
After My Alpha Left Me for His Mistress, I Chose My True Mate
Chapter 3
The fire had burned low by the time Rowan spoke.
I was curled into the corner of the wide leather couch, a blanket pulled around my shoulders, watching the flames eat through the last of the cedar log. The smell of it—so close to his scent—kept doing something strange to my pulse. My wolf had settled into a low, steady hum since we'd arrived here, like she recognized this place as safe in some bone-deep way I couldn't argue with.
'There's something I should tell you,' Rowan said from the armchair across from me. He wasn't looking at the fire. He was looking at me.
I waited.
'Seven years ago, when you left—' He paused. Just briefly. 'The mate bond doesn't go quiet because one person decides to suppress it. You know that.'
I did know that. I'd felt it—a constant low-grade ache I'd trained myself to ignore the way you learn to ignore a bruise. 'I know,' I said.
'For me, it was not quiet.' His voice stayed even, but something moved beneath it. 'It was—' He stopped again, chose his next word carefully. 'Physical. There were nights it felt like something trying to pull itself out through my ribs.'
The fire popped. I didn't move.
'And your parents' territories,' he continued. 'The eastern borders had three rogue incursions in the first year alone. I had Sebastian coordinate additional patrols. We kept it quiet. Your father would have told you, and you would have come home.'
I stared at him. 'You didn't want me to come home.'
'I wanted you to come home because you chose to.' His eyes held mine. 'Not because you felt obligated.'
Something cracked open in my chest.
Seven years. Seven years of him sitting with that bond aching through him, quietly keeping my family safe, making sure I had no reason to be pulled back before I was ready. While I was standing at pack altars in white gowns and telling myself Elliott's indifference was something I could fix.
'I wasted it,' I said. My voice came out strange. Thin. 'Seven years. I wasted all of it on—'
'Don't.' Rowan leaned forward, his elbows on his knees. 'You were looking for something real. That's not a waste. It was just—' A pause. 'The wrong place to look.'
I don't know exactly when I started crying. I didn't feel it happen the way I usually do—that burning behind the eyes, that moment of decision where you choose to hold it in or let it go. It just happened. Quietly, the way exhausted things fall.
I pressed my hand over my mouth and looked at the ceiling, furious at myself, but the tears came anyway. For my mother, who had called every month and never said a word about how much it hurt when I kept our calls brief and distant. For my father, who had sent birthday messages and never once said, come home, please come home. For Rowan, who had sat in that chair across from this fire and felt his ribcage split open for seven years and done nothing but make sure I was safe.
The couch shifted. I felt the warmth of him a second before he sat beside me—not crowding, still careful, but close enough that his shoulder pressed against mine.
Then he pulled me into him.
I meant to say something. I didn't. I just pressed my face against his chest and let myself fall apart properly, which was something I hadn't done in a very long time. His hand came up to the back of my head, slow and steady. And then—low and deep and resonant—I felt the rumble start in his chest. Not words. Just sound. A purr that vibrated through his sternum and into my bones like it was rewriting something.
My wolf went still. Completely, finally still.
I don't know how long we stayed like that. Long enough for the fire to burn down to coals.
---
The Alpha Summit announcement came a week later—a formal gathering of pack representatives, hosted at the Whitmore Hotel in the city. Territorial agreements, treaty renewals, the usual business of a werewolf world pretending to look like a corporate conference.
I had paperwork to file. Boundary documentation from the time before I'd left—formalities my father's legal team had been gently nudging me about for months.
Rowan said nothing when I told him I wanted to go. He just looked at me for a moment, then nodded once.
'Sebastian will be there,' he said. 'You won't see me. But I'll be close.'
I thought about asking him not to bother. Old habit. Instead I said, 'All right.'
He held my gaze a beat longer than necessary. Like he was checking something.
I let him check.
Whatever was waiting for me at that Summit, I'd handle it. But this time, I wasn't walking in alone.
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