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After My Wolf Awoke, He Chose His Mistress Novel Cover

After My Wolf Awoke, He Chose His Mistress

I woke up on the cold grass before sunrise, and the world smelled. That is the only way I know how to say it. For nineteen years I had lived inside a kind of soft, clean nothing. People around me would tilt their heads, breathe in, and smile or stiffen at things I could not feel. I had learned to fake the small reactions. A nod. A wrinkled nose. A pretend laugh when someone asked, "Don't you smell that?" Now my whole body smelled. Pine sap from the trees behind the pack house. Wet dirt.
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Chapter 2

I started writing the morning after I left Lilyana's house.

Not in the pack house. Never there. I wrote at Lilyana's kitchen table, with her baby asleep in the next room and the notebook open against my palm, and I wrote the way I used to make lists as a child — carefully, without feeling, the way you have to when feeling would make the pen shake.

October 3rd. Melissa Ryan. White cedar and dark amber. Deep layered marking, not recent. Ongoing.

October 3rd. Damon's ring.

That one I had only just noticed, but once I knew what to look for, I could not stop seeing it. His Alpha crest ring — heavy gold, a family heirloom he wore on his right hand — he would reach for it with his thumb and straighten it, slow and unconscious, a private habit he clearly had no idea he performed. I had watched him do it at breakfast that first morning, after I handed him his coffee and said thank you for the flowers he had left on the counter. Straighten. Slow. Like a man adjusting his collar before a photograph.

I wrote it down.

He does it most after I thank him for something.

I stared at that line for a long time. Then I added: Especially small kindnesses. Especially when he has just come from her.

I pressed the notebook into the false bottom of Lilyana's nursing basket, under the soft cloth, under the spare burp cloths and the lanolin cream and the whole comfortable architecture of a nursing mother's life. Damon would not come near it. I knew that with a certainty that was almost funny.

I went home and made his breakfast and smiled at him across the kitchen island, and he smiled back, and neither of us said anything that mattered.

***

The pack dinner was on a Friday.

Damon called it informal — twelve people, the long table in the east dining room, candles instead of the overhead lights. Senior pack members mostly. The Gamma and his mate. Two of the Delta commanders. Damon's Beta, Cole, whose wife had the good social instincts to watch everything and say very little.

Melissa arrived in a cream-colored dress and a scent that I felt land against my skin like a palm pressed flat. White cedar. Dark amber. I did not flinch. I had been practicing not flinching since October third.

Damon introduced her to the room with a smile I recognized — warm, easy, the one he used when he wanted people to feel at ease before he needed something from them. 'An old family friend,' he said, 'just back from abroad.' He used the word 'family' twice in one sentence.

Melissa took the seat across from mine.

The dinner was good. I had approved the menu myself — rack of lamb, roasted root vegetables, the good red from the cellar. I watched Melissa over the rim of my wine glass and she watched me, and the table talked around us about pack alliances and the Lycan Council's new district schedules and whether Lilyana's pup had his father's ears.

Halfway through the main course, Melissa turned to me with a smile that reached her eyes just enough to be convincing.

'Your herb garden,' she said. 'Damon told me you planted it yourself. The rosemary near the south window — I could smell it when I came in.'

Her fingertips brushed the inside of my wrist as she reached, casually, as though for the bread near my plate.

It was not casual. It was a test. She was breathing near my skin, reading whether my pulse jumped, whether my wolf surfaced in the scent she was projecting at me from three inches away.

I felt my wolf go utterly still inside me. Like a held breath.

'Thank you,' I said, warm and easy. 'I had to kill it twice before it took. Rosemary's stubborn that way.' I turned to Cole's wife across the table. 'Wasn't it you who suggested the south placement? I keep meaning to credit you for that.'

Cole's wife looked pleased. The table moved on.

When I glanced back at Melissa, her smile had not changed. But her eyes had.

She was not convinced. She was watching me for the rest of the meal with a stillness that reminded me of the way pack wolves watch the tree line — not alarmed yet, but attending.

Good, I thought. Let her wonder.

Under the table, my free hand found the hem of my sleeve and pressed there, quiet, counting my own pulse until it slowed.

***

Two days after the dinner, I came to Lilyana's in the afternoon to feed the notebook a new page — Melissa's wrist test, Damon's ring again, twice at dinner, both times after she spoke to him directly — and found Lilyana sitting with her baby against her shoulder, her expression doing something complicated.

'Ledger came by,' she said.

I looked up.

'Not for me.' She shifted the baby. 'He was doing a walk of the pack house. He stopped here after, just to — he said he was making rounds. But he had that look.'

I set down my pen. 'What look.'

'The one where he's decided something.' She met my eyes. 'He asked me, very casually, whether you used the main staircase or the back one in the mornings.'

The room was warm. The baby made a small sound. Outside, the October light was going amber through the curtains.

I thought about Ledger's hands during my last appointment. The way he had looked at my eyes a beat too long and written something in his notes that he did not show me.

I thought about the main staircase. The third step from the top, which had given slightly under my foot two mornings ago. I had attributed it to the old wood.

'What did you tell him,' I said.

'I said I didn't know your morning habits.' Lilyana's voice was level, watching me. 'Taylor. What's on that staircase.'

I did not answer right away. I was thinking about what it meant that Ledger had looked, and found something, and not told Damon.

'I don't know yet,' I said.

But my wolf did.

She had gone very quiet. Not the held-breath quiet of the dinner table. Quieter than that. The kind of quiet that means something is coming, and she has already started bracing.

I picked up the pen.

October 7th, I wrote. Staircase. Ledger. Ask him.

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