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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 5

Liliana made her move on a Monday morning.

I was in the east corridor when I heard it — her voice carrying from the training yard, that particular register she used when she wanted to sound authoritative and only managed to sound brittle. I stopped walking and listened.

'The morning rotation needs to shift to afternoons,' she was saying. 'I want the senior warriors available for escort duty during pack social hours.'

Silence. The specific kind of silence that happens when a room full of people are deciding whether to pretend they didn't hear something.

I turned the corner.

Three of the senior warriors were standing in a loose cluster near the yard entrance — Bram, Cora, and old Fenwick, who had been running training rotations since before Grayson inherited the Alpha seat. Liliana was facing them in a pale blue dress that was entirely wrong for a training yard, her chin lifted at the angle she used when she was performing confidence she didn't feel.

Fenwick looked at me.

Not at Liliana. At me.

It was a small thing. A flicker of eye contact, half a second, the kind of look that said: *you built this, and we know it.* Bram's shoulders had shifted slightly toward me too, and Cora's jaw had gone tight in the way it did when she was waiting for a signal.

I kept my face completely neutral.

'The rotation schedule is already optimized for pack security,' I said, addressing no one in particular, my voice even. 'Shifting senior warriors to social escort duty would leave the eastern perimeter understaffed during peak rogue activity hours.'

Liliana's eyes cut to me. 'I wasn't asking for your input, Eleanor.'

'I know,' I said. 'I was offering it anyway.'

Grayson appeared from the side entrance thirty seconds later. He must have felt the tension through the pack link — or Liliana had already sent him a private message, which was more likely. He crossed the yard with that deliberate Alpha stride, and when he looked at me his eyes were flat and cold.

'A word,' he said.

It wasn't a request.

He walked me to the far end of the corridor, out of earshot of the warriors, and turned to face me with his arms crossed. 'You undermined her in front of the pack.'

'I offered a tactical observation.'

'You made her look incompetent.'

'She did that herself.' I held his gaze. 'The eastern perimeter rotation exists because we lost two Deltas to a rogue incursion fourteen months ago. I built that schedule. If she wants to dismantle it, she should understand what it's protecting first.'

His jaw tightened. 'You don't have Luna authority anymore.'

'Not yet,' I said. 'But I still have a functioning memory, which appears to be in short supply around here.'

The Alpha tone hit me like a wall — that low, resonant pressure that was designed to make wolves bare their necks and go quiet. I felt it move through me. I let it move through me. And then I looked at him with the same expression I'd been wearing since he woke up in that healing ward and decided I was expendable.

I didn't flinch.

Something moved behind his eyes. Not anger. Something closer to unease.

'Stay out of pack operations,' he said.

'Of course,' I said.

I walked back down the corridor. Behind me, I could feel the warriors' eyes on my back, and I knew — without turning around, without needing to check — that Fenwick was still watching. That Bram's shoulders were still angled toward where I'd been standing. That Cora had filed this moment the same way I had.

Grayson's grip on his own pack was fraying at the edges, and he didn't even know it yet.

Good.

---

Maren found me that afternoon.

She came to the guest room door with a covered tray — the healer's standard excuse for moving through the pack house without raising questions — and when I let her in she set the tray down and stood with her hands folded and her eyes on the floor for a moment before she looked up.

'I need to tell you something,' she said. 'And I need you to tell me what to do with it.'

I closed the door.

She had been documenting since the healing ward. That was the first thing she said, and she said it quietly, like a confession. Trace wolfsbane compounds in Grayson's recovery den — not the standard suppressants that healers kept on hand, not the diluted compounds used for controlled training exercises. Concentrated. Refined. The kind of preparation that had one use.

'How long have you been sitting on this?' I asked.

'Three weeks.' Her voice was steady but her hands weren't. 'I didn't know who to trust. I didn't know if —' She stopped. 'I didn't know if you were going to fight or go quietly.'

'I'm not going quietly,' I said.

Something in her shoulders released. 'I know that now.'

I looked at her for a long moment. Maren Voss had been the Blackridge healer for eleven years. She had stitched up warriors after rogue incursions and sat with grieving mates and kept the pack's medical records with a precision that bordered on obsessive. She was not a political creature. She was not someone who took risks without cause.

She was here because she had watched something wrong happen and couldn't unknow it.

'Keep documenting,' I said. 'Dates, compound types, quantities. Everything. Don't move anything, don't confront anyone, don't change your routine at all.' I paused. 'And don't tell anyone you came to me.'

She nodded. 'What are you going to do with it?'

'Build a case,' I said. 'The kind that doesn't leave room for interpretation.'

She picked up the tray. At the door, she paused without turning around. 'He's going to use the Banquet,' she said. 'I don't know how. But the compounds I found — the quantities — they're not for training.' She finally looked back at me. 'Be careful at Nighthollow, Eleanor.'

I thought of Lucas's voice in the kitchen. *Be careful.* The tension in his jaw. The way his eyes had gone somewhere careful and then come back.

Two people who had no reason to coordinate had said the same thing to me in the same week.

I filed it. Added Maren to the small circle of people I trusted, which was now four people and a dog.

'I will,' I said.

---

Cooper hurt his paw on Wednesday evening.

I don't know what he caught it on — a loose nail in the baseboards, maybe, or the edge of the stone step near the back entrance. I found him limping in the hallway with a small but steady bleed from his left front pad, and I was already on the kitchen floor with the first aid kit when Lucas knocked.

I didn't ask how he knew. I was starting to stop asking how he knew things.

He came in and sat on the floor across from me without a word, and Cooper — even injured, even anxious — immediately tried to put his head in Lucas's lap. We worked together in the low kitchen light, me cleaning the cut and Lucas keeping Cooper calm with one hand steady on the dog's flank, talking to him in that low, easy voice that I had stopped pretending didn't affect me.

When the bandage was wrapped and Cooper had settled between us with his head on Lucas's knee, the kitchen went quiet.

'He's going to be fine,' Lucas said. 'It's not deep.'

'I know.' I smoothed the edge of the bandage. 'He's dramatic.'

'He gets it from someone.'

I looked up. He was watching me with that expression — the one underneath the easy smile, the one that was honest in a way that made it hard to look at directly. I looked back down at Cooper.

The silence stretched. Not uncomfortable. The opposite of uncomfortable, which was its own problem.

'I've never met anyone,' Lucas said, 'who made me want to stay somewhere.'

He said it simply. No performance in it, no angle I could find. Just a man sitting on a kitchen floor with a dog between us, saying a true thing.

I didn't deflect. I didn't call him kid. I didn't reach for the sarcasm I kept loaded and ready for exactly these moments.

I said nothing.

But I didn't look away either. And I think he understood what that meant, because he didn't push. He just stayed — one hand on Cooper, the other resting on the floor between us, close enough that I could feel the warmth of it without touching.

We sat there until Cooper's breathing slowed into sleep.

Then Lucas stood, quietly, and let himself out.

I stayed on the kitchen floor for a long time after the door closed. Cooper's bandaged paw rested against my knee. The house was very still.

I pressed my thumb to my wrist.

Nine days until the Banquet.

I stayed on the floor a little longer.

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