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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.
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Chapter 4

The notice came through pack administrative channels on a Tuesday morning, printed on the pale cream letterhead of the Inter-Pack Coordination Council. I found it on the communal bulletin board in the pack house main corridor, tucked between a warrior rotation schedule and a notice about the harvest exchange with Pinehaven.

Annual Inter-Pack Alpha Summit. Blackstone Hall. Six weeks.

Keynote address: Alpha Jackson of Silvercrest Pack. Topic: Sacred Bond Governance and the Foundations of Inter-Pack Cooperation.

I stood in the corridor for a long moment and read it twice.

Sacred bond governance.

I pressed two fingers to the inside of my wrist. Felt my pulse. Steady. Present.

Then I went back to the Omega recovery room, sat down on the narrow cot, and began to plan.

---

I sent Silas new instructions that evening. Specific ones.

The mind-link recordings needed to be cleaned—background noise stripped, the audio amplified to broadcast quality. The photographs needed sequencing: not scattered, not overwhelming, but a chronological narrative that any wolf watching a livestream could follow in under three minutes. The cross-pack documentation from Ironclaw, Duskhollow, and Thornfield needed to be formatted for visual display. Clean headers. Dates. Pack names. The kind of layout that left no room for a watching wolf to claim confusion.

I also told him about the bite mark. The unsanctioned marking on Jaylani's neck, photographed eight months ago. I needed that image in the sequence. Centered. Unmissable.

Silas confirmed receipt through the stone-drop the next morning. Three stones arranged in a line. *Understood. Working.*

I messaged Renata the same day. Two sentences: *The summit is in six weeks. The account freeze executes the moment the broadcast begins, not after.*

She replied within the hour. *Already adjusted. The filing is ready to submit remotely. I'll be watching the livestream.*

That was all we needed to say.

---

The harder work was quieter. It always is.

Five years of Luna diplomacy doesn't look like much from the outside. It looks like remembering names. It looks like showing up to a junior warrior's injury recovery with a proper healer referral when the pack's senior staff was too busy. It looks like spending forty minutes with an Omega's mate before an elder council hearing, not because it was required, but because she was terrified and no one else had thought to sit with her.

Jackson had never learned those names. He didn't need to. That was what a Luna was for.

Now those names were what I needed.

I found the summit's display technician through a contact in the administrative wing—a low-ranked wolf named Corvin who I'd once helped navigate a pack housing dispute that had been quietly strangling his family for two years. Jackson had dismissed it as an Omega matter. I'd spent three evenings reviewing the relevant statutes and made sure the elder council heard it correctly.

Corvin owed me nothing. That wasn't how I'd done it. But when I sat across from him in a quiet corner of the pack house kitchen and told him only what he needed to know—that I needed the summit's display console accessible from a specific auxiliary terminal at a specific time, and that I needed him to be somewhere else when it happened—he looked at me for a long moment.

"The Luna suite," he said quietly. "I heard what happened."

"You don't need to know anything else," I said.

He nodded once. "Terminal seven. East corridor. I'll have the access code updated by the week before."

I thanked him. I meant it.

The Delta from the allied Ashwood Pack was easier. His mate was an Omega I'd defended before the Silvercrest elder council three years ago—a boundary dispute that had threatened her standing in the pack. He'd been in the viewing gallery that day. He'd watched me argue pack law for two hours on behalf of a wolf Jackson hadn't known existed.

He asked only one question: "Will it be legal?"

"Every piece of evidence was documented by a licensed rogue tracker," I said. "Every recording was obtained through legitimate surveillance of a public Alpha figure. Every cross-pack testimony was given voluntarily. Yes. It will be legal."

He was quiet for a moment. Then: "What do you need?"

"To be inside Blackstone Hall during the keynote. With access to the east corridor."

He arranged it within the week.

The young she-wolf from Silvercrest's administrative staff came to me. I hadn't sought her out. She knocked on the Omega recovery room door one afternoon, and when I opened it, she was standing in the corridor with her hands twisted together and her eyes red-rimmed from what looked like several nights of inadequate sleep.

Her name was Wren. She'd been working the healing wing intake desk the day of the incident. She'd watched Jackson carry Jaylani down the corridor. She'd heard Cayson's voice from the back examination room, taut and desperate, calling for supplies that weren't adequate for what he was dealing with.

She hadn't been able to stop it. The Alpha tone had reached even the administrative staff.

"I don't know what you're planning," she said. Her voice was unsteady. "I don't want to know. But if there's something I can do—"

"I don't need anything from you," I said. "Not right now."

She looked at me like I'd said something in a language she wasn't sure she'd understood correctly.

"Rest," I told her. "Sleep. When the time comes, if the elder council asks what you witnessed, tell the truth. That's all."

She left looking fractionally less hollow. I noted her name in the margin of my mental ledger, in the column I was beginning to think of as *the ones who couldn't stop it but didn't look away.*

That column was longer than Jackson knew.

---

Cayson came that same evening.

He'd been checking on me with the regularity of a wolf performing penance—every morning, sometimes evenings, always brief, always with that specific expression that lived somewhere between guilt and dread. I'd stopped trying to reassure him after the first few days. It wasn't what he needed. He needed to sit with it until it became something he could carry forward instead of something that paralyzed him.

I was reviewing dissolution protocols by lamplight when he appeared in the doorway. The documents were spread across the cot beside me—pack law statutes, the formal mate rejection rite language, the elder council procedural requirements for a contested Alpha dethronement. I didn't hide them.

He looked at the papers for a long moment. Then at me.

"What do you need from me?" His voice barely held together. Three weeks of guilt compressed into seven words.

I set down the document I was holding. Looked at him directly, the way I'd learned to look at wolves who needed to be seen rather than managed.

"Nothing," I said. "Not tonight."

He blinked. Like he'd been braced for something that didn't come.

"Cayson." I kept my voice even. "An Alpha tone is not a choice. It's a physiological override. What happened in that corridor was not your failure. It was his crime."

His jaw tightened. He looked at the floor. "I know the difference between what I could have done and what I did."

"So do I," I said. "I also know the difference between a wolf who was overpowered and a wolf who was complicit. You are not the second one."

Something shifted in his face. Not relief—it was too early for relief. But something that had been locked very tight loosened slightly, like a door that had been sealed against pressure finally finding that the pressure had changed.

He sat down in the chair beside the cot.

He didn't ask about the documents. I didn't explain them. We sat in the lamplight for two hours, sometimes talking about small things—the pack's herb garden, a complicated case he'd handled last month, the way the eastern window showed the stars on clear nights—and sometimes not talking at all.

When he finally left, somewhere past midnight, he paused in the doorway.

"If the elder council ever—" He stopped. Started again. "If there's ever a hearing. I want you to know that I remember everything. Every minute of it. I could give the timeline to the second."

I nodded once. "I know."

He left.

I turned back to the dissolution protocols and picked up where I'd left off.

Six weeks.

It was enough time.

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