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After My Mate Named Another Woman His Luna Novel Cover

After My Mate Named Another Woman His Luna

I spent an hour on my dress that morning. It was the nicest thing I owned — a soft cream-colored wrap dress I'd found at a thrift shop in the nearest town, fourteen miles from the cottage. I'd taken in the waist myself, stitching it by hand with the same patience I used for everything out here. Three years of patience. Three years of learning to make do, make small, make quiet. I pressed it flat with a warm iron and hung it on the back of the bathroom door while I braided my hair. Then I unbraided it. Then I left it down, the way Damian used to say he liked it, loose around my shoulders, long enough to cover the mark on my neck. My wolf stirred as I pulled on my coat. Not an excited stir — something else.
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Chapter 3

I found him near midnight.

The corridor outside his chamber was empty except for two wall sconces burning low, and Damian standing in the doorway with his jacket off and his sleeves still rolled, like he'd been about to go inside and then didn't. He looked up when he heard me coming and something moved across his face — fast, gone before I could name it.

I stopped six feet away.

My hands were still wrapped in strips of shift fabric. The bandages had gone stiff where they'd dried. I kept them at my sides.

"I want to know," I said. My voice came out steadier than I expected. "What happened to our bond. To the ceremony. To three years."

He was quiet for a moment. Then he moved to the side of the corridor and leaned his shoulder against the wall, like we were having a conversation about the weather.

"Gabrielle." He said my name the way you say something you're tired of. "You were useful. You know that, right? What you did for my mother — the caretaking, the stability, keeping that situation managed while I built the alliances I needed — that mattered. You should be grateful it had a purpose."

I let those words arrive. I let them settle.

"Useful," I said.

"I needed someone reliable in that cottage. Someone who wouldn't ask too much and wouldn't leave." He shrugged, one shoulder. "You fit."

He said it gently. That was the worst part. Not cruel — gentle. The way you explain something obvious to someone who should have figured it out already.

"The mark," I said. "Damian. The mark on my neck."

He laughed.

I had heard him laugh at jokes. At pack stories. At his own sharp wit in rooms full of Alphas who wanted to impress him. But I had never heard him laugh at me — at something specific and broken about me — and the sound was so unexpected that my wolf made that small whimper again, the one I'd first heard after the silver tea, and then went silent.

"Ask a real healer about that mark," he said. His voice was already returning to its usual register, already done with me. "A real one. Not the pack clinic." He pushed off the wall. "You're a smart woman. You'll figure it out."

He walked inside and closed the door.

Not loudly. Not a slam. Just a soft, final click.

I stood in the corridor for a long time.

---

Victor Sloane's temporary office was a converted meeting room near the legal annex, stacked with files. He was a compact man, gray at the temples, who looked at me over the rim of his reading glasses when I knocked at his open door the next morning.

"I need you to verify a bond," I said. "Mine."

He set down his pen. Something in my face must have told him not to redirect me to a pack healer, because he simply said, "Sit down," and reached for his reference files.

It took twenty minutes.

He examined the mark on my neck with a small forensic light and a magnifying lens, the kind used for document authentication. He ran two fingers along the edges of the mark and then went very still. He pulled out a ledger — Lycan Council ceremony filings, alphabetical — and turned pages without speaking.

Then he sat back.

"The mark is cosmetic," he said. "Ink and pigment. Layered to approximate the depth and spread of a bite scar." His voice was professionally flat. "The technique is consistent with dermal pigmentation used by certain unlicensed practitioners. It is not a claiming bite."

I pressed my palms flat against his desk.

The edge of the wood was cool against my bandaged hands. I held onto that.

"The ceremony officiant," he continued, not looking away from his ledger, "holds credentials that do not appear in any sanctioned Council registry. The filing reference attached to your ceremony record traces back to a document number that was never assigned." He paused. "No bond was filed with the Lycan Council. No bond was ever established."

The room was very quiet.

"So," I said. "There was never—"

"No," he said. "There was not."

I sat there with my palms on his desk and looked at the wall behind him and tried to locate some version of shock inside myself. I'd expected the answer, I thought. I had already half-known it in the Omega quarters when I reached through the mind-link and heard nothing. When I looked at Damian in the banquet hall and saw a man who had never once felt me reaching.

But knowing a thing might be true and hearing it stated plainly are different animals.

Three years.

My palms pressed harder against the desk.

Then I smelled it.

Pine and rain — closer than before, and warmer, the clean cool of it threading through the dry air of the legal annex with a certainty that didn't match any open window I could see. My chest went warm the same way it had in the Omega quarters. My wolf stirred — not a whimper this time. A longer, slower movement, like something waking from a sleep it hadn't chosen.

I turned my head toward the corridor.

Empty. Just the hallway and the muffled sounds of the compound moving around us.

The scent faded.

"Are you all right?" Sloane asked.

I turned back. "Yes," I said. "I'm fine. Thank you for your time."

---

That night I cleaned.

Omegas on the late shift were given access to the compound's secondary areas — storage rooms, the records hall, a document archive that smelled like old paper and cedar. I went through the rotation without incident. No one watched Omega workers very closely. That, I was learning, was both the indignity and the advantage of the role.

I found what I needed in a gray filing cabinet in the third room.

The accident report for Daniel Greene's car. The original Alpha heir. Filed eighteen months before I'd arrived in Ironveil territory.

I read it twice. Then I read it a third time, sitting cross-legged on the archive floor with the document in my bandaged hands, and I paid attention to the parts that didn't fit.

The brake failure was attributed to a worn hydraulic line — consistent with age and road wear, the report said. But the car had been serviced six weeks before the accident. I found the service record in the same cabinet, two folders back. Clean bill. No flagged components. The mechanic's initials were on every checked line.

A six-week-old hydraulic line doesn't wear through on its own.

I set the service record beside the accident report and looked at them together.

Then I moved to the medical inventory logs. It took me longer to find what I was looking for, but I found it: the pack's wolfsbane stores. Regulated quantities, logged intake, documented treatments.

Except the documented treatments didn't account for the depletion.

The numbers were off — not dramatically, not the kind of discrepancy that announces itself, but the slow steady kind. A small draw, consistently, at intervals that matched no listed patient. Going back three years.

Three years.

I sat with both sets of documents in my lap and felt something cold move through me that had nothing to do with the archive's temperature.

Mrs. Greene.

I thought about her hands in mine. Her eyes tracking the ceiling above her bed when she couldn't turn her head far enough to find me. The way she had squeezed my hand twice — quick, deliberate — on mornings when Natalie had stopped in before me. I had thought that meant she was glad I'd come. I had smiled and squeezed back and thought how sweet it was that she had her own small ways of saying so.

I had been wrong about everything, I was beginning to understand.

Everything.

I copied both documents by hand on the back of blank archive forms, working fast and even, the way I worked when I was making something careful and precise. I folded them small and tucked them inside the waistband of my Omega uniform.

Then I replaced the originals, closed the cabinet, and went back to work.

My wolf watched everything I did. She didn't sleep. For the first time in three years, she stayed fully awake beside me, quiet and very still, her attention on each thing I touched like she was memorizing it.

I didn't tell her it was going to be fine.

I didn't know that yet. But I knew what I had in my hands. And I knew, in the deep part of myself that the false bond had never reached, that knowing was the beginning of something.

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