After My Mate Marked His Best Friend’s Widow Novel Cover

After My Mate Marked His Best Friend’s Widow

8.5 / 10.0
The forest smelled like wet pine and frost the morning everything ended. I ran at the back of the pack, the way I always did. Sable kept my pace easy under the trees, her black fur slipping between trunks like ink through water. The other wolves of Crescent Hollow loped ahead in a loose, happy pack — grey and brown and tawny — their tongues out, their breath steaming. A normal dawn run. A normal Tuesday. Except for him. Hugh Brooks stood at the edge of the clearing in human form, in a dark coat with the royal crest stitched at the shoulder. The Lycan Prince. Rhett's commanding lord.

After My Mate Marked His Best Friend’s Widow Chapter 1

The forest smelled like wet pine and frost the morning everything ended.

I ran at the back of the pack, the way I always did. Sable kept my pace easy under the trees, her black fur slipping between trunks like ink through water. The other wolves of Crescent Hollow loped ahead in a loose, happy pack — grey and brown and tawny — their tongues out, their breath steaming. A normal dawn run. A normal Tuesday.

Except for him.

Hugh Brooks stood at the edge of the clearing in human form, in a dark coat with the royal crest stitched at the shoulder. The Lycan Prince. Rhett's commanding lord. He had come down from the border outpost on what he called a routine inspection, and our Alpha had nearly tripped over his own feet bowing.

I had only seen the prince twice before, and never this close. He was tall in a way that did not need to announce itself. His eyes tracked the pack with quiet precision, and when they passed over me, they did not linger. Good. I preferred not to be looked at.

I shifted behind a stand of cedar and pulled on the clothes I'd left folded on a stump. My pendant — my mother's silver Healer's crest — was cold against my collarbone when I slipped it back over my head. I pressed my palm to it the way I always did. A small habit. A small prayer.

The pack scattered to drink at the stream. I walked toward my usual log, the long fallen pine where I sat to catch my breath while Sable settled.

There was a tablet on the log.

It was thin and silver, royal-issued, the screen still bright. I almost called out — *Your Highness, you forgot* — but my eyes caught on the image before my mouth could move.

A hall of white marble. Chandeliers. Rows of court werewolves in formal silver.

And Rhett.

My Rhett, in a black ceremonial coat I had never seen, his hair longer than when he'd left, his face — God, his face — open and soft and shining the way it had not shone for me in five years, maybe longer. He was bending over a woman in a cream gown. His hand cupped her jaw. His mouth was at her throat.

The caption read: *Beta Rhett Martinez, Crescent Hollow, marks Madeleine Perry — widow of fallen warrior Cole Perry — in honored Mate Ceremony, Capital Court.*

Mate Ceremony.

Mark.

The word *mark* turned over in my head like a stone in a stream and would not sink.

Sable's howl tore up through me before I understood it was coming. Not a sound out of my mouth — a sound *inside,* keening, raw, the way a wolf cries when she has been gutted and left to find out about it slowly. My knees softened. I caught the pine trunk with one hand. The other went to my pendant and closed around it so hard the edges bit my palm.

*He marked her. He marked her. He marked her.*

I did not make a sound.

Across the clearing, pack members laughed and shook water from their hair. Someone called my name about breakfast. I lifted my hand from the tree. I straightened my spine one vertebra at a time, the way my mother had taught me to do over a patient I could not save.

I did not look at the prince. But I felt him looking at me. A long, quiet look, the kind a man gives when he has just done something costly on purpose and is waiting to see if you survived it.

I walked home.

---

The Beta's quarters were warm and tidy because I had made them that way. Rhett's boots by the door, even though Rhett had not worn them in fourteen months. The kettle on the stove. The herb jars in the order my mother had taught me — alphabetical, glass labels facing out.

I closed the door behind me. I sat on the edge of our bed.

I gave myself one minute.

Sable wept inside me — long, low, wordless — and I let her. I counted the seconds on the brass clock on the dresser. At sixty I stood up.

I knelt beside the third floorboard from the window, the loose one, and pried it up with the flat of a butter knife I kept in the drawer. Underneath, wrapped in oilcloth, was the scroll.

*Royal Court Medical Wing. Apprenticeship of the Healer Eliza Martinez of Crescent Hollow. Position held pending confirmation. Silvercrest Territory.*

I had hidden it for four months. I had told myself I was waiting for the right moment to discuss it with Rhett.

I smoothed the scroll flat on the desk beside my medical texts. I took out a clean sheet of paper. I dipped the pen.

*To the Alpha and Luna of Crescent Hollow Pack —*

My hand was steady. The letters came out even. I wrote a resignation from my household duties in the polite, exact language my mother had used in her own correspondence. I did not mention Rhett. I did not mention Madeleine. I did not weep.

I was not, it turned out, going to weep.

---

The Luna received me in the front parlor that evening, the way she always did when I came to her with the household accounts. She wore her grey shawl. Her hands were folded.

I sat across from her and laid the ledger open between us, and after a polite minute about the autumn provisioning I said, very quietly, "May I ask you something, Luna."

"Of course, dear."

"Did you know."

She did not pretend to misunderstand. She was too proud for that. Her eyes flicked once to the window, once to the fire, and then back to her folded hands.

"Eliza," she said gently. "You must understand. The Perry bloodline ties to the Northern Reach pack. It is a prosperity our Crescent Hollow has needed for a generation. And the honor due a fallen warrior's widow — a child to come — these are not small things. My son did what a Beta is sometimes required to do. For the pack."

She looked up at me then, kindly. As if she were explaining weather.

"You have been such a comfort to this family," she said. "That does not change."

I sat very still. Sable had gone quiet inside me — not healed, just listening.

"Thank you for your honesty, Luna," I said.

I closed the ledger. I excused myself. I walked back across the yard to the Beta's quarters in the blue dusk, and at the desk I took out my list of what I was leaving behind, and under *the bed, the kettle, the herb jars,* I wrote, in the same even hand: *the Luna.*

Then I folded the list into the scroll, and the scroll into my coat, and I waited.

---

He came home three days later.

I heard the car before I saw it — the low purr of an engine I did not recognize, slowing in our drive. I was in the entry hall in a clean grey dress, my mother's pendant at my throat, my hands loose at my sides.

The door opened.

Rhett stepped through first, broader than I remembered, his Beta coat brushed and his jaw freshly shaved. His eyes found me and did not flinch — a man, I saw at once, who had already decided how this conversation would go.

And on his arm, one slim hand resting with very practiced visibility at the small curve of her belly, came Madeleine Perry. Her perfume reached the threshold before she did — something floral and expensive, something that did not belong in my house.

She smiled at me. A soft, sorry smile. The kind a woman wears when she has rehearsed it.

"Eliza," Rhett said. His voice was warm. Reasonable. The voice of a man about to be generous. "We need to talk about the arrangements."

I did not move from where I stood.

I waited.

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After My Mate Marked His Best Friend’s Widow of Contents

Ch. 1 Ch. 2 Ch. 3 Ch. 4
Ch. 5
Ch. 6
Ch. 7
Ch. 8
Ch. 9
Ch. 10
Ch. 11
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