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A Hundred Nights in Her Bed and I'm the Alpha King's Hidden Daughter Novel Cover

A Hundred Nights in Her Bed and I'm the Alpha King's Hidden Daughter

Seven years ago, Mira Sovereign gave up her name to follow Caleb Ironclaw into Ironclaw Pack. When his brother dies, Caleb Ironclaw inherits the Alpha title — and the dead Alpha's widow, Selene Thorne. He swears Mira Sovereign is still his only mate. He swears the bedding nights are duty. He swears the marking ceremony is hers, after Selene Thorne delivers the heir. On the hundredth night, Selene Thorne's pregnancy is announced, and the marking invitation goes out — with Selene Thorne's name on it. Mira Sovereign's five-year-old son asks why Daddy isn't coming home. What Caleb Ironclaw doesn't know: Mira Sovereign is the only daughter of the Moonveil Sovereign, the Alpha King's bloodline he was never told existed. She walks out with their son. She lets the world believe the boy is fatherless. And then the Sovereign's heir comes home.
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Chapter 4

Mira

The doorbell rang before the sky had any color in it.

I was already awake. I hadn't slept. The parchment was back inside the picture book, the amulet tucked beneath my shirt, and the study smelled like I'd opened a window to clear the air — because I had.

The bell rang again. Not impatient. Measured. The kind of ring that said *I'll wait, but you will answer.*

I pulled on a cardigan and went downstairs. Through the frosted glass panel beside the front door, a figure stood with hands clasped behind his back. Dark suit. Driver's cap.

I opened the door.

"Good morning, Mrs. Ironclaw." The driver dipped his chin. Mid-fifties, grey at the temples, built like a man who'd spent decades opening doors for people who never thanked him. "Madam Patricia requests your presence at the main house. You and the young master."

*Requests.* The word sat in his mouth like a stone he'd been told to polish.

"At this hour?"

"Madam said it was important." His eyes didn't waver. "The car is ready."

I looked past him. A black sedan idled at the curb, exhaust curling white in the cold morning air. The rear windows were tinted dark enough to hide whatever sat inside.

"Give me ten minutes," I said.

"Of course, ma'am."

I closed the door and stood with my hand on the knob. Patricia Ironclaw didn't summon people for breakfast. She summoned them for verdicts.

Cayden was already sitting up when I pushed open his door. The wooden wolf was clutched against his chest, and his eyes were wide and bright — the instant alertness of a child who'd heard a doorbell and decided it meant something wonderful.

"Is Daddy home?"

The question hit me square in the sternum.

"Not yet, sweetheart. But Grandma Patricia wants to see us."

"Is Daddy there?"

"Maybe." I pulled his sweater from the chair and held it open. "Arms up."

He wriggled into it, already bouncing on the mattress. "Is it because of my birthday? Is it a surprise?"

I smoothed the collar flat against his neck. My fingers brushed the warm skin beneath his jaw, and I felt his pulse — quick, excited, trusting.

"Let's go find out," I said.

He grabbed my hand the moment we stepped outside. His grip was fierce for a five-year-old, all knuckles and determination, and he practically dragged me down the front steps toward the car.

"I bet it's a cake," he whispered. "A big one. With a wolf on top."

The driver held the rear door open. Cayden scrambled in first. I followed, pulling him onto my lap even though he was getting too big for it. He didn't protest. He pressed his back against my chest and held the wooden wolf up to the window so it could watch the road.

The drive took twenty minutes. I spent every one of them with my chin resting on the top of my son's head, breathing in the smell of his hair — soap and sleep and something green, like crushed leaves. A child's smell. Uncomplicated.

The Ironclaw main house rose out of the tree line like a jaw clenched shut. Grey stone, narrow windows, ivy cut back to sharp lines along the eaves. Patricia kept the grounds immaculate the way generals kept their uniforms — not for beauty, but for authority.

The driver opened our door. Cayden jumped out and tugged my hand.

"Come on, Mama."

