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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 3

He came back four days after the Ceremony night.

Not to reschedule. Not to explain. He came back the way he always did when he had let something fester too long — with the particular energy of a man who had decided the problem was mine.

I was at my drafting table when he walked in. Luna was asleep on the chair beside me. She woke the instant the door opened, and her ears went flat, and she did not get up.

I kept my eyes on my screen.

"You've been avoiding me," Alex said.

"I've been working."

He moved into the room the way he always moved — like the space belonged to him, which, technically, it did. Pack-house quarters. Alpha's territory. I had never owned a single wall of it.

"Anna." His voice shifted. Not the practiced evenness from his morning-after visit. Something with more weight to it. "Talk to me."

I saved my file. Closed the laptop. Turned around.

He was standing near the window, and the afternoon light was behind him, and he looked exactly the way he had always looked — broad-shouldered, certain, the kind of man a room reorganizes itself around. I had loved that about him once. The solidity of him. I had mistaken it for safety.

"What would you like me to say?" I asked.

He ran a hand through his hair. That was the tell — the one gesture that cracked the composure. "You're angry about the Ceremony. I understand that. But a training injury, with her sensitivity—"

"I'm not angry," I said.

And I wasn't. That was the true thing. Whatever had lived behind my sternum for fifteen years — the hope, the patience, the careful tending of a love I thought was reciprocal — it had gone very quiet. It was not anger. It was something colder and cleaner than anger.

He looked at me for a long moment. The stillness in my face seemed to confuse him. He was used to my softness. He was used to the version of me that rushed to smooth things over before they fully broke.

"You doubt me," he said. His voice dropped into that low register — the one just above his Alpha tone, the one he used when he wanted to make me feel small without technically commanding me. "Like everyone else always has. Like my father did."

There it was.

I had heard this before. I knew every inflection of it. The slight roughening of his voice on *father*. The way he let the silence after it stretch, giving me time to feel guilty for whatever I had just said or not said or implied. It had worked for fifteen years. I had spent fifteen years rushing into that silence with apologies, with my hands on his arm, with *I don't doubt you, I trust you, I'm sorry, I didn't mean it that way.*

I said nothing.

Alex blinked.

The silence went on. I watched him wait for me to fill it. I watched him realize I wasn't going to. Something moved across his face — not quite unease, but the precursor to it, the moment before a man understands that the ground under him has shifted without his permission.

"I thought you were different," he said.

The words landed the way they were meant to. Heavy. Accusatory. The implication clear: *you have failed me the way everyone else has failed me.*

And I felt it — I want to be honest about that. I felt the old reflex kick hard, the fifteen-year muscle memory of *fix it, smooth it, be softer, be sorrier.* My throat tightened.

But I did not speak.

I held his gaze and I let the silence stand.

I don't think Alex had ever, in fifteen years, heard me be quiet like that. Not in the middle of one of his wounds. My silence had always been the kind that waited politely for him to finish. This was a different animal entirely, and somewhere beneath the surface of his composure, I think he knew it.

He left without resolution.

That had never happened before. He always left having gotten the apology, the softening, the confirmation that whatever he had done was understandable and forgiven and that I was still there, still his, still waiting. This time he pulled the door shut behind him and I heard his footsteps go down the corridor and I sat very still and did not move until they faded.

Luna climbed off her chair and pressed herself against my shins.

I put my hand on her back.

"I know," I said. Same as before. She wagged once, small and certain, and that was that.

---

I went to see Vera two days later.

I told myself it was the wrist. I had strained it three months ago — a minor thing, a stupid reach for a high shelf — and it had been taping on and off since. That was a real reason. A sensible reason. The kind of reason a person goes to the pack infirmary.

The infirmary was quiet in the early afternoon. Vera was alone, reorganizing her supply shelves with the focused, unhurried energy she brought to everything. She heard me come in and glanced over her shoulder and said, "Annabelle," in the tone of someone who had been expecting me.

She gestured to the examination table. I sat. She pulled her stool close and unwrapped the old tape from my wrist with steady, careful hands.

For a while neither of us said anything. The only sound was the soft tear of medical tape, the faint chemical smell of the infirmary's clean surfaces.

"How's the range of motion?" she asked.

"Fine. Better."

She nodded. Pressed two fingers gently along the inside of my wrist. I felt the mild warmth of her healing gift, that particular steadiness healers carry in their hands.

"Good," she said. "Another week of support and you can leave it off."

She began to re-tape. Her movements were precise. She kept her eyes on my wrist.

And then, almost to herself — the way you say something you have been holding for a long time and have simply run out of room to keep holding — she said:

"A healer memorizes everything about her pack. Every sensitivity, every allergy." A pause. The tape pulled smooth. "It's how we protect them."

She did not look up.

She did not say anything further.

I sat with that for a moment. The weight of it. The kindness of it, and also the sorrow — the particular sorrow of a woman who had watched something from the inside for a long time and had not been able to say so until now.

"Thank you, Vera," I said.

She pressed the last strip of tape flat and folded her hands in her lap and finally looked at me. Her eyes were steady. Not pitying. Just clear.

"Take care of that wrist," she said.

I walked back through the pack house corridor with my hands loose at my sides and the trunk under my bed already packed and the drive already in my bag, and I thought about what it meant to memorize someone. What it meant to know every sensitivity, every allergy, every small particular of a person's body and history and need.

Alex had never asked.

Not once. Not in fifteen years.

I touched the pendant at my throat, one last reflex, and then I lowered my hand deliberately, and I did not reach for it again.

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