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My Alpha Saved His Mistress Instead of Me Novel Cover

My Alpha Saved His Mistress Instead of Me

The silk felt like water against my skin. My mother had sewn it by hand. Every stitch, every pearl along the collar, every fold of the long ivory train — Diane Lawson's quiet, work-worn fingers had put it all there. Luna-grade silk. The kind an Omega-born woman was never supposed to wear. "You'll be beautiful, Anna," she had whispered that morning, pinning the last hem. Her eyes were wet. "You'll be his Luna. My girl." My girl. I was thirty years old, and she still said it like I was eight.
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Chapter 1

The silk felt like water against my skin.

My mother had sewn it by hand. Every stitch, every pearl along the collar, every fold of the long ivory train — Diane Lawson's quiet, work-worn fingers had put it all there. Luna-grade silk. The kind an Omega-born woman was never supposed to wear.

"You'll be beautiful, Anna," she had whispered that morning, pinning the last hem. Her eyes were wet. "You'll be his Luna. My girl."

My girl. I was thirty years old, and she still said it like I was eight.

I stood in the bridal chamber on the second floor of the Crimson Hollow pack house, and I let myself look in the mirror. Really look. The silver moon-charm pendant rested at the hollow of my throat — the one Alex Martin had slipped around my neck fifteen years ago, under a full moon, when we were both teenagers and the whole world smelled like pine and possibility.

My fingers found it without thinking. They always did.

Below, the pack hall hummed. I could hear the low murmur of gathered allies, the clink of crystal, the slow swell of the ceremonial music as it tuned itself for the procession. The air smelled of pine resin and beeswax candles. Forty minutes. Forty minutes, and I would walk down that staircase as Annabelle Lawson, and walk back up it as Annabelle Martin, Luna of Crimson Hollow.

For the first time in fifteen years, I let myself believe it without flinching.

I smiled at the mirror. It was a small smile, soft, almost shy. The kind of smile a woman gives herself when no one is watching.

The mind-link tore open like a blade slipped between ribs.

*Sweet thing.*

Carolina's voice. Bright. Laughing. The way she laughed at brunch when she was about to say something cruel about someone we both knew.

*Did you really not know?*

I did not move. My hand was still at the pendant.

*Five years, Anna. He courted you to make me jealous. Your scent never moved him. Mine did.*

A pause. A breath. The smile of it, audible.

*Why do you think he's never marked you?*

The link snapped shut.

The candle on the vanity guttered. Somewhere far below, a violin began to tune. The silk against my skin was suddenly unbearable — too smooth, too cold, too white.

Behind me, on the woven rug by the bed, Luna lifted her small dark head. Our rescue pup. The one I had named without asking anyone. She stared past me at the closed chamber door and a low, certain growl rolled out of her chest.

I did not turn around. I could not turn around. If I turned around, I would have to look at her, and if I looked at her, I would have to understand what she had always known.

Five years.

I stood there until the violin found its note.

---

I do not remember deciding to leave.

I remember my hand on the side garden door. I remember the cold of the brass. I remember the ceremonial silk dragging through wet grass and not caring, not even a little, that my mother's stitches were soaking through with dew.

I walked. The pack hall noise thinned behind me — the laughter, the music, the warm yellow windows — until there was only the forest, and my own breath, and the soft scrape of silk over pine needles.

The trees closed around me. The moon was high and very white.

I did not cry. I have never been able to cry when other people might see, and the forest, somehow, felt like other people.

I was not aware of him until he was already there.

A tall figure stepped from the tree line ahead of me — not quickly, not threateningly. The way you might approach a deer you did not want to startle. He was in a dark long coat, the collar high against his jaw, and the moonlight caught something in his hair that was almost silver.

I should have been afraid. A strange werewolf, in the woods, in a ceremonial gown. I was not afraid. That was the first strange thing.

The second strange thing was the scent.

It was faint — barely there, as if he were holding it carefully back from me. White roses. And something underneath. Something I did not have a word for, something that struck the quiet, sleeping place behind my sternum where my wolf had lived in silence for fifteen years.

She stirred.

She had not stirred in fifteen years.

The stranger lifted his coat from his own shoulders without a word and settled it around mine. It was heavy and warm and smelled of him. He pressed something into my hand — a single white rose, the stem trimmed clean, no thorns.

I looked up at him. His eyes were dark and very still.

"You don't have to explain," he said.

That was all.

My fingers closed around the rose. When I looked up again — a heartbeat later, two — he was already gone. There was only the dark line of the trees, and the moon, and the coat around my shoulders, and my wolf, half-awake now, listening.

---

I walked back the way I had come.

The pack house was wrong. I knew it before I reached the door. The music had stopped. The yellow windows were too quiet. A Gamma was on the steps speaking in low, fast tones to two confused allied delegates, and when he saw me his face did something complicated and ashamed.

"Annabelle —" he started.

"Where is he," I said.

The Gamma swallowed. "The infirmary. Miss Ellis took a graze at training. Alpha — Alpha carried her down himself."

I walked past him.

The corridor to the infirmary was long and lit too bright. I stopped at the doorway. I did not go in. I did not need to.

Alex was there. My Alex. In his ceremonial whites, the cuffs already smeared red, his hand braced on the edge of the cot where Carolina lay propped on her elbow. The scratch on her forearm was shallow. I could see it from the doorway. It barely broke skin.

Alex was roaring.

"— no anticoagulant, Vera, do you hear me, she cannot tolerate it, the wolfsbane derivatives, the standard blend, you use the *western* blend, the one with yarrow and witch hazel, it closes her fastest, do you understand me —"

Vera Sinclair, our pack Healer, stood very still with her hands folded in front of her apron. She had treated me for fifteen years. Twisted ankles. A sprained wrist. A fever the winter I was twenty-two. She had never once heard Alex recite a single thing about what I could or could not be given.

He knew Carolina's wolfsbane sensitivity by heart.

He had never asked me what I was allergic to.

Vera's eyes lifted from her patient. They found mine across the bright hallway.

She did not speak. I did not speak. There was nothing in that look that needed words — only the long, quiet recognition of two women who had been watching the same thing from different angles for a very long time, and who were finally, in the same instant, seeing it whole.

I held her gaze for three seconds.

Then I turned, and I walked back to my quarters, the stranger's coat still around my shoulders and the white rose still in my hand.

I did not change out of the silk. I sat at my drafting table. I opened my largest sketchbook — the one with the deep green cover, the one full of moons and jasmine vines — and I pressed the rose carefully between two blank pages near the back.

It is only beautiful, I told myself.

It does not mean anything.

Luna jumped up onto the chair beside me and pressed her small warm body against my hip and did not move for the rest of the night.

I did not sleep.

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