Follow
Chapters
Share
My Alpha Made Me Bear His Mistress’s Child Novel Cover

My Alpha Made Me Bear His Mistress’s Child

I have been Luna of the Ironveil Pack for ten years. I know how to smile at the right moment, how to place a hand on a visiting Alpha's arm just long enough to soften his pride without threatening his ego, how to read a room full of wolves who would tear each other apart if the seating chart were wrong by one chair. Tonight, at the Winter Solstice Pack Banquet, I do all of it perfectly. The great hall is warm with candlelight and the low roar of conversation. Ironveil's ranked members fill the long tables in their finest clothes, and the visiting Alphas from three neighboring packs sit at the head table with Grayson. I move through the room like water — here to redirect a tension between two Betas before it becomes a scene, there to laugh at exactly the right moment when old Alpha Mercer makes his tired joke about the northern border. I wear a deep green dress that Grayson chose. My hair is up. The mark on my neck is visible, the way it always is at formal events. Grayson looks magnificent tonight.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

I don't sleep.

Naomi has a spare room with a narrow bed and a window that faces east, and I lie on top of the covers with Buster pressed against my legs and I stare at the ceiling and I think. Not about the footage. Not about the DNA report. I have already done that — I did it on the kitchen floor, and I am done doing it there. Now I think about the map.

By the time gray light starts coming through the window, I am already at Naomi's kitchen table.

The tactical map of the Eastern Seaboard goes down first. I have carried it folded in my coat for ten years without unfolding it, and the creases are deep, the paper soft at the corners from handling. I smooth it flat with both hands. Twelve pack territories. Borders marked in pencil from the original survey, updated in pen twice since then — once after the Rogue Wars shifted the northern boundary, once after the Nighthollow Pack absorbed two smaller territories three years ago.

I know this map the way I know my own face.

I get a yellow legal pad from Naomi's desk drawer and I start writing.

The Pack Alliance Summit is in nineteen days. Grayson has been building toward it for two years — the landmark alliance with Nighthollow Pack, the deal that would give Ironveil effective dominance over three Eastern territories and make Grayson the most powerful Alpha on the Seaboard. Every major pack leader will be in that room. Every Alpha who has ever owed Ironveil a political debt, every Alpha who has quietly resented Grayson's expanding reach, every Alpha who has smiled at his face and counted his weaknesses behind their eyes.

All of them. In one room. Watching.

I write down names. I write down debts. I write down the three Alphas who lost border concessions to Ironveil in the last five years and have never stopped being angry about it. I write down the two who sent their daughters to Ironveil as diplomatic wards and got nothing in return. I write down Alpha Sylas Dean of the Silverfang Pack, and I circle his name, and I sit with it for a moment.

Sylas tried to recruit me as his Beta strategist nine years ago. I turned him down because I was newly marked and I believed, genuinely believed, that my place was here. He accepted the refusal with a courtesy that I have thought about more than once since then. His pack is the second strongest on the Seaboard. His reputation for integrity is the kind that takes decades to build and has never cracked.

More importantly: he has no alliance with Grayson. No debt. No reason to protect him.

I write a second circle around his name.

Naomi finds me there two hours later. She stops in the kitchen doorway, takes in the map, the legal pad, the three empty coffee cups, and says nothing for a moment.

"You didn't sleep."

"I slept a little."

She looks at me. We both know that's not true. She comes in and starts the coffee maker and sits down across from me, and she looks at the map for a long time without speaking.

Then she says, "We should go to the Lycan King's council. Today. Take the drive, take the DNA report, and go."

I set my pen down. "I've thought about that."

"And?"

"A private complaint from a rejected Luna," I say, "gets reviewed. It gets filed. It gets investigated over months, maybe longer, while Grayson uses every political connection he has to slow it down and discredit the source." I tap the legal pad. "A public exposure, broadcast before every Alpha on the Eastern Seaboard, at the exact moment Grayson is standing in front of them claiming to be the most powerful and legitimate leader in the region — that cannot be walked back. That cannot be quietly buried."

