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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 3

The trap was Emryn's idea. The architecture was mine.

We spent an hour at my kitchen table refining it — Emryn with her coffee and her dossier and that precise, satisfied look she gets when a plan is clicking into place, me with a legal pad and the same focused calm I use when I'm drafting territory clauses. It felt almost normal. That was the strange part. For the first time in four days, my hands weren't keeping themselves busy to stop themselves from shaking.

'The Circle needs a name that sounds like it cost something,' Emryn said. 'Luna Legacy Initiative. Something with weight.'

'Something she'd want to be seen at,' I agreed.

'Exactly. We make the guest list look like a ladder.' She tapped Riggs Chapman's name with her pen. 'He'll be there. He always comes to these things. He thinks networking is a personality.'

I almost smiled. 'He's not the target.'

'No. He's the stage.' Emryn sat back. 'We just need Scarlet to perform on it in front of the right audience.'

That was the elegance of it. We weren't manufacturing anything. We were just removing the walls she'd been hiding behind and letting the room see what she actually was. All we had to do was give her the setting she'd been working toward and make sure the witnesses were unimpeachable.

I told Emryn to run it. I told her to keep my name off the invitations.

'You sure?' she asked.

'I'll be busy maintaining appearances.' I wrote two more lines on the legal pad. 'Someone has to make sure Aaron doesn't notice the floor is moving under him.'

Emryn looked at me for a moment — that look she has, unfiltered and a little worried and trying not to show it. Then she nodded and picked up her coffee and didn't say the thing she had clearly decided not to say.

I appreciated that more than she knew.

After she left, I sat with the quiet and let myself feel it — that flicker, low and tentative, like a pilot light catching. It wasn't happiness. It wasn't even close to that yet. But it was something that felt, faintly and for the first time in days, like Mara Hunt.

I held onto it. Then I got back to work.

---

Julien's update came through a secured channel at eleven-thirty that night. Not a call. A file transfer — line items, shell entity names, bond purchase confirmations. No preamble. No explanation of what he was doing or why.

He didn't need to explain it. I read the architecture of it in the numbers: layered acquisitions through three different holding entities, all untraceable back to the Lycan Court, all targeting the specific tier of Crescent Ridge's territorial debt that Aaron had personally guaranteed. Each bond purchased was another degree of leverage. Each entry in the file was another wall closing in around a man who had not yet noticed the room was getting smaller.

I read every line. Twice.

Then I typed back through the encrypted channel: Continue. Faster.

His reply came in under a minute. A single word: Confirmed.

I stared at that word for longer than I should have. There was something about his precision — the total absence of performance in it, the way he communicated in coordinates rather than gestures — that landed differently than I had expected. Aaron had always been fluent in the language of warmth. Big laugh. Hand on the shoulder. My Luna. He had been so very good at the language of warmth, and it had meant nothing at all.

Julien didn't bother with any of that. He just did the thing, and then told me it was done, and waited.

I closed the channel and went to bed and lay in the dark on my side of a room that still smelled like someone else's choices, and thought about the difference between those two things for longer than I meant to.

---

The charity gala was at the Lycan Court's hosted venue — high ceilings, warm light, the kind of event where the flower arrangements cost more than some Deltas' monthly salary and everyone knows it. Every ranking Alpha on the East Coast had been there for twenty minutes before the first honest conversation happened.

I arrived alone. Unannounced. Dark dress, pack colors in the brooch at my shoulder — the original Crescent Ridge seal, the one I had designed — and no Aaron.

He was already inside. So was Scarlet. I had clocked their entrance from the lobby through the glass-paneled doors: timed to land in the middle of the arrivals wave, when the room was fullest and most attentive. The toddler on Aaron's arm, dressed impeccably. Luca. I had to be careful with that name in my own head. I had to keep it in the operational category and not let it get anywhere else.

I waited four minutes. Then I walked in.

I did not look at them.

I found Alpha Doran of Stonewater first — we had signed together three days ago, which gave me an opening — and I stood with him and Alpha Vance from the Ironbrook line and let the conversation find its level. It did not take long. Territory law always finds its level in a room full of Alphas.

'The Harrow Ridge boundary dispute,' Vance was saying, 'comes down to the question of what constitutes a legitimate Luna appointment under the old Lycan statutes.'

'It does,' I said. 'Article twelve, subsection four. The appointment has to be formalized through the Mate Ceremony and registered with the regional Council within sixty days. Without that registration, any peripheral bonding — regardless of biological progeny — carries no territorial authority.' I said it evenly, without emphasis. Just a woman discussing a legal category she happened to know well. 'There's precedent from the Coldwater Pack dissolution, two Council cycles ago. The tribunal was very clear: the existence of offspring does not confer Luna standing. Only the bond does.'

I did not look at Scarlet.

I did not have to.

Vance said something about the Coldwater case. Doran asked me a follow-up question. I answered it. And in my peripheral vision I watched Scarlet, who had been working the room fifteen feet away with the confident ease of someone who had prepared for this event for months, go very still.

That stillness. That single held breath.

I knew it. I owned it.

Then the room shifted — one of those small seismic social adjustments, almost imperceptible — and Celia Voss crossed the floor toward me.

Celia Voss. Luna of Moonveil Pack. The position I had walked away from ten years ago and had never fully stopped measuring myself against. She moved through the room the way a woman moves when she has never once doubted her right to be in it, and she stopped in front of me and extended her hand and said, 'Luna Hunt. It's been too long.'

Not Luna Shaw. Hunt. My name. The one I had before I handed a decade of my life to a man who did not deserve it.

I shook her hand. 'Luna Voss.'

Her eyes were warm and very sharp. She held my hand one beat longer than a social greeting required, and in that beat she looked at me in a way that said, I know what you're doing, and I know why, and I am standing here so that every Alpha in this room can see me do it.

I had always respected Celia Voss. I respected her more in that moment than I had respected almost anyone in ten years.

The room took note. I felt them take note — that slight, collective recalibration of attention that happens when the most senior Luna present decides who she is acknowledging first.

Scarlet, fifteen feet away, was performing not-watching with the desperate precision of someone watching very hard indeed.

I turned back to Celia and asked about the Moonveil territory expansion, because I had read about it last month and had three genuine questions, and because there was nothing more devastating in a room like this than simply being more interested in the right things than your opponent.

---

I felt him before I found him.

That scent — cold air, black tea, pine and stone — threaded through the warm room like a current in still water, and my wolf lifted her head and turned toward it with the slow, certain gravity of a needle finding north.

He was beside a pillar near the east wall. A glass of what I was certain was black tea in his hand, untouched. He was not watching the room the way Alphas watch rooms — sweeping, assessing, performing vigilance. He was watching me.

Only me.

I did not let it show on my face. I turned back to Celia and finished my sentence about the eastern boundary revision. I laughed at something Doran said. I was perfectly present, perfectly Luna, perfectly the woman Aaron had been trying to whisper out of existence.

But I knew where Julien was standing for the rest of the evening the way you know where a fire is in a dark room.

And I thought, distantly, with a clarity that had nothing to do with strategy: that expression on his face — the one I could feel rather than see from across the floor — was not cold at all.

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