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My Alpha Accused Me of Hurting His Mistress Novel Cover

My Alpha Accused Me of Hurting His Mistress

The mind-link punched through my sleep at 11:47 PM. *Luna. Medical wing. Now.* It was Rowan, our Beta, his voice tight in a way I had not heard in five years of marking. I sat up in the bed I shared with my mate and reached for him out of habit. The sheets beside me were cold. I pulled on jeans and a sweater. My Healer's kit was already by the door. I have been the Ironveil Pack's lead Healer since I was nineteen. Five years as Luna.
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Chapter 3

They kept me in the east wing for two days.

No windows. A narrow bed. A guard outside who changed shifts every six hours and never spoke to me. Someone slid food under the door twice a day — plain bread, water, the kind of meal you give a wolf you have already decided is not worth feeding well. I ate it. I needed my strength, though I did not know yet what for.

I spent those two days doing what I had always done when I was afraid: I worked. I had nothing to work with, so I worked with my hands. I flexed each finger, one at a time, the way I had taught injured wolves to do after fractures healed wrong. I pressed my palms flat against the stone wall and felt the cool resistance of it. I thought about the carpal bones, the metacarpals, the small intricate machinery of a Healer's hands, and I told myself: *these are mine. No one can take what is mine.*

I was wrong about that.

On the morning of the third day, the door opened and it was not the guard.

It was Rowan.

He looked like he had not slept. His eyes were red at the rims and his jaw was set in the way it got when he was carrying something he did not want to carry. He stood in the doorway for a moment without speaking, and I understood from the look on his face that whatever was coming, he had already tried to stop it and failed.

"Isla," he said. Just my name. Not *Luna* anymore.

"Tell me," I said.

He told me.

Adonis Hicks. The inventory records. The scent crystals. The closed session with Declan and the Gamma, the evidence laid out in neat clinical order, the testimony delivered in the flat, authoritative voice of a medical professional who had nothing to gain from lying. Abortifacient compounds. My scent near Lilia's quarters. A closed loop, Rowan said. He said it like the words tasted bad.

"I found two inconsistencies," he said. "The crystal timestamps. The intervals don't match the pack house's standard logging cycle. I told him."

I waited.

"He used the Alpha tone," Rowan said quietly. "The full one. I couldn't — Isla, I couldn't push past it. I'm sorry."

I looked at him for a long moment. Rowan, who had stood beside Declan for eight years. Rowan, who had called me Luna on the first day and meant it. Rowan, who had tried.

"I know," I said.

He flinched like I had hit him.

"They're assembling the pack," he said. "Central courtyard. Dawn."

I nodded. I stood up from the narrow bed and I smoothed the front of my shirt — the same clothes I had been wearing for two days, wrinkled now, smelling of stone and stale air — and I thought about my mother's moonstone sitting in the bottom of my bag in my quarters, wrapped in silk, waiting.

*Hold on,* I told it, though it could not hear me. *I'm coming back for you.*

I was wrong about that too.

---

The courtyard was full.

Every wolf in the Ironveil Pack, it seemed. Warriors in their ranks along the east wall. Omegas clustered near the gate, some of them holding pups against their chests. Elders in the covered walkway. The Gamma's unit positioned in a loose ring at the center, and inside that ring, a cleared space of pale stone that the morning light hit flat and cold.

They brought me through the main doors with a hand on each arm. I walked between them without pulling away. I kept my chin level. I kept my eyes forward.

Declan was standing at the center of the ring.

He was in full Alpha dress — the dark ceremonial jacket, the pack seal at his collar. His face was composed. His eyes found mine when I entered the courtyard and stayed there, and I searched them for something — doubt, grief, the five years we had built together — and found nothing I recognized.

Sable made no sound inside me. She had gone somewhere deep and still, conserving herself, the way animals go quiet before something terrible.

Declan spoke.

His voice carried across the courtyard without effort, the way an Alpha's voice always did, filling the space and pressing against the skin. He said my name. He said the word *crimes.* He said *unborn pup* and *poisoned salves* and *betrayal of the Luna oath,* and each word landed in the assembled pack like a stone, and I watched their faces change as the stones fell.

I did not speak. There was no point in speaking. The story had enough witnesses now.

Then he gave the order.

Two of the Gamma's warriors took my arms. A third knelt in front of me and took my right hand in both of his, and I had one moment — one single moment — where my body understood what was about to happen before my mind did, and every Healer's instinct I had screamed *protect the hands, protect the hands, the hands are everything—*

The first finger broke at the proximal joint.

I had set broken bones before. I knew the sound. I had never heard it from the inside.

I did not scream. I want to be clear about that. I did not scream, not once, through all of it — not the right hand, not the left, not the small bones or the large ones or the places where the warrior had to press twice because the first time was not enough. I made no sound that I was aware of. I bit the inside of my cheek until I tasted blood and I kept my eyes open and I looked at the sky above the courtyard, which was pale grey and featureless, and I breathed.

Sable howled.

Not out loud. Inside me, in the deep place where she had gone quiet, she howled and howled and the sound of it filled my skull and drowned out everything else — the crack of bone, the murmur of the assembled pack, Declan's voice reading the formal charges above my head. Sable's howl was the only thing I had left that was entirely mine, and I held onto it.

When it was done I was kneeling on the pale stone. My hands were in my lap. I did not look at them.

Declan crouched in front of me.

He reached out and took the Luna pendant from my neck — the silver crescent I had worn for five years, the one he had clasped there himself on the night of our marking ceremony, his hands warm and careful in my hair. He took it now with two fingers, like he was removing something contaminated, and the chain snapped against the back of my neck as it came free.

He stood.

"Bring the Omega rags," he said.

Someone brought them. Grey cloth, rough-woven, the kind that chafed. The kind that announced what you were before you opened your mouth.

He dropped them in front of me.

"Change," he said.

I looked up at him.

For one moment — just one — I saw something move across his face. Something that might have been, in another life, the man who had commissioned my mother's moonstone memorial and held my hand through the night when the pack's youngest pup nearly died on my table. Something that knew me.

Then it was gone.

"Change," he said again. Alpha-flat. Final.

I changed.

I did it slowly, because my hands could not manage buttons and I had to use my wrists and my forearms and my teeth, and I did it in front of every wolf in the Ironveil Pack, and I did not hurry and I did not look at the ground. I looked at the sky. The same pale grey sky. Featureless and wide and belonging to no one.

When I was done, someone spat at my feet.

Then another.

A warrior near the east wall curled his lip and let out a low snarl. An elder turned away. A few of the younger wolves looked at the ground — not intervening, but not joining in either, which was the most I could expect and less than I deserved.

I knelt on the pale stone in Omega grey with my ruined hands in my lap, and I thought about Lilia's smile in the courtyard two nights ago, and I thought about the phone call in the dark, and I thought: *she planned this before I ever walked into that medical wing.*

And then I thought: *she has not planned for everything.*

Sable went quiet again. But it was a different quiet now. Not grief. Not shock.

The quiet of something that has decided to survive.

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