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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 3

The sound of heels clicking against marble echoed through the foyer as I watched the servants carry in box after box of designer luggage. Louis Vuitton. Chanel. Hermès. Each piece screamed money and permanence, like Maren had been planning this move for months.

"Careful with that one," Maren called out sweetly, her voice carrying the authority of someone who belonged here. "It has my grandmother's jewelry."

I stood frozen at the top of the grand staircase, my fingers gripping the banister until my knuckles went white. The guest room she'd been assigned was directly across from the master suite—our bedroom. One thin wall separating the woman who'd destroyed my family from where I'd once felt safe.

"Luna Harper!" Maren's voice floated up to me, honey-sweet and poisonous. "I hope you don't mind, but I took the liberty of organizing the staff schedule. You've been through so much grief, darling. Let me handle the household management for a while."

Darling. The word hit me like a slap, especially delivered in front of Marcus, our head of security, and two visiting pack elders who'd come to discuss border patrols. They all nodded approvingly at Maren's apparent kindness, completely missing the way she'd just stripped me of my authority in my own home.

"How thoughtful," I managed, my voice steady despite the rage building in my chest.

Maren beamed up at me, then turned to Damian, who was exploring the foyer with wide eyes. "Sweetie, why don't you go thank Aunt Harper for letting us stay here?"

Aunt Harper. Not Mom. Not even Luna. The message was crystal clear—I was a temporary fixture in this child's life, someone to be tolerated until better arrangements could be made.

Damian looked up at me with those gray-blue eyes that were so painfully familiar. "Thank you, Aunt Harper. Maren says you're being very nice to us."

The innocent words twisted in my stomach like a knife. This boy had no idea what role he'd played in my son's death. To him, this was just a new adventure, a bigger house with more toys.

"You're welcome, Damian," I said quietly, then retreated to my bedroom before anyone could see the cracks forming in my composure.

That evening at dinner, Ryker cleared his throat and set down his wine glass with the ceremonial gravity he used for pack announcements.

"I've been thinking," he began, his gaze moving between Maren and me. "Damian deserves a proper welcome into our family. I'd like to host a ceremony next week—invite the neighboring Alphas, make it official."

Maren's face lit up with perfectly performed surprise. "Oh, Ryker, that's wonderful! Isn't it wonderful, Harper?"

I took a careful sip of water, buying myself time. A ceremony meant witnesses. Official recognition. It meant Ryker was moving faster than I'd anticipated to establish Damian as his heir.

"Of course," I replied. "Every child deserves to feel welcomed."

Under the table, I pressed my phone against my thigh, sending a quick text to Wren: *Need those files tonight. Time is running out.*

The response came immediately: *Already on it. Meet me in the kitchen at 2 AM.*

As dinner continued, I watched Ryker cut Damian's meat with the same gentle patience he'd once shown Noah. The sight made my chest ache, but beneath the pain, something else stirred—that flutter in my ribcage was growing stronger, more insistent.

After putting Damian to bed, I retreated to my room and tried to focus on a book, but the words blurred together on the page. Around midnight, I heard footsteps in the hallway—heavy, familiar steps that paused outside my door for a long moment before continuing.

To Maren's room.

The soft knock, the quiet creak of hinges, the low murmur of voices. Then silence.

I closed my eyes and pressed my palms flat against the mattress, focusing on my breathing. In. Out. In. Out. But with each exhale, the tremor in my chest grew stronger. My skin felt hot, electric, like something was trying to claw its way out from the inside.

I slipped out of bed and padded to the bathroom, flicking on the light. My reflection stared back at me—pale, hollow-cheeked, a ghost of my former self. But as I watched, my pupils dilated slightly, and for just a moment, I could have sworn I saw a flash of silver in their depths.

The antidote couldn't come soon enough.

At exactly 2 AM, I made my way downstairs to the kitchen. Wren was waiting for me, her face grim in the dim light from the range hood.

"I found something," she whispered, pulling out her phone. "In the safe behind his desk. Look at this."

The photos on her screen made my blood run cold. Official documents, contracts, financial transfers. But it was the signature at the bottom that made my hands shake—Maren's elegant script, right next to Ryker's bold scrawl.

"It's a supply agreement," Wren explained quietly. "Five years old. Ryker's been paying a underground organization for regular shipments of Moonshade. But look at this—Maren's listed as the intermediary. She's been facilitating your poisoning from the beginning."

The room seemed to tilt around me. Maren hadn't just been Ryker's mistress—she'd been his accomplice. They'd planned this together, systematically destroying my wolf, my strength, my very identity.

"There's more," Wren continued, swiping to another photo. "Financial records showing payments to the same organization for 'disposal services' dated three weeks ago. Right after Noah's death."

Disposal services. They'd paid to have the evidence of their crime erased.

I was still processing this information when the kitchen door swung open. Ryker stood in the doorway, his expression dark and unreadable in the shadows.

"Harper." His voice was deadly calm. "Come with me. Now."

Wren melted back into the pantry, her phone disappearing into her apron pocket. I followed Ryker through the house, my heart hammering against my ribs. He led me to the medical wing, where our pack healer maintained a small treatment room for minor injuries.

Two guards stood flanking the doorway—Marcus and his second, both built like mountains and utterly loyal to Ryker. They stepped aside as we entered, but I caught the way their hands rested casually on their weapons.

The healer, Dr. Thorne, stood beside a metal table where a ceramic bowl sat steaming. The liquid inside was an unnatural green, bubbling slightly around the edges like something from a witch's cauldron.

"Sit," Ryker commanded, gesturing to the examination chair.

When I hesitated, Marcus moved closer, his massive frame blocking the exit. I had no choice but to comply.

"What is this?" I asked, staring at the bowl.

Ryker's expression softened into something that might have looked like concern to an outsider. "It's a fertility suppressant," he said gently. "Dr. Thorne has been monitoring your condition since Noah's death. With your wolf dormant, your body can't handle the stress of another pregnancy. This is for your health, Harper. Your safety."

The lie was so smooth, so perfectly delivered, that for a moment I almost believed him. Almost.

But I could see the truth in his eyes—the same cold calculation I'd witnessed at Noah's grave. This wasn't about my health. This was about making sure I could never give him another heir, another complication to his perfect plan.

Dr. Thorne lifted the bowl with trembling hands. "Luna, if you could just—"

"No." The word came out stronger than I felt.

Ryker's mask slipped for just a moment, revealing the predator beneath. "Harper, don't make this difficult. Marcus, help her."

The guards stepped forward, their hands reaching for my arms. But as their fingers made contact with my skin, something exploded in my chest—a burst of heat and fury that made the air around me shimmer.

For the first time in five years, my wolf stirred. Not just a flutter, but a growl.

And everyone in the room felt it.

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