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My Alpha Chose His Mistress Over His Injured Luna Novel Cover

My Alpha Chose His Mistress Over His Injured Luna

I have healed wolves who were half-dead on the table. I have pressed my hands into wounds that would have made a warrior faint and held steady. I have never once, in all my years as a Healer, let what I was feeling show on my face when it mattered. So when Raelynn Gonzalez's phone lit up on the examination table beside her, and I saw the mind-link signature bloom across the screen in Xander's unmistakable frequency, I did not stop moving. I kept my fingers on her shoulder, kept my healing warmth flowing steady and even, and said nothing. I just breathed. And that was when it hit me. The scent was already there. I don't know how I had missed it when she walked in — cedar and dark musk, the specific warmth of my mate's skin, the smell that used to mean home. It was soaked into her.
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Chapter 1

I have healed wolves who were half-dead on the table. I have pressed my hands into wounds that would have made a warrior faint and held steady. I have never once, in all my years as a Healer, let what I was feeling show on my face when it mattered.

So when Raelynn Gonzalez's phone lit up on the examination table beside her, and I saw the mind-link signature bloom across the screen in Xander's unmistakable frequency, I did not stop moving. I kept my fingers on her shoulder, kept my healing warmth flowing steady and even, and said nothing.

I just breathed.

And that was when it hit me.

The scent was already there. I don't know how I had missed it when she walked in — cedar and dark musk, the specific warmth of my mate's skin, the smell that used to mean home. It was soaked into her. Not a trace, not a passing brush. Saturated. The kind of deep that takes months to build.

My wolf screamed.

Not a whimper. Not a warning. A full, raw, tearing scream from somewhere behind my sternum that I had to physically contain the way you contain a wound — pressure, stillness, don't let it out.

Raelynn didn't notice. She was still talking.

"He's so protective, it's almost annoying, you know?" She laughed, tilting her head so I could access the muscle along her trapezius. She'd been transferred to us from the Ashveil Pack three weeks ago for a training injury — nothing serious, a deep tissue tear, but she'd requested follow-up sessions. "Like, I sneeze wrong and he wants to know about it."

"Mm," I said.

My voice came out exactly as it should. Mild. Professional. Faintly warm.

"He says it's just because I'm new to the territory." She smiled at the ceiling. "But I think he just likes knowing where I am."

I finished the session in eleven minutes. I noted the recovery progress in her file — good, ahead of schedule — told her she could resume light training in four days, and walked her to the ward door with the same steady ease I always carry in this room.

I closed the door behind her.

I crossed the ward to the supply closet in the back corner, the one with the heavy door that seals tight, and I stepped inside, and I pulled it shut behind me.

Dark. Shelves of gauze and antiseptic and bone-set compound. The smell of clean linen and nothing else.

I pressed my hand to my neck.

The mate mark has always been warm. From the night Xander marked me, five years ago, it has run a few degrees above my surrounding skin — a quiet heat, a constant reminder. I used to press my fingers to it when I was tired or homesick in distant territories. It always felt like a heartbeat.

Under my fingers now, the skin was cool.

Not cold. Not gone. But cool, and when I concentrated — when I really focused the way I do when I'm reading a patient's wound — I could feel the edges of it. Ragged. Gray at the borders, the way a flame goes gray before it goes out.

I stood in that closet for sixty seconds.

Then I straightened my coat, walked back to my instrument table, and finished cleaning up.

---

Dinner was lamb and roasted potatoes. Marcus was talking about the patrol rotation. Xander sat at the head of the table, half his attention on Marcus, half on his phone — the usual evening energy of a man running a pack the size of Ironvale, always something requiring management.

I passed him the salt without being asked. He took it without looking up and said, "Thanks," in that absent, automatic way.

"The southern border rotation needs an extra body Tuesday," Marcus was saying. "We're thin on that end."

"Pull Declan's unit and shift them down," Xander said.

"That leaves the east side light."

"East has been quiet for two months. Southern matters more right now."

I ate my lamb. I asked Garrett, the Gamma, how his daughter's school recital had gone, and he lit up and talked for four minutes about her violin solo. I laughed in the right places. I refilled my water glass.

Xander looked at me once, across the table — just a quick glance, the automatic check-in of a man who has eaten dinner with the same person for five years. "You're quiet tonight," he said.

"Long day in the ward," I said. I smiled. "New transfer patient needed extra work."

He nodded and went back to Marcus.

---

I locked the bathroom door behind me that night and stood in front of the mirror for a long time.

Pulled my collar down.

In the white light above the sink, the mate mark looked worse than it had felt. The outer edges had gone the color of ash — a dull, flat gray that bled into the center where the warmth used to sit. Still alive. Still flickering. But draining. Slowly, steadily, like a battery being pulled from two directions at once.

Partial scent-claim.

I knew what I was looking at. I'm a Healer. I've read the texts, the case histories, the documentation of bonds under interference. I had simply never expected to be reading those symptoms on my own neck in my own mirror, in the pack house I had helped design.

I pressed two fingers to the inside of my opposite wrist. Old habit. It means nothing and it steadies me and I've never explained it to anyone.

I stood there until my breathing was even.

Then I dried my hands, turned off the light, and went to bed.

Xander was already asleep. I lay in the dark and listened to him breathe and thought about financial records. Pack accounts. Supply routes. The southern border.

I had a locked medical supply box in my ward office that no one touched. The label on it was written in my clinical script. To anyone else, it looked like patient documentation.

I started cataloging what I would need to put inside it.

My wolf had stopped screaming. She was quiet now — not broken, not gone. Just watching. The way you go quiet when you finally understand the shape of the thing you're dealing with.

I understood the shape.

I closed my eyes and let myself breathe one more time — slow, full, deliberate — and in the morning, I would begin.

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