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After My Mate Claimed My Step-Sister as Luna Novel Cover

After My Mate Claimed My Step-Sister as Luna

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.
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Chapter 4

He started showing up in my kitchen at night.

I don't know when it became a pattern. The first time, I came downstairs at midnight because I couldn't sleep — which was every night now — and found him sitting on the counter with Cooper in his lap, eating leftover soup straight from the pot like he lived there. I should have thrown him out. Instead I stood in the doorway for a long moment, watching my dog's tail sweep back and forth across Lucas's thigh, and then I went to the stove and started making bread.

Neither of us said anything about it.

The second time, he was already there when I came down. Sitting at the counter with his elbows on the surface and his chin in his hand, watching the dark window like he was waiting for something. Cooper was asleep on his feet. Lucas looked up when I walked in, and that easy smile came up slow, like sunrise.

"You're going to make something," he said. Not a question.

"I was going to make something for myself," I said. "You're not invited."

"Cooper invited me."

I looked at my dog, who was, in fact, asleep on the man's feet and showed no signs of moving. I turned to the stove.

I made pasta. He ate two bowls with the focused reverence of someone receiving communion, and when he was done he set the fork down and said, "That's the best thing I've eaten in six months."

"You've been eating bar food for six months," I said. "That's not a compliment, that's a low bar."

"Still counts."

My wolf hummed. I pressed my thumb to my wrist under the counter where he couldn't see.

He asked questions the way other people breathed — constantly, without apparent effort, each one landing somewhere it shouldn't. What did I cook when I was a kid. Whether my father had taught me or I'd taught myself. Whether I found it calming or just useful.

"Both," I said, without thinking.

"Which one tonight?"

I didn't answer. He didn't push. He just sat there in the low kitchen light with Cooper at his feet and watched me work, and the silence between us was the most comfortable thing I'd felt in months, which was its own kind of problem.

I deflected when I meant something tender. I knew I was doing it. I called him kid when he said something that got too close to the truth, and I watched the corner of his mouth twitch every time — not hurt, just amused, like he could see exactly what I was doing and found it endearing rather than effective.

"You're not as cold as you want me to think," he said one night.

"Go home, Lucas."

"You made me extra," he said, nodding at the bowl in front of him. "You measured it out. You knew I was coming."

I had. I didn't say anything. He ate the extra portion and didn't mention it again, and I stood at the sink with my back to him and my thumb pressed hard against my pulse point and told myself that feeding someone was not the same as trusting them.

The last bond I trusted was a lie. I had to keep remembering that.

---

Grayson noticed I hadn't broken.

I could feel it through the fraying bond — not warmth anymore, not that lazy golden contentment that had driven me out of the house three weeks ago. Something sharper now. Watchful. He was paying attention in a way he hadn't bothered to before, and that meant he was worried.

Good.

The new face in my household staff appeared on a Wednesday. A young warrior named Dex, reassigned to interior duties — cleaning, supply runs, general maintenance. Plausible. Routine. Grayson had done it smoothly enough that a less attentive Luna might have missed it.

I identified him in forty-eight hours.

It wasn't difficult. I had spent two years learning this pack's rhythms — who ate breakfast early, who lingered in the hallways, who made eye contact and who avoided it. Dex avoided it. He also had a habit of positioning himself near doorways when I was on the phone, and twice I caught him in the corridor outside the guest room at hours when there was no cleaning reason to be there.

I didn't confront him. That would have told Grayson I'd found the leak, and a closed leak was less useful than a controlled one.

Instead, I started talking.

Not to Dex directly — that would have been too obvious. But near him. In the kitchen, in the hallway, in the small spaces where sound carried. I let him hear me on the phone with a name I invented — Elder Marsh, sympathetic, old-school, the kind of pack elder who might be persuaded to intervene in a rejection proceeding on humanitarian grounds. I let him hear me mention a legal appeal. A petition for reconsideration. The language of a woman pursuing the slow, legitimate channels. The language of someone who believed the system might still work in her favor if she asked nicely enough.

I watched Dex's posture relax over the following days. He stopped hovering near doorways. He started eating in the kitchen with the other staff again.

Grayson, I was fairly certain, now believed I was chasing a dead end through a sympathetic elder while his Council petition moved forward unopposed.

Let him believe it. Twelve days until the Blood Moon Banquet.

I kept the encrypted drive in Cooper's treat bag and kept working.

---

Lucas was quieter than usual on Thursday night.

He came in with Cooper's steak and sat at the counter, and he ate what I made — lamb chops, because I was stress-cooking and lamb chops required attention — but he was somewhere else. His eyes tracked me the way they always did, but there was something underneath the easy expression that hadn't been there before. A tension in his jaw. A stillness that felt less like calm and more like control.

"You're thinking about something," I said.

"I'm always thinking about something."

"Something specific."

He looked at me for a moment. Then he picked up his fork. "The Banquet's coming up," he said. "The Blood Moon one. At Nighthollow."

I kept my face neutral. "I know when it is."

"You're going."

It wasn't a question. I looked at him. "Why do you ask?"

"Just making conversation."

He wasn't. I could feel it — not through any bond, just through the simple fact that I had been reading people my entire life and Lucas Bennett, for all his easy warmth, was not a man who made idle conversation. Every question he asked had a destination. I just couldn't always see where it was going.

"I'm going," I said. "It's a neutral-territory event. I have standing to attend."

He nodded slowly. His thumb moved along the edge of the counter — once, twice — and then stopped.

"Be careful," he said. Quiet. Not casual at all.

My wolf lifted her head.

I looked at him across the counter — this man who was supposedly a packless drifter working a bar door, who brought my dog premium steak and asked questions like a scalpel and showed up in my kitchen at midnight like he belonged there — and something cold moved through me. Not fear. Recognition.

He knew something.

I didn't ask what. Not yet. The kitchen was warm and Cooper was asleep and the lamb chops were getting cold, and whatever Lucas Bennett was hiding, I wasn't ready to pull that thread tonight. Not when my wolf was purring and my thumb was already pressed to my wrist and I was already fighting on too many fronts to open another one.

But I filed it. The way he'd said it. The tension in his jaw. The way his eyes had gone somewhere careful and then come back.

I filed it in the same place I filed everything — the part of my mind that was always building, always cataloging, always waiting for the moment when the pieces would arrange themselves into a shape I could use.

"I'm always careful," I said.

He looked at me for a long moment. Then the smile came back, softer than usual.

"I know," he said. "I just —" He stopped. Started again. "I know."

Cooper shifted in his sleep, pressing closer to Lucas's feet. The kitchen was very quiet.

I turned back to the stove and told myself the warmth in my chest was just the heat from the burner.

Eleven days.

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