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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 5

He said it like it was nothing.

'No.'

One word. Flat and final, dropped into the cold mountain air the way you drop a stone into water — not thrown, not shouted, just released. And then the Alpha aura came up, and it was nothing like the mate bond. The mate bond was a pull, a warmth, a thread you could trace back to something that had once felt like home. This was different. This was pressure. The kind that presses down on the backs of your knees and the base of your throat and reminds every nerve in your body exactly where you stand in the hierarchy.

I stood very still and let it roll over me.

My wolf pressed herself flat inside me — not submitting, just waiting. She had learned patience in the months since she woke. We both had.

'You belong to Crescent Hollow.' His voice had gone quiet. That was always the more dangerous register. 'You belong to me. The bond doesn't expire because you decided to start speaking about it.'

'Damon —'

'You will not speak of this again.'

The Alpha tone hit the last sentence like a weight dropped on a scale. Not a request. Not even a command. A closing. The kind of thing that isn't meant to be answered, only received.

I looked at him for a moment longer. The fog moved in the valley below us, slow and indifferent. Behind him the pale granite edge of the cliff caught the flat grey light, and I thought, with a clarity that surprised me, that this was the exact place he had brought me to unlock something. Force something open.

It had worked. Just not the way he planned.

I turned and walked back to the car.

***

He drove. I watched the mountain roads unspool through the windshield and I did not look at him once. My hands were in my lap, quiet. My wolf was quiet. Everything was very quiet in the way that follows a door being permanently closed.

The pack house came back into view in the early afternoon light — the grey stone, the high windows, the Crescent Hollow crest above the main entrance. I had walked through that entrance as Luna for three years. I had arranged flowers in the front hall. I had hosted dinners and shaken hands and stood beside Damon at pack events with his hand at the small of my back, and the pack had looked at us and seen what they were supposed to see.

I thought about what the pack had never bothered to look for.

Damon stopped the car and came around to my door, and even now the habit held, and he opened it, and I stepped out, and neither of us said anything. Two Deltas appeared at the pack house entrance without being called. He had arranged that before we left, I understood. He had known how the cliff was going to end before we got there.

'You'll stay in,' he said. Not a question.

I looked at the Deltas. I looked at the door.

'All right,' I said.

He went inside. The Deltas took their positions.

I went upstairs to our room — my room, I had started thinking of it — and I sat at the writing desk near the window and I opened the notebook I kept there, the secondary one, the one Damon had seen and therefore the one that contained nothing of consequence. My hands were steady. I found a clean page.

I wrote fast. The date at the top, the time, then everything — every word from the cliff, his exact phrasing, the moment his hand left my shoulder, the aura press, the tone on the final sentence. I had rehearsed my confession until the words were neutral, but I had also, in the same weeks, trained myself to record what I heard with the precision of a witness rather than the subjectivity of a wife. It was a skill I had not known I would need when I started. I knew now.

I filled two pages and then I sat back and looked at what I had written.

*You will not speak of this again.*

I pressed my thumb against the mate-mark on my neck, the old habit, and this time I let myself feel it fully — the pull beneath the skin, the bond that tethered me to the other end of a man who had just told me, on a cliff over the Adirondack valley, that he would not let me go. Not because he loved me. Because I was his.

I took my hand away.

The Deltas outside my door changed shift at six and again at ten. I listened to the pattern and I noted it and I did not sleep.

***

Two nights later, the window gave.

It happened in the gap — the forty-minute window between the ten o'clock rotation and the next, which I had not known existed and which I now understood had been there on purpose. Engineered. The kind of precision that requires someone on the inside.

I was awake when they came through. I had not been sleeping well, and my wolf was already up, already oriented toward something she had been sensing at the edge of the territory for hours — something that smelled wrong, like pine and river silt and old aggression, feral and unpack-bonded.

Rogues. Three of them.

I did not have time to reach the door.

The warehouse was cold and smelled of rust and standing water and something chemical underneath, the ghost of whatever had been manufactured there before it was abandoned. They chained me to a support beam — industrial chain, not silver, but heavy enough — and the first one hit me before I had finished assessing the space, and after that I stopped trying to assess anything and focused only on staying in my body, because my wolf was pulling hard toward the shift and I knew if I shifted they would hurt me differently, worse, and I needed to be able to think.

Think. Stay. Think.

They were not quiet. That was the thing I would remember after — that they talked, to each other, and sometimes to me, in the casual way of people who are not afraid of being overheard. One of them said her name twice. *Melissa.* Not as a curse, not as an accusation, just as information — the woman who called, who paid, who gave them the scent profile and the schedule and the gap in the Delta rotation.

My wolf heard it and went absolutely rigid inside me.

She had known. She had been pressing at me for weeks with the nameless urgency of a creature who can smell a trap before it closes. I had known too, in the part of me that had been writing dates and timestamps and verbatim exchanges into a notebook under a false bottom in a nursing basket three streets away. We had both known and neither of us had been able to move fast enough.

Sometime in the second hour I reached for the mate bond.

It was still there. Of course it was still there — he had made certain of that on the cliff, had said *no* and sealed it and driven me home with Deltas at my door, and the bond was the chain he kept because he could. I had not used it since autumn. I reached for it now the way you reach for a door you're not sure will open, and it opened, and I pushed everything through it.

Location: the territorial sense, the pull toward the pack's center and the angle of its deviation, the distance. I pushed it.

The rogues' voices. I pushed those too, with Melissa's name attached, with the smell of them and the cold of the warehouse floor.

And then my own terror, which I had been keeping behind my back like something I was ashamed of, and I stopped being ashamed of it for exactly long enough to let him feel it, to let him understand that this was not a message, not a manipulation, not a *Luna's tantrum* — this was me, in a chain, bleeding, and he was the only person with Alpha authority over this territory and I was his mate and I was asking him to come.

I felt the link open on his end.

I felt him receive it.

I held on.

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