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After My Mate Crippled Me, He Crowned His Mistress Novel Cover

After My Mate Crippled Me, He Crowned His Mistress

I should have known something was wrong when he made the tea. Not because Jameson never made tea — he did, sometimes, on quiet evenings when the ridge was cold and the cabin smelled like woodsmoke and my herb bundles drying above the kitchen window. But there was something different about the way he moved that night. Too easy. Too deliberate. Like a man walking through a room he had already memorized in the dark. I didn't notice. I was bent over my healing notes at the kitchen table, cross-referencing my feverfew ratios for the third time, too absorbed to look up when I heard him fill the kettle. My Come of Age ceremony had been fifteen years ago — fifteen years since I'd caught his scent across the ceremonial grounds and felt the whole world tilt sideways. Pine and smoked leather.
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Chapter 3

The mug had been in my lap for nine days.

I'd retrieved it the morning after Calloway's visit, during one of the slow corridor passes I'd made a ritual of — wheelchair, soft eyes, the practiced slump of a woman with nowhere particular to be. Jameson had stepped out to meet with the Alpha's war council. I had exactly forty minutes. I wheeled into the cabin kitchen, lifted the mug from the cabinet above the sink with my right hand, wrapped it in the dish cloth folded on the counter, and set it in my lap beneath the blanket I kept across my legs.

Then I went back to the healing room and stared at the ceiling stain and said nothing to anyone.

Nine days of that mug against my thighs, hidden under wool, while Jameson pushed my chair through corridors and told pack members I was doing better. Nine days of waiting for the right afternoon.

Marguerite came on a Thursday, which was when she usually came — she'd been bringing food since the second week, soups mostly, the kind with enough salt to make you feel like someone cared whether you ate. She was careful about it. She never made it feel like charity. She'd set the container on the side table and talk about small things: the new centrifuge that kept misfiring, the argument between two Omega kitchen staff that had apparently divided the entire pack house into factions. She had a gift for making ordinary conversation feel like shelter.

I waited until her sentence finished. Until I had checked the corridor through the cracked door and confirmed it empty. Until I was certain Jameson's footsteps weren't anywhere in the wing.

Then I reached under the blanket and pressed the cloth bundle into her hands.

She didn't say anything. She looked down at it — just for a second, one breath — and then looked at me.

"Wolfsbane," I said. Just the word. "Test for alkaloid residue. Concentration level. Don't log it. Don't tell anyone."

Marguerite's face did something I can only describe as closing — not shutting me out, but sealing something in. A very specific kind of stillness that I had seen exactly once before, when she'd told me her mother was dying and she hadn't cried yet and wasn't going to, not here.

She tucked the bundle inside her jacket.

She picked up her empty soup container and left.

She did not ask me a single question, which is why I had chosen her.

---

Three days is a long time when you are counting hours by what a man's face does over dinner.

Jameson was attentive that week. Solicitous in a way that felt, now, like maintenance — checking the structural integrity of something he needed to remain upright for a while longer. He brought me books I didn't read. He sat beside me in the evenings with his hand near mine on the blanket, close enough to reach for but not quite touching, which was its own kind of precision. His pine-and-leather scent moved through the room and Sable turned away from it in small, slow degrees, the way you turn away from a light that has started to hurt your eyes.

I let none of that be visible. I kept my face at the right angle. I asked him about a border patrol dispute that I already knew the resolution to and listened to him explain it with the mild attention of a woman whose world had genuinely contracted to this room, these walls, this blanket.

The performance was immaculate. I was proud of it, which was a cold, private pride that surprised me a little.

Marguerite found me on the third evening.

Not in my room. In the lab — she'd told Jameson she wanted to show me some updated pack medical charts, since I'd been asking about staying current with cases. He'd nodded, approved, offered to wheel me there himself. I'd said I needed the independence. He'd approved that too, because a mate who wanted independence was a mate who was healing, who was stabilizing, who was not a threat.

The lab after hours was low and quiet. One fluorescent panel humming above the sample refrigerators. The door locked behind us.

