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My Alpha Raised a Secret Son with His Mistress Novel Cover

My Alpha Raised a Secret Son with His Mistress

The conference room smelled like cedar polish and three different Alpha colognes, and I had spent the last forty minutes proving — quietly, in clean black ink — that I was the only person at the table who had actually read all sixty-two pages of the treaty. Aaron sat to my right, one hand resting on the back of my chair like a prop. He laughed at the Blackridge Alpha's joke a beat too late. I clocked it and let it pass. "Clause nine," I said, sliding the page across. "Hunting rights revert if either party defaults on the quarterly tithe. That's non-negotiable." Alpha Doran of Stonewater squinted at the paragraph. "You drafted this, Luna?" "I drafted all of it." Aaron's hand drifted from my chair to my shoulder. Warm. Familiar.
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Chapter 1

The conference room smelled like cedar polish and three different Alpha colognes, and I had spent the last forty minutes proving — quietly, in clean black ink — that I was the only person at the table who had actually read all sixty-two pages of the treaty.

Aaron sat to my right, one hand resting on the back of my chair like a prop. He laughed at the Blackridge Alpha's joke a beat too late. I clocked it and let it pass.

"Clause nine," I said, sliding the page across. "Hunting rights revert if either party defaults on the quarterly tithe. That's non-negotiable."

Alpha Doran of Stonewater squinted at the paragraph. "You drafted this, Luna?"

"I drafted all of it."

Aaron's hand drifted from my chair to my shoulder. Warm. Familiar. I didn't move.

My phone buzzed face-up on the table.

A notification banner. A photo, auto-previewing from a thread someone had named "BK weekend 🐾" — a thread I had never been added to. The image loaded fully before my brain caught up with my eyes.

A playground. Brooklyn brick walk-ups in the background. Aaron in a gray hoodie, crouched, laughing the way he used to laugh at me in the first year of the pack — that unguarded, throat-open laugh I had not heard in four years and had told myself was just the cost of being Alpha.

Scarlet beside him, hair in a low knot, one hand on the small of his back.

And a toddler. A boy. Maybe three. Dark hair, Aaron's jaw already starting to surface under the baby fat, and a scent rolling off the screen so unmistakably Alpha-blooded that my wolf — what was left of her — lifted her head inside me for the first time in a long time and growled.

I did not flinch.

I turned the phone face-down with two fingers, the way you'd turn over a card you had been dealt and already memorized.

"Clause nine," I said again, evenly. "Non-negotiable. Shall we initial?"

Doran initialed. Blackridge initialed. The Ironbrook Alpha, who had been watching me a beat too long, initialed last. I signed for Crescent Ridge on the final page in the long, deliberate hand I had practiced when I was twenty-two and still believed signatures meant something.

Aaron's palm squeezed my shoulder. "My Luna," he said warmly to the room. "What would I do without her."

I smiled. I had a very good smile. I had built it the way I built everything else in this pack — from scratch, on purpose, to last.

"Gentlemen," I said, standing. "Drinks are in the east drawing room. I'll join you in ten."

I walked out at a normal pace. I closed my office door at a normal pace. I sat down at my desk, opened my laptop, and pulled up Aaron's private file directory.

The password field blinked at me.

I typed in the date of our Mate Ceremony.

The folders opened.

---

I didn't cry. I want that on the record, even if the only record is the one I'm keeping inside my own skull. I sat in my office with the door locked and the lamp on low, and I read.

A Brooklyn lease, two bedrooms, paid quarterly from an LLC I had personally signed off on three years ago because Aaron told me it was a vendor account.

A French villa. Deed in progress. Beneficiary: Scarlet Morales.

School enrollment paperwork. Pre-K, fall semester. Name on the form: Luca Shaw. DOB three years and four months ago. Father: Aaron Shaw.

Three years and four months.

I did the math twice, because I am the kind of woman who does the math twice. He was conceived the month I started taking the new suppressants. The ones Mazie said the Healer had upgraded. The ones I had thanked her for, because she'd brought them up to my room on a tray with chamomile tea.

I closed the folder. I refilled my coffee from the carafe that had gone cold hours ago. I drank it black and bitter and over-brewed, the way I have drunk it since I was twenty-three and pulling all-nighters drafting the territory maps still rolled in the back of my wardrobe.

Then I opened a new document. I titled it nothing. I started to plan.

