreds of wolves watch from the shadows, their eyes glowing in the torchlight. I can feel their judgment, their curiosity. They're wondering why their Alpha agreed to this political mating with the Wood Pack's daughter. If only they knew the truth. Alpha Sebastian Pierce stands across from me, and I can't bring myself to meet his eyes.