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My Alpha Let Our Son Die For His Mistress's Bastard Novel Cover

My Alpha Let Our Son Die For His Mistress's Bastard

Harper Sterling gave up everything for her Alpha mate—her royal bloodline, her family, her power. For five years, she was the perfect Luna of the Silver Fang Pack, never suspecting that Ryker had been poisoning her food with Moonshade to suppress her rare Silver Moon Wolf. When their three-year-old son Noah is killed near rogue territory, Harper's world shatters. But the truth is worse than any rogue attack: Ryker let Noah die to protect his mistress's illegitimate son—the real killer. Now he plans to install the bastard as heir and trick Harper into raising her own child's murderer. But Harper isn't the docile, wolfless Luna Ryker created. She's the daughter of the Alpha King. She's a Silver Moon Wolf—one born every thousand years. And her power is finally waking up. With her wolf unleashed and her royal family at her back, Harper returns not as a grieving mother, but as a force of nature. She will expose every lie, strip Ryker of everything he stole, and burn his world to ashes. The only question is: will the curse tied to her betrayal destroy her before she gets her revenge?
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Chapter 1

The rain hammered against the black marble headstone like nature's own grief, each drop a reminder that my three-year-old son would never again laugh at the sound of storms. I stood there, clutching a single white lily, watching the water cascade down Noah's name etched in cold stone.

"Harper." Ryker's voice cut through the downpour, his strong hand finding mine. Even through my numbness, I felt the familiar spark of our mate bond, that electric connection that had once made me believe in forever. "We should go. You're soaking wet."

I couldn't move. Couldn't breathe. The funeral had been a blur of condolences and pack members offering their sympathies, but standing here at Noah's grave made everything brutally real. My baby was gone. Torn apart by rogue wolves while playing too close to the border.

"I'm going to find them," Ryker whispered against my ear, his Alpha authority bleeding through his grief. "Every last rogue who touched our son. I'll make them pay, Harper. I swear it on the moon goddess herself."

For a moment, I almost believed him. Almost let myself sink into the comfort of his promises and the warmth of his embrace. But exhaustion hit me like a physical blow, my legs threatening to give out.

"I need... I need a moment," I managed, pulling away from him. "Just give me a minute alone with Noah."

Ryker's jaw tightened, but he nodded. "I'll be by the cars. Don't stay too long."

I watched him walk away, his broad shoulders cutting through the rain as he headed toward the line of black SUVs parked along the cemetery's main path. The other mourners had already left, leaving only the essential pack members and security. When my knees finally buckled, I stumbled behind one of the large stone pillars that marked the cemetery's older section, pressing my back against the cold granite.

The rain provided perfect cover for my sobs, but as I tried to catch my breath, voices drifted from the other side of the pillar. Ryker's voice, low and urgent.

"I don't understand, Alpha." That was Jace, Ryker's second-in-command, confusion clear in his tone. "Why didn't you let the pack healers try to save Noah? When they brought him in, he was badly injured, yes, but it wasn't hopeless. The healers said they might have been able to—"

"Enough." Ryker's command was sharp, final. But then his voice dropped to barely above a whisper, and I had to strain to hear over the rain. "It was because of Damian."

Damian. The name hit me like ice water. I knew that name.

"Damian pushed Noah toward the rogue territory," Ryker continued, and each word felt like a knife twisting in my chest. "He's only six years old, Jace. He doesn't understand pack boundaries, doesn't know what danger means. If Noah had survived, if he had woken up and told everyone what really happened..."

"Maren would go to prison," Jace finished quietly. "And the council would sentence a child to death for causing the Alpha heir's injury."

Maren. My hands pressed against the stone pillar so hard my knuckles went white. Maren, Ryker's college girlfriend. The woman I'd thought was ancient history.

"Exactly." Ryker's voice carried a weight that made my soul shrivel. "I couldn't let that happen. Damian is just a boy. He didn't mean for any of this to happen."