Marguerite didn't hand me the paper immediately. She stood at the counter with her back to me for a moment, and I watched her shoulders rise once, fully, and then drop. Then she turned around.

She held out a folded sheet.

I took it with my right hand. Unfolded it. Read it twice, not because I hadn't understood it the first time, but because some things need to be fully received before they change you.

Concentrated wolfsbane alkaloid residue. Well above accidental threshold. Well above any medicinal application I had ever documented. The kind of concentration that requires specific knowledge, deliberate measurement, and a cup of chamomile to hide the taste.

I held the paper and I felt it — the thing that had been building since the fall, since the ceiling stain, since Ximena's voice came down the corridor speaking my words in her mouth. It moved through me like a slow tide going out. Sable had been clinging all this time, even quietly, even while she helped me make my lists at three in the morning — some last filament of the bond she hadn't been able to release, the fifteen-year weight of pine and smoked leather that the Moon Goddess herself had pressed into her nose the night of the Come of Age ceremony.

I felt that filament go.

Not snap. Not break in the dramatic, howling way a rejection sounds. Just — release. Quiet as a door easing shut.

Sable went cold inside me. Not grieving-cold. Strategy-cold. A wolf who has finished one thing and turned her full attention to the next.

Marguerite was watching my face.

"Isabelle," she said, very softly. Just my name, the way Sable said it at three in the morning.

"I'm all right," I said. I folded the paper into quarters and tucked it into the pocket of my cardigan, against my ribs. "I just need you to keep this between us. And keep the mug somewhere he can't find it."

Her jaw tightened once. She nodded.

I did not cry. I had decided, without quite deciding, that I would allow myself that exactly once — alone, in the dark, with no audience. Not yet. Not tonight. Tonight there was still too much to build.

---

I found the storage room four days later.

It was in the basement corridor behind the old linen supply — small, low-ceilinged, with a rusted bolt on the inside of the door and a single pull-chain light that still worked. I had discovered it during a corridor exploration I'd made a habit of, moving the wheelchair slowly through the lower level while Jameson was occupied upstairs, mapping the building I'd lived alongside for a decade and a half as though seeing it for the first time. Which, in some ways, I was.

I tested the bolt. Solid. I checked for foot traffic signs — dust undisturbed, no scent trails — and found none. I confirmed the isolation with two minutes of sitting in complete silence, listening for anything moving above or adjacent.

Nothing.

I said nothing to anyone, the way I had learned to say nothing to anyone about anything that mattered.

That night, Jameson took his sleeping pills at eleven-fifteen. He had been hiding them in the inside pocket of his running jacket, which he believed I couldn't access from the wheelchair. I had accessed it four days after I found the first one, confirmed the dosage, and noted that he was taking enough to guarantee deep, motionless sleep by midnight.

At twelve-thirty, I eased out of bed.

The hallway was dark and silent. I moved without the wheelchair — I'd been practicing, in small increments, the particular shuffle-and-brace that let me move quietly along walls — and took the stairs down with both hands on the rail and my left arm pressed to my ribs, the pins in my bones aching with every vibration.

The basement corridor smelled like old linen and cedar and cold concrete. I found the storage room by touch more than sight, slid the bolt, pulled the chain.

The light was yellow and low. The room was empty except for a broken shelf bracket in the corner and the ghost of someone else's stored boxes.

I stood facing the door. I raised my left hand to the handle.

Gripped it.

The pain was immediate and specific — not the diffuse ache of healing tissue but the bright, precise complaint of bone pressed against metal implants in a pattern they weren't yet ready for. I had spent fifteen years learning where pain lived in the body and what it meant, and I understood this pain: this was structural resistance, not structural damage. There was a difference.

I held the grip.

Sable pressed close behind my ribs, a low growl of encouragement that was the most present I had felt her since the fall.

Fifteen seconds. Twenty. Twenty-five.

At thirty, I released the handle and stood in the yellow light breathing through my nose until my pulse steadied.

My left hand trembled. I looked at it — the slight shake, the reddened knuckles, the faint depression where the handle had pressed. I looked at it the way I had once looked at lab results: with professional attention, cataloguing what was true.

This was the first session.

There would be others.

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