
My Alpha Chose His Mistress
Chapter 2
The first time I lost a training bout at Silverfang, I lost it in forty seconds.
The wolf who beat me was a Delta named Rourke — six-two, two-twenty, arms like bridge cables. He didn't even look winded afterward. Just stepped back, shook out his hands, and moved on to his next partner like I was a warm-up drill.
I lay on the mat for exactly three seconds. Then I got up.
That was day two.
By day five, I'd lost to Rourke twice more and won against two mid-ranked Deltas I had no business beating. Not because I was stronger — I wasn't. Not because I was faster — I was average at best. But Rourke telegraphed his right hook with a shoulder drop, and the first Delta always planted his left foot before he lunged, and the second one held his breath when he was about to commit to a takedown.
Patterns. Everyone had them. Most wolves fought on instinct and muscle memory. I fought on what I saw.
By the end of the second week, the Silverfang warriors had started to notice.
Not loudly. Not with compliments. Just the way the mat cleared a little differently when I stepped onto it. The way a few of them started watching my bouts instead of their own warm-ups. Small things. But in a pack where rank was everything, small things were currency.
I didn't celebrate. I logged it.
Every night, after the training hall emptied and the showers went quiet, I sat on the edge of my bunk in barracks twelve and opened the ledger. Small notebook, black cover, nothing written on the outside. Inside, two columns: credits earned, credits remaining. The blood oath's financial terms were specific — a number that had seemed impossible the first time I read it and now just looked like a problem to be solved.
I entered the day's combat stipend. It was a small number. I didn't look at the remaining column. Not yet.
I folded the ledger, tucked it under my pillow, and went to sleep.
---
I didn't know Griffin watched me train until the fourth day.
I caught the movement on the upper level during a sparring rotation — a figure at the railing, still and unhurried, the way Griffin Tucker was still and unhurried about everything. He wasn't hiding. He just wasn't announcing himself either.
I didn't look up again. I went back to my bout.
But I felt it — that particular awareness of being watched by someone who actually sees you, not just your rank or your record. It was different from the sideways glances I'd been getting all week. Those felt like assessment. This felt like something else.
I didn't think about what that something else was. I had a left hook coming at my face and a pattern to read.
---
The social media thing started around day eight.
Dani Reyes told me about it. She was a mid-ranked she-wolf, two bunks down from mine, with a sharp mouth and the kind of loyalty that announced itself through action rather than words. She'd started sitting next to me at meals around day four without explanation, which I respected.
She dropped her phone on the table in front of me at breakfast and said, "You're going to want to see this. Or maybe you won't. Either way, you should."
I looked at the screen.
It was a pack social media account — one of those anonymous gossip feeds that every major pack network had, the kind that dressed up rumors in pack-values language to make them sound like legitimate concern. The post was about me.
*Sources close to the Ironveil Pack confirm that the Dawnmere she-wolf abandoned her mate bond not because of mistreatment but because she couldn't handle the pressure of an Alpha's expectations. Multiple witnesses describe erratic behavior at the Mate Ceremony. The question isn't why Alpha Morrison turned to a more suitable she-wolf — it's why the Dawnmere Pack thought their unstable Omega-adjacent daughter was ever a match for Ironveil in the first place.*
There were three hundred and twelve comments. Most of them agreed.
I read it once. Then I handed the phone back to Dani.
"Okay," I said, and picked up my fork.
Dani stared at me. "That's it? Okay?"
"What do you want me to do? Cry into my eggs?"
"I want you to be at least a little bit angry."
"I am," I said. "I'm just not going to be angry at breakfast."
She looked at me for a long moment. Then she picked up her own fork. "You're a weird one, Davis."
"I've been told."
The posts kept coming over the next few days. Different accounts, same architecture — anonymous, pack-values framing, just enough specific detail to sound credible. *Unstable. Weak. Ran because she couldn't handle it.* I fielded the sideways glances in the training hall. I heard the muttered comments in the corridor outside the barracks. One she-wolf I'd never spoken to looked at me across the mat and said, loud enough to carry, "Didn't she just get rejected by her own mate?"
I looked at her. "No," I said. "I left. There's a difference."
Then I beat her in four minutes and went to log my combat stipend.
The campaign was working, in the sense that it was making my first weeks harder than they needed to be. But it wasn't breaking anything that mattered. Ariel had built her attack on the assumption that I needed pack approval to function. She was wrong about that. I needed rank. Approval was a side effect.
---
The mind-link came on a Tuesday.
I was in the middle of reviewing my training notes when my mother's voice pressed into the back of my skull — that particular frequency that only family could access, warm and guilty and practiced.
*Lexi. Sweetheart. We've been so worried.*
I set down my notes.
*The pack needs the Ironveil alliance to hold. You understand that, don't you? Everything we did — the oath, the arrangement — it was for you. For your future. For all of us. If the bond breaks, the debts come back, and the Dawnmere Pack —*
She kept talking. I listened to all of it. Every word. The guilt framing, the obligation language, the careful way she said *for you* when she meant *for us.* I let her finish.
Then I severed the link.
Clean. Quiet. Like closing a door.
My wolf stirred. Two words, flat and certain, pressed against the inside of my skull.
*Not ours.*
I picked up my training notes. I picked up my ledger. I entered the day's credits.
The remaining column was still a large number. But it was smaller than yesterday. And tomorrow it would be smaller than today.
That was enough.
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