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I Nearly Lost My Son to My Mate’s Secret Daughter Novel Cover

I Nearly Lost My Son to My Mate’s Secret Daughter

I had been rehearsing the words all afternoon. Not because I was nervous, exactly. More because I wanted them to be right. I wanted to see his face when I said it — the way his eyes would go still for half a second before the smile broke through. Atticus wasn't a man who showed surprise easily. But this would surprise him. This would crack that careful Alpha composure wide open, and I wanted to be watching when it did. I lit the last candle and stepped back to look at the table. Grandmother's roast, the one with the rosemary and the slow-braised garlic that filled the whole room with something warm and golden. The good plates.
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Chapter 1

I had been rehearsing the words all afternoon.

Not because I was nervous, exactly. More because I wanted them to be right. I wanted to see his face when I said it — the way his eyes would go still for half a second before the smile broke through. Atticus wasn't a man who showed surprise easily. But this would surprise him. This would crack that careful Alpha composure wide open, and I wanted to be watching when it did.

I lit the last candle and stepped back to look at the table. Grandmother's roast, the one with the rosemary and the slow-braised garlic that filled the whole room with something warm and golden. The good plates. The wine I'd been saving. Everything exactly right.

My wolf hummed low in my chest, content in a way she rarely was — a deep, settled vibration, like a purr. She had been like this since Rosalind confirmed it this morning, pressing the small wand to my wrist and then looking up at me with that quiet, careful smile healers use when the news is the kind that changes everything.

*Positive, Luna. Eight weeks.*

Eight weeks. A pup. The Silverfang heir, growing in the dark and the warmth of me, already real, already ours.

I pressed my fingertips together — a habit I've had since I was a girl, something my mother always said meant I was thinking hard — and let myself feel it. Just for a moment. The fullness of it. Two years as Luna of this pack, two years of learning its rhythms and its people and its politics, and now this. The thing that would make it permanent in a way even the mating ceremony hadn't quite managed.

I heard the front door.

My wolf lifted her head.

I was already smiling when I turned toward the hallway. I had the words ready. I had the whole evening planned.

Atticus came through the door the way he always did — filling the frame, that particular Alpha stillness radiating off him, the kind of presence that made a room rearrange itself around him without anyone deciding to. I had loved that about him once. I still did, I thought. I was still smiling.

Then I saw the child.

She was gripping his hand. Small, dark-haired, maybe eight years old, wearing a coat that was slightly too big for her. Her eyes moved around the room in quick, darting sweeps — the kind of look that was performing frightened while actually cataloguing. I noticed that. My wolf noticed it harder.

But what stopped me — what stopped everything — was the scent.

It hit me before the child spoke a single word. Something deep and biological, the kind of thing that bypasses thought entirely and lands straight in the gut. Atticus's scent was in her. Not on her, the way a scent transfers from contact. *In* her. Blood-deep. Bone-deep. The unmistakable signature of shared bloodline.

My wolf went rigid.

"Daddy," the girl said. "Is this her?"

The candles were still burning. The roast was still warm. I stood in my own kitchen with my hands at my sides and felt the floor shift under me in a way that had nothing to do with the ground.

Atticus's jaw tightened — just slightly, just for a fraction of a second — before his expression smoothed back into something controlled. He reached into his jacket and produced a folded set of papers. Official-looking. Stamped.

"Her name is Makenzie," he said. "Bianca Meyer's daughter. You remember Bianca — she ran with the pack for a while before she went rogue. She passed away last month. No family. No one to take the girl in." He set the papers on the counter without looking at me. "I had the guardianship formalized. It was the right thing to do."

I looked at the papers. I looked at the child. I looked at my mate.

"Atticus." My voice came out steadier than I felt. "Can we — I need to talk to you. Privately. There's something I have to tell you."

"Winter." The shift in his tone was subtle but absolute. The Alpha tone — not the full weight of it, not yet, but the edge of it, the warning pressure that settled against my chest like a hand. "She's had a hard day. She's scared. We can talk later."

*Later.* The word landed like a door closing.

I opened my mouth. The pressure increased, just enough, and the words dissolved before they reached air. I had been Luna of this pack for two years. I knew what the Alpha tone felt like. I had never had it used on me.

I closed my mouth.

Makenzie was watching me. Her eyes were wide and soft and perfectly, carefully frightened. But they didn't move the way a frightened child's eyes move. They were still. Assessing.

I knelt down anyway. Because that is who I am. Because my parents raised me to lead with grace, and because the bond is sacred, and because I had spent two years believing that Atticus Cunningham was a man I could trust.

"Hi, Makenzie," I said. "I'm Winter. You're safe here."

She looked at me for a long moment. Then she smiled — small, tentative, perfectly calibrated — and leaned slightly into Atticus's leg.

"Thank you," she said softly.

My wolf did not relax.

The dinner went cold. Atticus took Makenzie upstairs to show her the guest room, and I stood in the kitchen and looked at the good plates and the wine I'd been saving and the candles burning down to nothing. I blew them out one by one.

I didn't tell him about the pup that night.

Later — much later, after the pack house had gone quiet and the light under Makenzie's door had finally gone dark — I sat alone in the Alpha suite and listened to the silence from down the hall where Atticus was still sitting with her. I pressed my fingertips together. I thought about the scent. I thought about the papers on the counter and the smoothness of his voice and the way his jaw had tightened for exactly one fraction of a second before he controlled it.

I opened my journal. I hadn't written in it for months.

I wrote one line.

*His scent is in her blood. I felt it before he spoke a word.*

Then I closed the journal, pressed my hand flat against my stomach, and sat with the quiet hum of the life growing inside me — the only honest thing in the room.

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