---

By four a.m. I couldn't sit in that house anymore. The walls had Aaron's scent on them, and Aaron's scent had a child in it now, and I needed asphalt under me and weather on the windshield and somewhere that wasn't here.

I took the coast road. The rain started somewhere past the Crescent Ridge line and got serious by the time I hit the borderlands — slow, fat drops, then a hammering sheet of it that the wipers couldn't keep ahead of.

I took the curve at Miller's Bend too fast.

There was a sleek black SUV stopped on the shoulder, hazards on, and I saw it half a second too late. I braked. The tires said something unkind to the wet pavement. My front bumper kissed his rear bumper with a sound like a tin can being stepped on, and my forehead bounced off the headrest, and the airbag did not deploy, which felt, in the moment, like a personal slight.

I sat there. My hands on the wheel. My breath loud in my own ears.

The driver's door of the SUV opened.

A man got out into the rain. He didn't hurry. He didn't even pull his coat collar up. He walked to the back of his vehicle, looked at the crumpled bumper without expression, and then walked to my window.

I rolled it down because I am the kind of woman who, even concussed and shattered, rolls down the window.

The scent hit me before the face did.

It was cold air and black tea and something underneath — pine resin, maybe, or the particular sharpness of snow on stone — and my wolf, my muzzled, half-asleep wolf, came up out of the dark of me and pressed her nose to the inside of my ribs like a creature recognizing a sound it had not heard in ten years.

I looked up.

Julien Alexander looked back.

The Ice Prince. The Lycan Court's enforcer. The boy across the sparring ring at the Come of Age Ceremony, who had pinned me twice and let me pin him once and never, in three rounds, said a word.

A decade older. The jaw harder. The eyes the same — that pale, glacial gray that did not so much look at you as catalogue you.

Rain ran down his temple. He did not blink.

"You shouldn't be driving like this," he said. His voice was lower than I remembered, and quieter, and absolutely final. "Get in."

I should have said something cutting. I had a whole arsenal of cutting things. I had built that arsenal carefully over a decade of being underestimated in rooms full of men.

Instead I said, "My car —"

"Leave it."

I looked at him through the rain. I looked at the crumpled bumper of a vehicle that, I would later learn, he would refuse to repair for the rest of the year.

I got out, and I got in.

---

The back of the SUV smelled like him, only worse — concentrated, undiluted, my wolf turning circles inside me like she had forgotten she was supposed to be asleep. I pressed my spine into the leather and folded my hands in my lap and stared at the rain on the window because looking at him was not yet a thing I could afford to do.

He slid into the seat opposite. Closed the door. The rain went muffled.

He did not turn on the heat.

I noticed that, distantly, the way you notice a detail in a contract you'll come back to later. I had always run warm. I had complained about it once, ten years ago, at a banquet table where he had been seated four chairs down and had not, to my knowledge, been listening.

"Where are we going," I said. Not a question. A clause.

"My office."

"I didn't ask for your office."

"No," he agreed. "You didn't."

I breathed in once, slowly, through my nose. The scent of him went all the way down into the parts of me Aaron had stopped reaching years ago.

"I'm filing for rejection," I said. Flat. Clean. The way you state a fact to a notary. "From Aaron Shaw. Alpha of Crescent Ridge."

He did not look surprised. He did not ask why. He looked at me for one long beat in the dim wet light of the back seat, and then he said, very evenly:

"I'll handle the proceedings. Personally."

I made myself laugh. It came out wrong. "A Lycan Prince doesn't handle pack-level rejections."

"No."

"Then why."

He was quiet. The rain hammered the roof. Somewhere on the road behind us, my abandoned car was filling up with weather.

"Because no one else," he said, "will do it correctly."

I did not answer that. I could not, yet, answer that.

The SUV pulled smoothly off the shoulder, and he drove us not back toward pack territory but south — toward the Lycan Court district, toward a glass-and-steel tower I had only ever seen from a distance, toward a war room whose walls, when I walked in an hour later, would already have my pack's borders flagged in red.

He poured me a cup of coffee without asking how I took it. Black. Over-brewed. Exactly the way I had been drinking it since I was twenty-three.

I looked up at him over the rim of the cup.

Something behind my composure — something I had been holding in place since the photo loaded on a phone screen in a room full of Alphas — shifted, very slightly, a single degree off true.

He saw it. He did not comment.

He just set the carafe down, stepped back, and waited.

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