
My Alpha Demanded I Save His Mistress’s Life
My Alpha Demanded I Save His Mistress’s Life Chapter 1
I knew something was wrong before she even stepped out of the car.
I was standing on the front steps of the Shadowvale pack house, a mug of tea going cold in my hands, when the black SUV pulled through the main gates. The morning was sharp and grey, the kind of early autumn day that smells like wet bark and coming rain. I watched the driver circle around to the passenger side, and then I watched him lift out a wheelchair.
She was already arranged in it perfectly. Back straight. Neck brace fitted just so. A soft cream blanket across her lap, pale hands folded on top of it like something painted. Camilla Shaw looked up at the pack house the way a woman looks at a thing she has always believed belongs to her.
I pressed two fingers against my side, just under my right ribs. An old habit. I didn't realize I was doing it.
I had heard the name Camilla Shaw for eight years. Xavier mentioned her occasionally — never at length, always with a particular quality of quiet that I had learned not to ask about. She was from the Thornfield Pack's allied eastern holdings. Her family had done something for him once, something important. He owed them. That was all he ever said.
That was all he thought he needed to say.
Xavier appeared in the doorway behind me before her wheels hit the gravel path. I felt him — I always felt him, that pull at the center of my chest that eight years had done nothing to dull. His hand came to rest briefly on my shoulder as he moved past me, and the contact lasted exactly as long as it took him to clear the steps.
He didn't look back.
I watched him cross the courtyard. Watched the way his stride changed — that slight, unconscious forward lean of an Alpha moving toward someone he feels responsible for. His voice reached me from across the gravel, low and warm in a register I recognized. I had heard it directed at me, sometimes. Not often enough. Not lately.
"Camilla." Just her name. But the way he said it told me everything.
She looked up at him, and her eyes filled. Not dramatically. Just enough. The corners of her mouth pressed together like she was fighting back something too tender to show.
"Xavier," she said softly. "I didn't want to call you. I know how much you have to—"
"Don't." His voice was gentle in a way I had not heard from him in months. "You should have called sooner."
I turned and went back inside.
---
By evening, I had been moved.
Beta Jessica was the one who told me. She appeared in the doorway of my room — the room I had occupied for three years, two floors up, east wing, close enough to Xavier's chambers that the mind-link between us hummed steady and warm even in sleep — and she stood there for a moment without speaking. Her jaw was tight. She had a look I had come to recognize over the years: the look of a woman delivering news she has already argued against and lost.
"Alpha Xavier has asked that you relocate to the west wing," she said. "Third floor. Room twelve."
I set down the book I wasn't reading.
"Camilla needs the east wing suite," Jessica continued, and then stopped. Like she couldn't make herself frame it more palatably than that. "The one adjacent to—"
"I understand," I said.
"Lily."
"Jessica." I stood up and reached for the small stack of things on my bedside table — a photo, a bracelet, a worn journal. "It's fine."
It wasn't fine. We both knew it. But I was not going to perform the specific kind of pain she was watching for, because performing it would make it real in a way I wasn't ready for yet.
Room twelve in the west wing was Omega-level quarters. Single window. Narrow bed. The kind of room assigned to packless wolves passing through on temporary arrangements. Xavier had given me a room that said, without a single spoken word, exactly where I stood.
I unpacked my three things. I sat on the edge of the narrow bed. I pressed my fingers against the scar beneath my ribs and held them there until the ache in my chest settled into something I could manage.
His wolf had always been able to find mine across any distance. Even now, faint and warm at the back of my mind, I could feel the thread of the mate bond — the thing the Moon Goddess had tied between us before either of us had any say in it. It had survived eight years of withheld marks, cancelled ceremonies, and quiet relegations. It was stubborn. So was I.
But there are different kinds of stubbornness. I was beginning to learn the difference.
---
Three days later, I sat in the small strategy room off the main hall with fourteen pages of diplomatic notes I had spent seventy-two hours preparing.
The cross-pack alliance meeting with the Ridgecrest and Ferndale delegations had been my project for two months. I knew the territorial dispute language. I knew which Ridgecrest elder needed to be addressed formally and which one responded better to informal register. I knew the exact wording that would satisfy the Ferndale Beta's pride without conceding anything Shadowvale couldn't afford to give. I had written every page of it myself, without being asked, because that was what I did — I moved through the gaps Xavier didn't notice and smoothed the things he didn't see.
He walked in, looked at the pages in my hands, and said, "I'll take those."
I looked up at him.
"Camilla reviewed the file last night," he said, not quite meeting my eyes. "She had some thoughts on the Ridgecrest approach. I want her perspective in the room."
The silence between us lasted four seconds. I counted.
"Camilla," I said, "is not a member of this pack."
His jaw shifted. "She understands eastern alliance politics. Her family—"
"I know," I said. "Her family."
He took the pages from my hands. Not roughly. Almost gently. Like he was picking up something that had been left unattended and he was simply tidying.
The mind-link channel that led to the strategy room — the one he always kept open for me during alliance meetings so I could feed him context in real time — went quiet ten minutes later. Not severed. Just... closed. Like a door eased shut from the other side.
I sat alone in the small room with no pages and no channel and the smell of him still faint in the air — cedar and winter cold, the scent that my wolf had catalogued and adored for eight years.
I pressed my fingers against my ribs.
I thought about a fifteen-year-old girl lying on a healer's table in the dark, bleeding out onto cold metal, certain that the Moon Goddess would make it right eventually.
I sat with that for a long time.
My Alpha Demanded I Save His Mistress’s Life of Contents
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