Naomi's jaw tightens. "You're nineteen days pregnant with — " She stops. Starts again. "You're carrying a pregnancy. You're in rejection territory emotionally even if you haven't spoken the words yet. And you want to spend nineteen days inside Grayson's reach, building a case, while he — "

"I'm not inside his reach. I'm here."

"He knows you're gone."

"Yes," I say. "He does."

She looks at me for a long moment. I can see her running the scenarios the way I taught her to, back in the war room — checking exits, counting variables, looking for the version of this that ends with me intact. I let her run them. She is not wrong about the risk. She is not wrong about any of it.

She is just not going to change my mind.

"The Summit is the only venue where the consequences are irreversible," I say. "I need irreversible, Naomi. I need every Alpha in that room to see it at the same moment, with no warning and no spin. I need Grayson to be standing at the height of his power when it happens." I meet her eyes. "I know what I'm asking you to sit with for nineteen days. I know it's not fair."

She is quiet for a long time. Outside, a bird starts up somewhere in the trees behind her building, and Buster lifts his head from under the table and then puts it back down.

"Fine," Naomi says finally. The word comes out flat and controlled, the voice she uses when she is furious and choosing not to be. "Fine. But I'm not leaving your side."

"I know," I say.

She gets up and pours two cups of coffee and puts one in front of me without asking. I wrap both hands around it.

We work until noon.

---

They come on the second afternoon.

I am at the table when Naomi's phone buzzes. She reads the screen, and something in her face goes very still in the way it does before a fight.

"Two Deltas at the border," she says. "Ironveil markings. They're asking for you by name." A pause. "Luna's health and safety during pregnancy. Those are the words they used."

I look at her. She looks at me.

"Stay inside," she says, and she is already moving toward the door.

I do not stay inside. I stand at the window.

The border of Naomi's pack territory is a tree line about forty meters from the building — a natural boundary that every wolf in the region recognizes. The two Deltas are standing just inside it, broad-shouldered, in Ironveil's colors. Naomi walks out to meet them with her hands loose at her sides and her chin level, and I watch her talk to them from the window.

I cannot hear the words. I don't need to.

The first Delta reaches for her arm. Naomi moves — fast, clean, the kind of movement that does not waste anything — and he goes sideways into the tree line. The second one swings. She takes the hit across her left shoulder, rolls with it, comes back up. Takes another one to the ribs that makes her stagger one step.

She does not go down.

She says something to them. Short. Whatever it is, they hear it. They look at each other. They look at the building — at the window where I am standing — and then they turn and walk back through the tree line and they do not come back.

Naomi comes inside. She is breathing carefully, the way you breathe when something hurts and you are deciding not to say so. There is a red mark along her jaw that will be a bruise by morning.

"They're gone," she says.

"I saw." I go to the kitchen and get ice from the freezer and wrap it in a dish towel and hold it out to her. She takes it and presses it to her ribs without comment.

I go back to the table. I open my evidence file — a plain notebook, nothing on the cover — and I write the date, the time, and a single line: *Two Ironveil Delta warriors dispatched to neighboring pack territory. Attempted removal of Luna by force. Retreated after physical confrontation with Gamma Naomi Cruz.*

I underline *neighboring pack territory.*

That is the part that matters. Grayson sent his men across a border to retrieve me. That is not a wellness check. That is not concern for a pregnant Luna. That is an Alpha reaching outside his own territory to reclaim property he believes he owns.

I close the notebook.

Naomi is watching me from across the room, ice still pressed to her ribs, her expression unreadable.

"Thank you," I say.

She shrugs with her good shoulder. "Don't thank me. Just win."

I look down at the map. At the circled name.

"I intend to," I say.