"But Noah was your son too," Jace said, and I could hear the disbelief in his voice. "Your heir. Your mate's child."

"And now Harper will never have to know the truth." The casual way Ryker said it, as if my son's death was just an inconvenient problem he'd solved, made bile rise in my throat. "When she's ready, when her grief has settled, I'll bring Damian home. We'll tell everyone he's a war orphan we're adopting. Harper has such a soft heart—she'll raise him as her own. He'll become the next Alpha, and no one will ever know what really happened."

The world tilted. My vision blurred, and for a moment I thought I might faint. Damian wasn't just some random child. He was Ryker's son. His illegitimate son with his former lover. And Ryker had let our Noah die to protect them.

I pressed my hand over my mouth to stifle the scream building in my chest. The rain continued to fall, washing away the last of my naive faith in the man I'd called my mate.

Slowly, carefully, I pushed myself away from the pillar. My legs felt like water, but somehow I managed to walk back toward the cars without collapsing. By the time Ryker noticed me approaching, I had wiped the rain and tears from my face.

"Ready to go home?" he asked, concern etched in his features. The perfect grieving father and husband.

I nodded, not trusting my voice.

The ride back to the Alpha mansion passed in silence. Ryker kept glancing at me, probably worried about my unusual quiet, but I stared out the window and let him think it was just grief. In a way, it was. I was grieving everything—my son, my marriage, my entire life.

Once we were home, I walked straight to Ryker's study. The familiar scent of leather and pine that had once comforted me now made my stomach turn. Ryker followed me, closing the door behind him.

"Harper, what—"

"I want to break our mate bond."

The words hung in the air between us like a death sentence. Ryker's face went completely white.

"What did you just say?"

"You heard me." My voice was steadier than I felt. "I want to sever our connection. Permanently."

"Harper, no." He stepped toward me, hands outstretched. "You're in shock. You're grieving. You don't know what you're saying."

"I know exactly what I'm saying."

He reached for me, trying to pull me into his arms, but I stepped back. "Baby, listen to me. Losing Noah has broken something in both of us, but we can't let it destroy our marriage. We can get through this together. We can try again, have another—"

"Don't." The word came out like a growl. "Don't you dare suggest replacing him."

Before Ryker could respond, his phone rang. The ringtone was different from his usual business calls—softer, more personal. His face went pale as he glanced at the screen.

"Daddy?" A small voice came through the speaker when he answered. "Daddy, I don't feel good. I have a fever, and Mommy's sick too. When are you coming home?"

Home. Not here. Somewhere else, with someone else.

"I'll be right there, buddy," Ryker said, his voice gentle in a way I hadn't heard since Noah was alive. "Take care of Mommy for me, okay?"

He hung up and turned to me, lies already forming on his lips. "Pack emergency. There's been an incident at the eastern border. I have to—"

"Go." The word came out flat, emotionless. "Just go."

Ryker hesitated for a moment, probably surprised by my lack of questions or protests. Then he grabbed his jacket and left, practically running from the room.

I stood alone in his study, surrounded by the remnants of a life built on lies. My phone buzzed against my leg. An unknown number had sent me a photo.

The image made my knees buckle. Ryker and a blonde woman, naked and intertwined in bed, her face glowing with satisfied happiness. More photos followed in rapid succession—family pictures of Ryker, the woman, and a dark-haired little boy. Beach vacations. Birthday parties. Christmas mornings.

A whole other life.

The final message was text: "Do you know why your wolf has been silent all these years? Ryker's been putting Moonshade in your food. He was afraid of what you might become if you fully awakened. Afraid you'd threaten my position. You really are pathetic."

I stared at the phone until the screen went dark, my reflection staring back at me like a ghost. Everything made sense now. My wolf had been drugged into submission for years. My son was dead because of a lie. And I had been living as a prisoner in my own life.

The rain continued to pound against the windows, but inside me, something far colder had begun to freeze solid.

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