The front doors were already open. A staff member I didn't recognize led us through the foyer and into the main hall.

I smelled them before I saw them. A dozen wolves, maybe more — the thick layered musk of Ironclaw elders and branch families packed into a room meant for formal occasions. Cedarwood polish on the long table. Fresh coffee. And underneath it all, faint but unmistakable, white musk and cedar perfume.

The hall was full.

Elders lined both sides of the table, their faces arranged in expressions of careful neutrality. Branch family heads occupied the chairs along the wall. Patricia Ironclaw sat at the head of the table in a high-backed chair that might as well have been a throne, a porcelain teacup balanced on her knee.

And at the far end of the room, standing beside the fireplace, Caleb had his hand on the small of Selene Thorne's back.

His eyes found mine the instant I stepped through the doorway. Then they slid away — a quick sideways cut, like a man flinching from a light he wasn't ready for.

Selene didn't flinch. She stood with her shoulders back and her chin lifted, one hand resting on her stomach. She wore cream silk. Her hair was pinned up, exposing the long line of her neck.

She looked like she'd been placed there. Arranged. A portrait waiting for its frame.

"Mira." Patricia's voice carried across the room without effort. "Sit."

There was one empty chair. It faced the table from the side, angled so that I'd be looking at Caleb and Selene in profile. I sat. Cayden climbed into my lap before I could stop him, his legs dangling over my knees.

"Daddy," he whispered, craning his neck toward Caleb.

Caleb's jaw tightened. He didn't look over.

Patricia set her teacup on the table with a click that silenced the last murmur in the room.

"I've called you all here for a family matter." Her gaze swept the table. "My son has news."

Caleb stepped forward. His hand left Selene's back and found her elbow instead, guiding her forward half a step, presenting her to the room the way you'd present evidence.

"Selene is carrying my child."

The words landed clean and hard. A few elders exchanged glances. One of the branch family heads leaned back in his chair and folded his arms.

Caleb kept going. His voice was steady, rehearsed. "I'll be formally assuming the Alpha title at the end of the month. The marking ceremony will take place in two weeks. The child Selene carries will be recognized as the sole legitimate heir to the Ironclaw line."

Sole legitimate heir.

My arms tightened around Cayden. He squirmed, confused by the pressure.

Patricia picked up her teacup again. Sipped. Set it down. Her face betrayed nothing — not surprise, not satisfaction. The performance of a woman who'd known every word before it was spoken.

Caleb turned to face the room fully. His hand moved from Selene's elbow to her stomach, his palm pressing flat against the cream silk.

"I'm finally going to be a father."

The room exhaled. Murmurs of congratulation rippled down the table. An elder near the front raised his coffee cup. Selene's mouth curved into a smile so practiced it could have been stitched on.

Cayden went rigid in my lap.

His whole body stiffened at once — spine straight, shoulders locked, the wooden wolf frozen mid-air where he'd been swinging it. I felt the change in him the way you feel a door slam in another room. A vibration that travels through the walls.

His hand found the hem of my skirt. His fingers twisted into the fabric and held on.

"Mama."

His voice was small. Not a whisper — smaller than that. The voice of a child trying to make himself disappear and failing.

"Mama, Daddy said he's finally going to be a father."

The murmurs died.

"So what am I?"

Every head in the room turned. Every pair of eyes landed on the five-year-old boy sitting in my lap with a wooden wolf in one hand and his mother's skirt in the other.

Patricia's teacup hovered an inch from her lips. It did not move. Her fingers did not tighten. Her expression did not shift. She held perfectly, terribly still — the stillness of a woman who had accounted for everything in this room except a child's question.

Caleb's hand was still on Selene's stomach. His face had gone white.

Cayden looked up at me. His eyes were dry. That was the worst part — no tears, no trembling lip. Just a question sitting in the middle of his face like a wound that hadn't started bleeding yet.

"Mama," he said again. "What am I?"

I pressed my mouth against the top of his head and held it there.

The room waited.

And I had no answer that wouldn't break him.

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