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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 4

I went up to the Alpha's office on a Wednesday afternoon with a stack of pack health reports under my arm.

Marcus was already in the hallway when I rounded the corner. That was the first thing I noticed. He was leaning a shoulder against the wall outside Xander's door, scrolling on his phone, looking exactly like a wolf who happened to be standing there.

He was not happening to be standing there.

"Luna." He straightened up smooth and easy and gave me his Beta smile — warm, professional, the one he had been using on me for five years. "Let me take those off you."

He held out his hand for the files.

"I'd like to drop them with him directly," I said. "There's a flag on the contagion screening I want to walk him through."

"He's on a call." Marcus didn't move from the doorway. "Allied pack thing. Sensitive. He asked not to be interrupted for the next hour." The smile didn't shift. "I'll get them in front of him as soon as he's free. Promise."

I listened past him.

The door was thick, but I'm a Healer; I know the rhythm of a man's voice when he's negotiating with another Alpha and the rhythm of his voice when he is doing something else. What was bleeding through the wood was low, intimate, unhurried. There was a small laugh at the edge of it that did not belong to a treaty discussion.

Marcus's eyes were perfectly level on mine.

He knew what was on the other side of that door. He knew that I knew. The smile did not move.

"Of course," I said. I handed him the stack. "The flag is on page four. Tell him I'd like a sit-down before Friday."

"I'll put it on his calendar myself."

"Thank you, Marcus."

"Always, Luna."

I walked back down the hall at a normal pace. I went down the stairs at a normal pace. I crossed the foyer and went out through the side door into the afternoon heat at a normal pace, and only when I was inside the ward office with the door shut did I take the locked box out from under my desk and unlock it.

I added a line in my clinical script.

*Wednesday, 3:14 p.m. Beta intercept at office door. Verbal redirection. Audible content from interior consistent with non-pack call. Third documented instance.*

I closed the box. I locked it. I slid it back under the desk.

Then I sat down and pressed two fingers to the inside of my wrist and waited until my hands were steady enough to write a contagion report.

---

By Friday, the box was full.

Financial trail — clean. Three separate cross-pack administrative accounts moving funds south in increments small enough to look like training stipends. Den location — confirmed; I had walked the southern ridge on a Sunday afternoon under the cover of a tincture-gathering run, and the scent on the air a quarter-mile out had told me everything I needed without my ever setting eyes on the structure. Timeline — Raelynn's appearances in pack spaces cross-checked against Xander's patrol log to the hour, every gap accounted for, every overlap a confession. Marcus's interferences — five entries, dated, with notations on which wolves had witnessed what. The mate mark — photographed every Sunday night in the bathroom mirror, the gray creeping inward week by week like frost across a windowpane.

I had everything.

My ribs were still healing from the staircase. My hip was still tender to lie on. The shoulder pull had loosened but not finished. I could feel each of them when I moved a certain way, a quiet inventory of the body I was going to need, in full working order, when I finally moved.

Not yet.

A week, maybe. Ten days.

I closed the box on a Friday night and slid it back into its place under the desk, and my wolf, who had been quiet for so long, stretched once inside me — slow, deliberate, the way a wolf stretches before a long run — and settled.

Ready.

Not yet. But ready.

---

The banquet was on a Saturday.

Five years to the night.

The hall had been done in dark gold and deep green — Ironvale's colors — with long tables set in the formal hierarchy arrangement that Xander had insisted on from the first year. Alpha's table at the head. Beta and Gamma flanking. Senior Deltas in descending rank along the walls. Healers' table on the right. Visiting wolves and trainees seated at the far end near the south doors.

Raelynn was at the second-from-last table on the left. Visiting warrior trainee, the placard said. She had positioned her chair so that her line of sight to the head table was completely unobstructed.

No one had questioned the seating chart. Marcus had drawn it up.

I wore the dark green gown. High collar — silk, fitted close to the throat, hiding the gray. The Luna pendant lay against my breastbone, polished to a soft shine. My hair was up. I had drawn the line of my mouth in a color a shade darker than I usually wore and it made me look, in the mirror that evening, like a woman I almost recognized.

Xander stood when I entered. He always did. He crossed the floor to meet me halfway, took my hand, lifted it briefly to his lips, and walked me to the head table with his palm at the small of my back. The pack watched. The pack always watched. He looked, to anyone observing, like a man entirely in love with his Luna on the night of their fifth anniversary.

He did not look at me once during the walk.

He seated me. He took his own chair. He gave the toast — three minutes, polished, warm in the right places. Five years of Ironvale. Five years of a Luna whose gift had built this pack's medical wing into the strongest in the region. The hall lifted their glasses. I lifted mine. I drank.

Lucia, two tables away on the Healers' bench, met my eyes once across the room. Her face did not move. Her glass tilted, very slightly, toward me.

I tilted mine back.

The meal was served. Conversation rose. I ate three bites of something I did not taste. Xander leaned over to murmur something to Marcus on his other side and laughed. I smiled at Garrett's wife across the table and asked about the violin recital piece her daughter was preparing next. She lit up.

Somewhere around the second course, I felt Raelynn's gaze land on the back of my neck and stay there.

I did not turn.

I was lifting my water glass to my mouth — the cool weight of it against my fingers, the small rim of condensation — when the south doors blew inward.

The sound was wrong before the sight was. A splintering crack, then a low chorus of snarls that did not belong to any wolf seated in this hall, and then the screaming started — not panic yet, just the first surprised cry of a Delta whose chair went backward — and the air changed in a way I felt in my teeth.

Rogues.

More than one. More than three.

The glass was still at my mouth.

My wolf came up inside me in a single clean motion, fully awake, and the hall erupted.

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