After My Mate Sold Our Child To A Rogue Novel Cover

After My Mate Sold Our Child To A Rogue

8.5 / 10.0
I woke up on New Year's Day the way I had for the past ten years: five minutes before my alarm, already mentally sorting through the pack's annual run logistics. The winter sun wasn't up yet, and the pack house was still quiet in that particular way that meant everyone else was sleeping off last night's celebration. I hadn't attended. Someone needed to make sure the kitchens were prepped for the post-run breakfast, and that someone was always me. I was halfway through my morning routine—hair braided back, running clothes laid out, mental checklist cycling through supply counts and route confirmations—when the static hit. It wasn't painful, exactly. More like a sudden absence, the way your ears feel when a pressure shifts. I pressed my thumb against the inside of my wrist, steadying myself against the bathroom counter, and reached for the pack's elite mind-link chat. The one reserved for the Alpha, Luna, Beta, and Gamma. The one I'd been part of since the day Wesley marked me.

After My Mate Sold Our Child To A Rogue Chapter 1

I woke up on New Year's Day the way I had for the past ten years: five minutes before my alarm, already mentally sorting through the pack's annual run logistics. The winter sun wasn't up yet, and the pack house was still quiet in that particular way that meant everyone else was sleeping off last night's celebration. I hadn't attended. Someone needed to make sure the kitchens were prepped for the post-run breakfast, and that someone was always me.

I was halfway through my morning routine—hair braided back, running clothes laid out, mental checklist cycling through supply counts and route confirmations—when the static hit.

It wasn't painful, exactly. More like a sudden absence, the way your ears feel when a pressure shifts. I pressed my thumb against the inside of my wrist, steadying myself against the bathroom counter, and reached for the pack's elite mind-link chat. The one reserved for the Alpha, Luna, Beta, and Gamma. The one I'd been part of since the day Wesley marked me.

Nothing.

I tried again, pushing past the strange blankness. Still nothing. Not silence—silence had texture, had presence. This was erasure. I had been removed.

My wolf stirred uneasily in the back of my mind, a low whine I felt more than heard. I ignored her and finished getting dressed, moving through the motions with the same deliberate calm I'd cultivated over a decade of managing pack crises. There would be an explanation. A technical glitch. Wesley had probably been adjusting permissions and accidentally clicked the wrong setting. It happened.

I told myself this as I walked through the pack house halls, my steps echoing against the polished wood floors Wesley had insisted on installing last spring. The ones I'd coordinated with the contractors while he was off at that leadership conference. Or what he'd told me was a leadership conference.

The first sign that something was deeply, fundamentally wrong came from two Delta warriors stationed near the administrative wing. They didn't see me—I'd gotten very good at moving through spaces without drawing attention—but I heard them clearly.

"Can you believe it? The whole eastern lakeside tract, just handed over."

"Alpha's got a soft heart, I guess. Helping out a wolfless Omega like that."

"Raelynn Simpson. Heard she's got some kind of tragic backstory. No pack, no wolf, nowhere to go."

"Lucky her. That land's worth a fortune. Prime territory."

I stopped walking.

The eastern lakeside tract was the crown jewel of our new acquisitions—months of negotiation, a significant financial investment, and land that could house three new pack families or generate serious revenue if we developed it correctly. I had drawn up five different proposals for its use. Wesley and I were supposed to review them together this week.

And he'd deeded it to someone named Raelynn Simpson.

Without telling me.

Without even a courtesy mind-link.

My wolf snarled, a sound that reverberated through my chest. I pressed my thumb harder against my wrist and kept walking, my trajectory shifting automatically toward the administrative wing. Toward Wesley's office. Toward answers.

The hallway was empty. His office door was closed, the frosted glass dark. I tried the handle—locked. I pulled out my phone and called him. It rang four times and went to voicemail, his warm, public-facing voice inviting me to leave a message.

I didn't.

I stood there for a long moment, staring at that closed door, my mind cycling through possibilities and discarding each one as quickly as it formed. Then I turned and walked toward the other end of the hall. Toward the Luna suite. Toward the private rooms that had been mine—ours—for ten years.

The door was ajar.

I heard voices before I saw anything. Wesley's, low and amused. A woman's, lighter, with a softness that felt deliberately performed. And underneath it all, the sound of drawers opening and closing, hangers scraping against a rod.

I pushed the door open.

Wesley was standing near the bed, holding a stack of folded clothes. Beside him, a woman I'd never seen before was unpacking a suitcase, her movements easy and familiar, like she'd done this a hundred times. Like she belonged here.

The scent hit me a second later—jasmine and vanilla, mingled so thoroughly with Wesley's cedar and smoke that I couldn't tell where one ended and the other began. The kind of scent blend that didn't happen from a single encounter. The kind that took time. Proximity. Intimacy.

Wesley looked up and saw me. He didn't flinch. Didn't look guilty. He just sighed, the way you do when someone interrupts something mildly inconvenient.

"Hazel," he said, his voice flat. "We need to talk."

The woman turned, and I saw her face for the first time. She was beautiful in an understated way—soft features, careful styling, the kind of appearance that photographs well. She looked at me with something that might have been pity, or sympathy, or just polite discomfort.

"This is Raelynn," Wesley said, and his tone shifted. Not warmer. Colder. The tone he used when he was done pretending. "She'll be staying in the Luna suite from now on. I need you to pack your things and move to the guest wing."

I didn't move. Couldn't move. My wolf was howling now, a sound of pure, primal betrayal that I couldn't let reach my face.

"You're kicking me out of my own rooms," I said. My voice came out steady. I was proud of that.

"They're not your rooms," Wesley said, and his eyes went hard. "They're the Luna's rooms. And I'm making some changes."

Behind him, the door opened wider. Celeste stepped in, Wesley's mother, carrying two expensive-looking bags. And behind her—

Behind her was the boy. The ten-year-old I had raised. The child I had sung to sleep and taught to read and celebrated every birthday for. He looked at me with his father's eyes, cold and dismissive, and said:

"Mom, can you please stop causing drama for Dad? It's New Year's. You're embarrassing him."

Mom.

He'd called Raelynn 'Mom.'

And me—

Me, he looked at like I was a stranger making a scene.

I stood there in the doorway of the Luna suite, surrounded by the scent of jasmine and vanilla and ten years of lies, and felt the first crack split through the center of my chest.

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After My Mate Sold Our Child To A Rogue of Contents

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

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