
My Alpha Saved His Mistress Instead of Me
Chapter 2
I didn't sleep that night.
I sat in the Luna's office—my office, for another few hours at least—with the documents spread across the desk like a hand of cards I'd been holding close for five years. The proprietary formula transfer. The territorial deed reclamation. The formal resignation of Luna status. And beneath them all, crisp and final: the mate rejection papers.
I'd had the pack's lawyer draft them months ago, back when I still told myself I'd never use them. Now I smoothed the pages flat with hands that didn't shake, and I waited for dawn.
Marcelo arrived at nine, Petra Voss trailing him like a sharp-eyed shadow. He walked into the financial office with the loose confidence of a man who'd never been told no, his shirt sleeves rolled to his elbows, his expression somewhere between annoyed and amused.
"Alaya." He said my name like he was indulging a child. "Petra said this was urgent."
I slid the first document across the desk. "Sign it."
He didn't even look down. "What is this?"
"My resignation as Luna. Effective immediately."
Petra's eyes narrowed. Marcelo laughed—a short, disbelieving sound. "You're joking."
"I'm not." I kept my voice level, unhurried. "The second document transfers the Mills Rose formula back to my name. The third reclaims my share of the northern territory I developed. The fourth—" I tapped the final page. "—is the formal mate rejection."
The amusement drained from his face. He picked up the formula transfer, scanned it, then looked at me like I'd just set the building on fire. "You can't do this."
"I already did. The council approved it last night."
That was a lie. The council didn't know yet. But they would by noon, and the documentation was airtight enough that their approval was a formality.
Petra stepped forward, her tone clipped. "Alaya, this is clearly an emotional reaction to yesterday's—"
"Yesterday's what?" I looked at her directly. "Say it."
She faltered. Marcelo's jaw tightened.
"I watched my mate save another woman while I drowned," I said, my voice still calm, still quiet. "Then I came home and watched him mark her in our hallway. If you think this is emotional, Petra, you've mistaken clarity for hysteria."
Marcelo slammed the document down. "You're jealous. That's what this is. Rosalina was pregnant and panicking—"
"And I was drowning." I stood, rounding the desk slowly. "You made a choice, Marcelo. I'm making mine."
He stared at me, and for the first time in five years, I watched him struggle to find the script. The Alpha authority, the smooth deflection—none of it was landing.
"You built this with me," he said finally, his tone shifting into something that might have been sincerity if I didn't know him better. "The formula, the gardens, the trade routes. You're throwing it all away because of one mistake?"
"It wasn't one mistake. It was five years of them." I picked up the rejection papers and held them out. "Sign it."
"No."
The word was flat, final. He crossed his arms, his Alpha aura flaring just enough to remind me—and Petra—who held the power in this room.
"I'm not signing anything," he said. "You're upset. I understand that. But you're my mate, Alaya. That bond doesn't just end because you're angry."
I looked at him for a long moment. Then I set the papers down, picked up my bag, and walked toward the door.
"Where are you going?" His voice sharpened.
"Somewhere you're not."
I left the pack house with one suitcase. Everything else—the gifts, the jewelry, the carefully curated life of a Luna—I left behind. Let him keep it. Let Rosalina wear it. I didn't want anything that smelled like him.
The neutral territory hotel was small, clean, and blessedly anonymous. I checked in under my maiden name, unpacked my essentials, and sat on the edge of the bed as the afternoon light slanted through the blinds.
Thirteen days left.
That evening, I went to Elden's.
It was a high-end restaurant on Silverfang Pack territory, the kind of place Marcelo had always dismissed as pretentious. I'd wanted to go for years. Now I had no reason not to.
I ordered the tasting menu and a glass of white wine, and I was halfway through a perfect raspberry tart when I smelled him.
Marcelo.
I didn't look up. I heard his voice at the host stand, heard Rosalina's soft laugh, and I kept my eyes on my dessert as they were seated three tables away.
He'd brought her here. On purpose. To make me see them together.
I took another bite of tart. It was excellent.
Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Rosalina lean into him, her hand resting on her belly. Marcelo's gaze kept drifting toward me, waiting for the reaction he'd choreographed in his head.
I signaled the waiter. "Could I see the dessert menu again?"
Then I felt it—the shift in the room's air, the way conversations quieted without anyone meaning to.
Eiden Russell was walking toward my table.
I'd seen him before, at territory meetings and pack summits. The Silverfang Alpha. Tall, composed, with the kind of stillness that made you forget he was there until he moved. He stopped beside my chair, holding a bottle of wine I recognized from the reserve list.
"Miss Mills." His voice was low, quiet. "I thought you might enjoy this. A 1947 Bordeaux. It pairs well with raspberry."
I looked up at him. His expression was unreadable, but his eyes weren't.
"Thank you," I said.
He set the bottle down, poured a glass himself, and then—without asking, without hesitation—he stayed.
Not sitting. Just standing there beside my table, a wall of silent, unyielding Alpha presence.
Across the room, Marcelo stood abruptly.
Eiden didn't even glance at him. But the air around us thickened, humming with a lethal, suffocating aura that made the nearby diners shift uncomfortably in their seats.
Marcelo took one step forward. Then stopped.
I watched him weigh it—his pride against Eiden's aura—and for the first time in five years, I watched Marcelo back down.
He sat. Slowly. His face tight with something I didn't bother naming.
Eiden's aura eased, just slightly. He looked down at me, and the faintest trace of something—concern, maybe, or permission—flickered across his face.
"Enjoy your evening, Miss Mills," he said.
Then he walked away, and I was left sitting there with a glass of 1947 Bordeaux and the taste of raspberry on my tongue.
I didn't look at Marcelo again.
You may also like





