
After My Mate Claimed My Step-Sister as Luna
After My Mate Claimed My Step-Sister as Luna Chapter 1
I hadn't slept in three days.
The healing ward smelled like antiseptic and dried blood. Grayson lay on the cot with his eyes closed, his chest rising and falling in a rhythm I had memorized over seventy-two hours of sitting in the same hard chair. The rogue ambush had torn through his patrol unit in the Oregon wilderness — three warriors dead, two more in critical condition, and my mate dragged back to the Blackridge pack house with his ribs shattered and half his face swollen shut.
I stayed. I didn't eat. I barely drank water. I held his hand when the healer, Maren Voss, reset his bones, and I wiped the blood from his mouth when his wolf fought the sedatives. That's what a Luna does. That's what I did.
On the third morning, his eyes opened.
I leaned forward. My fingers found his. "Grayson."
He looked at me. Not the way a man looks at the woman who hasn't left his side in three days. Not the way a mate looks at the person whose scent is supposed to be the first thing that brings him home. He looked at me the way you look at a stranger who sat down at the wrong table.
"Who are you?" he said.
The words landed somewhere between my ribs. I opened my mouth, but before I could answer, I felt it — the mind-link. Not a private thread between us. A pack-wide broadcast, pushed out with the full weight of his Alpha authority, reaching every wolf in Blackridge simultaneously.
*I feel no mate bond with Eleanor Harris. I don't know this woman. The only person I remember loving is Liliana.*
The bond in my chest detonated.
It felt like someone had pressed a branding iron against the inside of my sternum. My wolf — who had been howling for three days, pacing and clawing and begging me to sleep so she could keep watch — screamed. Not a howl. A scream. The kind of sound an animal makes when it's caught in a trap and knows no one is coming.
I didn't move.
I sat in that chair with my hand still touching his, and I looked at his face. Really looked. His jaw was set. His breathing was controlled. And his eyes — his eyes held mine a beat too long. One second past natural. Two.
I knew that tell. I had watched Grayson Evans lie to pack elders, to visiting Alphas, to his own Beta. When Grayson lied, he held eye contact like a dare. Like he was saying *go ahead, call me on it. See what happens.*
He was lying.
I didn't know why. I didn't know what the play was. But I knew — the way I knew my own name, the way I knew the weight of the Luna pin my mother left me — that my mate was looking me in the eye and performing.
I pulled my hand back slowly. I stood up. My wolf was still screaming inside my skull, and the bond was burning so hot I could taste copper in the back of my throat.
I said nothing.
I walked out of the healing ward, down the corridor, and into the bathroom at the end of the hall. I locked the door. I pressed my thumb against the inside of my opposite wrist, right over my pulse point, and I counted the beats until my hands stopped shaking.
Then I started thinking.
---
It took less than a week.
Grayson's mother arranged it. His father signed off. And Liliana — my step-sister, the daughter of my father's second wife, the woman who had claimed the Silverfang Alpha seat before my father's body was cold — walked into the Blackridge pack house like she'd been expected all along.
She touched everything.
She ran her fingers along the kitchen counter where I prepped meals for the pack. She sat in my chair at the long table. She opened the closet in the Luna quarters — my quarters — and held one of my dresses against her body, tilting her head at the mirror like she was trying it on for size.
I stood in the doorway and watched.
"Oh, Eleanor." She turned with that smile. The one she'd perfected at sixteen — soft, apologetic, designed to make you feel like the unreasonable one for being angry. "I hope you don't mind. Grayson said I should get settled."
I didn't answer her. I looked past her to the bed I had shared with my mate for two years. The sheets had already been changed.
That same afternoon, Grayson found Cooper in the living room. My Golden Retriever — a rescue I'd brought home the year we mated, the only creature in this house who had never once looked at me with calculation — was lying on his bed by the fireplace.
"Get that thing out of here," Grayson said. He didn't look at me when he said it. "Real wolves don't keep dogs."
Cooper lifted his head and whined.
I walked over, clipped his leash, and took him to the small guest room at the end of the east wing. It had a single bed, a window that faced the tree line, and no lock on the door. I set Cooper's bed on the floor beside mine. He curled up and pressed his nose against my ankle.
I sat on the edge of the mattress and pressed my thumb to my wrist.
I started cataloging. Every room Liliana entered. Every document Grayson signed. Every conversation I overheard through walls that were thinner than an Alpha should have tolerated. I didn't have a plan yet. But I had a list. And lists, in my experience, eventually become weapons.
---
The pack dinner was Grayson's idea.
A formal meal to welcome Liliana to the Blackridge pack house. The long oak table was set for twenty — Grayson at the head, his Beta Callum Reid to his right, the senior warriors and their mates filling the rest. A seat had been placed at Grayson's left. The Luna's seat. My seat.
Liliana was already sitting in it when I arrived.
I almost didn't see it at first. She was wearing a cream blouse, her hair pinned up, her posture perfect. Then the candlelight caught something on her collar, and my vision narrowed to a single point.
My mother's Luna pin.
It was small — a silver crescent moon with a single sapphire at its center, the Silverfang crest engraved on the back. My father had given it to my mother the night she became Luna. She wore it every day until she died. It was the only thing of hers I had left.
And it was pinned to Liliana's collar like a piece of costume jewelry.
The room went very quiet. Or maybe that was just inside my head.
I picked up the silver-lined vase from the sideboard. It was decorative, heavy, and edged with a silver inlay that would burn werewolf skin on contact. I threw it at Grayson's head.
It missed by an inch. Deliberately. It shattered against the wall behind him, and a shard caught his ear. Blood ran down his neck.
The room erupted. Chairs scraped. Someone gasped. Callum half-rose from his seat, his hand on the table.
I was already moving.
I crossed the room in four steps, pulled the antique silver shears from the display case on the mantle — the ones Grayson's grandmother had kept as a ceremonial piece, real silver, sharp enough to cut bone — and pressed the open blades against his throat.
The silver hissed against his skin. He flinched. His Alpha aura flared, pressing down on the room like a thunderstorm, but I was his mate. Bonded. His aura couldn't touch me the way it touched everyone else.
I leaned in close. Close enough that only he could hear me.
"If you want a war," I said, "I will give you one that leaves scars your wolf can't heal."
His eyes flickered. Just for a second. Not fear — something worse. Recognition. The understanding that he had miscalculated.
I held the shears there for three more seconds. Then I straightened, turned to Liliana, and unpinned my mother's Luna pin from her collar. My fingers didn't shake. Liliana sat frozen, her lips parted, her face drained of color.
I pocketed the pin.
I walked out of the dining room without looking back. Cooper was waiting in the hallway. He fell into step beside me, his tail low, his eyes on my face.
The burn mark on Grayson's throat, I learned later, stayed for days. Silver scars on an Alpha. A reminder that wouldn't fade.
Good.
I closed the door to my small room, sat on the bed, and pressed my thumb to my pulse point. Cooper put his head in my lap.
The list in my mind was growing. And somewhere beneath the rage and the burning bond and the sound of my wolf still keening in the dark — somewhere underneath all of it — a plan was beginning to take shape.
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