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Open the Official Website

You may also like

After My Mate Chose His Pregnant Mistress Novel Cover
9.3
Five years. One thousand, eight hundred and twenty-five days. That was how long I had stood on the precipice of my own life, waiting for it to truly begin. I smoothed the silk of my midnight-blue dress—Dominic’s favorite color—and forced my hands to stop trembling. The Moonstone Pack House was alive with a nervous, electric energy. Streamers in the pack colors of silver and blue fluttered from the porch railings, snapping in the crisp autumn breeze. Below, the pack members gathered in a hush, their eyes darting between the driveway and me. They were waiting for the fairy tale. The Alpha’s daughter and the war hero, the adopted son who had fought for our safety, finally reuniting to lead them. "He’s close, Serenity," Sienna, my wolf, murmured in my mind.
After the Beta Killed Our Unborn Pup Novel Cover
8.4
On Christmas Eve, Maeve Richards, the Gamma of our pack and Jay’s childhood friend, deliberately burned my hand with a sparkler. She didn’t apologize afterward. Instead, she goaded Jay to lock me up in the abandoned church on the outskirts of the territory, claiming it was a test from the Moon Goddess to ensure the continuation of our bloodline. I begged Jay, my mate and the Beta of the pack, to take me back, pleading that I was two months pregnant. But he didn’t believe me. "Evelynn," he said, his voice cold and detached, "the future of this pack depends on us. Just stay there for one night, for me." With that, he turned and left with Maeve, never once looking back. Later, when his family scattered the ashes of our pup, it only drove them further into madness. By the time I stumbled down the hill, the bloodstains on my pants had dried. Finally, my phone found a signal.
After Three Alphas Tried to Claim Me Novel Cover
8.8
The contract was two pages long. I laid it on the table in front of Bryce Mason and uncapped my fountain pen. Heavy cream paper, clean black ink, every clause I had written myself over three years of building this business from nothing. He glanced at it the way powerful men glance at things they have already decided to sign — a performance of consideration, nothing more. I signed my name at the bottom. Alayna Riley. Neat, unhurried, final. "The booking runs from seven to midnight," I said. "No scent-marking. No physical contact beyond what the social situation requires.
Alpha's Redemption: Reclaiming My Destined Luna Novel Cover
8.6
"You had your chance, Alpha," Seraphina snarls, her violet eyes blazing as shadows dance around her powerful frame. "I'm no longer the weak Omega you threw away." Kai's wolf howls in recognition, desperate to reclaim what was lost. "Sera, please. I never wanted to reject you." But when her ancient bloodline awakens and darkness rises to claim her power, both realize the impossible truth: his rejection wasn't betrayal-it was protection. She's the last Ancient One, prophesied to either save or destroy the supernatural world. He's a broken Alpha whose only redemption lies in winning back the mate he was forced to abandon. Their bond could unite all packs against an ancient evil-or their love could be the key that unleashes hell on earth.
My Alpha Abandoned Me for the Rogue Luna Novel Cover
7.8
The first sensation was pain—a dull, persistent ache that radiated through every fiber of my being. My eyelids felt impossibly heavy as I struggled to open them, the harsh fluorescent lights of the infirmary stabbing into my consciousness like silver blades. "She's waking up," a soft voice murmured nearby. Dr. Sage Rivers' face swam into view, her eyes filled with something I couldn't quite place—pity, perhaps? "Austin?" My voice emerged as a rasp, my throat raw from months of disuse. "Is he here?" Dr. Rivers' expression tightened. "I'll... get him." The hesitation told me everything I needed to know.
Once His Luna Novel Cover
9.1
Ava Mills, the discarded Luna of the Silver Moon pack, endures public humiliation when her Alpha husband flaunts his pregnant mistress at their gala. Crushed under his dominance, she collapses—only to awaken something ancient in her blood: the power of the Lunar Wolves, a lineage thought extinct. As Ava uncovers the cruel truth—her miscarriage was no accident, and her rare bloodline is key to a sinister genetic experiment—she allies with Daniel, a royal spy hiding as a gardener. But when his dangerous secrets and her own awakening powers collide, Ava must choose: reclaim her life as the perfect Luna, or embrace the fury of the wolf they never saw coming.