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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 3

It started small. That's how it always starts.

The first time I saw her touch his arm, it was at the morning training review on a Tuesday. I was standing at the edge of the yard with my clipboard, doing the Luna thing — watching, noting injuries, making sure the Deltas weren't pushing through pain they shouldn't. Raelynn walked past the row of assembled wolves and said something to Xander, and her hand landed on his forearm. Light. Casual. The way you touch someone you've touched a hundred times before.

He didn't move away.

Two Deltas saw it. I watched their eyes cut sideways, then carefully forward again, the way wolves do when they're reading an Alpha's tolerance of a thing and deciding what to do with the information. They decided to do nothing. Of course they did.

I wrote down that Torres had a favoring pattern on his left knee and needed ward evaluation.

My handwriting was exactly the same as always.

By the end of that week, she had stopped pretending. She sat near the Alpha's table at communal meals, close enough that their proximity was a statement. She wore his scent openly now — no attempt to mask it, no discretion. She moved through pack spaces like a woman who had already decided the outcome of a thing and was simply waiting for everyone else to catch up.

I watched the pack's slow process of understanding. The way a Delta would glance between us and go quiet. The way a conversation would shift when I entered a room. Nothing was said. Nothing needed to be said. The pack reads power the way wolves read weather — through the body, through instinct, through the particular silence that falls when no one wants to be the one to name a thing.

I wore high collars and long sleeves and held my clipboard level and gave them nothing to read.

---

The comment happened on a Thursday.

I was running the training review — standard Luna oversight, checking conditioning protocols, making sure the program wasn't grinding anyone past the point of productive stress. About fifteen Deltas present, some standing, some stretching out. Raelynn was at the far end of the group, not because she needed to be there but because she had taken to appearing in spaces she wasn't technically required to occupy.

I was midway through a note on hydration protocol when I heard her voice, pitched just loud enough.

"Some Lunas are better at bandaging wounds than keeping their Alpha's attention."

The air changed. I felt it — the particular stillness of fifteen wolves simultaneously going rigid, not moving, not looking, waiting to see what happened next. Someone's training wrap crinkled in the quiet.

I finished writing my note.

I looked up, scanned the group the way I always scan after making a notation, made eye contact with the Delta nearest me — young, nervous, staring at a fixed point above my left shoulder — and said, in my normal voice: "Hydration reminders go in the weekly rotation. Talk to your unit leads. Good session, everyone. Dismissed."

They left.

Raelynn left with them, smooth and unhurried, like she hadn't said a word.

I stood in the empty training yard for about thirty seconds. The sun was doing something sharp and flat on the packed dirt. A bird called twice somewhere in the tree line.

Then I walked back to the ward.

Lucia was at my station when I came in. There was a mug of tea already on my tray. She had pulled two hours of afternoon consults off my schedule — I could see the whiteboard from the doorway, my name erased from the 2 to 4 block and her own written in.

She handed me the mug without looking at me directly.

I took it.

We stood at the prep counter for a moment, not talking. The ward hummed with its usual sounds — the sterilizer cycling, someone down the hall asking about discharge papers, the ancient air conditioning doing its best.

"Raelynn should really do something about that jaw of hers," Lucia said, finally. "Structurally. It keeps getting her into trouble."

It wasn't funny. I laughed anyway — just a breath, barely anything — and felt something loosen in my chest by about a millimeter.

"I'm fine," I said.

"I know," she said. She didn't believe me. She didn't argue with me either.

That was the closest we came to naming it. That was enough.

---

Xander came home late that night.

I heard his truck in the drive around eleven-thirty. Southern border patrol, he'd said that morning. Routine. I had nodded and asked if the coverage rotation Marcus had suggested was working out, and he'd said yes, and that had been the extent of it.

I was sitting at the bedroom window when he came up the stairs. The medical file in my lap was a patient case from two weeks ago, one I had already closed — I had picked it up by habit, something to have in my hands, something that looked like a reason to still be awake.

The door opened. He stopped when he saw me.

"Still up?" He smelled like the outdoors, like cold pine and exertion. Not like her. Not tonight.

"Reviewing a case," I said.

He looked at me for a moment. Tired eyes, the particular flatness of a man who has spent a long day managing too many things. "Everything okay?"

"Fine. Patient's borderline, I want to revisit the treatment plan."

He nodded. He accepted it the way he had been accepting things for months now — easily, without examination, the way you don't examine a door you no longer try to open.

"Don't stay up too late," he said.

He changed in the dark. He got into bed.

Within ten minutes, his breathing had slowed into the deep, even rhythm of sleep.

I stayed at the window.

I pressed two fingers to the inside of my wrist. Old habit. The night was very still outside, the tree line at the edge of the property a dark seam between the yard and the sky.

He hadn't asked what case. He hadn't asked which patient. He hadn't asked why my hands, which he could not see from where he stood, were trembling slightly against the edges of the file.

He used to know. Years ago — maybe even two years ago — he would have known. He would have read it in the set of my shoulders, in the way I held a file when I was troubled versus when I was tired, in the specific quality of my silence at that hour.

He had stopped looking.

I don't know exactly when. That's the thing no one tells you about this kind of loss. It doesn't announce itself. It accumulates. A hundred small unnoticings, stacked so gradually you don't feel the weight until you're already buried.

His breathing was slow and even in the dark.

I thought about the box in my ward office. What was in it now, and what still needed to go in. I thought about the southern border. I thought about a den on the territorial edge, supply routes, pack funds quietly redirected through cross-pack administrative accounts.

I was getting close.

My wolf sat quietly inside me. She wasn't screaming anymore. She had been quiet for days — not broken, not resigned. Waiting, the way a wolf waits when she has identified the shape of a threat and is simply gathering herself before she moves.

I closed the file.

I set it on the windowsill and looked at his sleeping form in the dark for a long moment. The man who had been a starving boy at the edge of my pack's territory, once. The man whose wolf I had coaxed back from the edge of nothing.

The man who, tonight, had asked if I was well and accepted my answer without once looking at my hands.

I turned back to the window.

Outside, the tree line held still. The sky was the color of old iron, the moon low and thin.

I needed a few more days. Maybe a week.

I pressed my fingers to my wrist one more time, felt my own pulse steady and slow, and waited for morning.

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