
My Mate Defended Her After She Killed Our Pup
Chapter 2
I waited until after ten.
Jaden came to bed late most nights — training rotations, pack business, whatever reason he gave himself to stay out of a room that still smelled like grief. I had learned to stop reading meaning into it. Tonight I needed him present, so I sat in the chair by his desk with the two documents face-up under the lamp and I waited.
When he pushed open the door, still in his training jacket, he registered my posture before he registered my face. His steps slowed.
"Maeve." Not a greeting. A warning flag.
"Sit down," I said. "Please."
He didn't sit. He crossed to the desk, glanced at the papers, looked back at me. The cedar-and-rain scent of him moved through the room and the mate bond responded the way it always did — a pull in my sternum, low and involuntary, like something reaching for its anchor. I pressed my thumb into the inside of my wrist.
"These are two records from my own file," I said. "Look at the dates. Look at the numbers."
He looked down. I watched his eyes track across both pages. The original bloodwork first — the outside lab, the timestamp, the fetal heartbeat documented at 168 beats per minute. Then Estella's filed report. *No fetal heartbeat detected.* A different date. Different data. The same careful handwriting.
The room was very quiet.
"These cannot both be true," I said. My voice was steady. I had practiced this too — not the argument, not the anger, just the facts laid bare. "Our pup had a heartbeat. A strong one. Estella's report says otherwise. One of these papers is a lie, Jaden, and only one person had access to both."
He was still looking at the desk. I couldn't read his face from where I sat.
"I know what you're going to say." I stood up. "That I'm grieving. That I need someone to blame. I thought that too, for about ten minutes, and then I looked at the timestamps and realized grief doesn't change laboratory data." I moved to stand on the other side of the desk, close enough that the mate bond thickened the air between us. "I am asking you — as my mate, as the father of that pup — to look at what is in front of you and choose us."
For a moment I thought he was going to.
His jaw worked. His hand rested on the edge of the desk, close to the papers, not quite touching them. The signet ring on his right hand caught the lamplight.
Then he straightened.
And the Alpha tone came down on me like a ceiling collapsing.
It wasn't a shout. It never is. It was something lower and worse — a frequency that bypassed hearing and went straight into the marrow, the part of every pack wolf that is wired, from birth, to yield. Sable slammed into the back of my skull and was shoved down, her growl cut off mid-breath, her legs folding under her whether she willed it or not.
My knees nearly buckled. I caught the desk with both hands.
"You will not slander Estella," Jaden said, "because you need someone to blame for your body's failure."
I looked up at him. The cedar-and-rain scent was everywhere — my mate, the bond the Moon Goddess built, the man I had pressed my hand against my stomach for and whispered *hold on, I will protect you.*
"You will not speak of this again."
He picked up both documents, folded them, and set them on the corner of the desk as if they were invoices he'd deal with in the morning.
Then he went to the bathroom and closed the door.
I stood there with my hands flat on the desk and the Alpha tone still ringing in my bones, and I felt something inside my chest go very quiet. Not broken. Not screaming. Quiet in the way that things go quiet after a decision has already been made and the body just hasn't caught up yet.
Sable didn't howl. She had gone still again — that particular, purposeful stillness she'd found in the records room. Watchful. Cold.
*Now we know,* she said.
I picked up both documents, put them back inside my journal, and went to sit by the window until morning.
---
Four days later I went back to the medical wing.
I told myself it was a recovery check. I had notes prepared — fatigue, some cramping, reasonable questions a convalescing Luna might bring to her healer. The junior healer was on intake. I signed in with my Luna's signature, got directed to the recovery corridor, and waited until she was occupied with another patient before I turned the other direction.
I was three doors from Estella's private office when I heard Jaden's voice.
I stopped.
Not the Alpha tone — just his voice, lower than usual, the particular register he used when he wasn't performing leadership for anyone. Through the half-open door came the sound of paper rustling, something set on a surface, Estella's soft laugh.
I stepped close to the frame.
Jaden was setting a box on Estella's desk — imported, ribbon-tied, the kind of thing he sourced from a specialty supplier three territories over. I recognized the packaging. He had brought me a box in our second month as mates, back when he was still trying. I had kept the ribbon for weeks.
Estella's hand went to his forearm. That same small touch — fingers resting just below his elbow, the proprietary ease of it, the touch she had been placing there since before I arrived in Silvercrest and that Jaden had never once moved.
I pushed the door open.
Both of them turned. Estella's expression shifted in sequence: surprise, then something softer, then the particular arrangement of her features that I was beginning to recognize as her performance of guileless confusion.
"Luna." She stepped back from the desk. "I didn't know you had an appointment today."
"I don't." I looked at Jaden. "What is this?"
His jaw tightened. Not guilt — I would have understood guilt. This was irritation. The look of a man managing a problem.
"I was checking on a pack member," he said. Flat. Closed.
"With imported treats from Delacroix's."
"Maeve." The warning in his voice was different from the Alpha tone but aimed at the same place. "Don't do this."
Estella touched the edge of the box gently, like she might offer to put it away. "Luna, you've been through something devastating," she said, her voice dropping to that careful healer's register. "It's completely understandable that you're — "
"Don't," I said.
She blinked. As if the word had surprised her by having an edge.
"Maeve." Jaden took a step toward me. "You're making a scene over nothing. You're not well. Go back to the recovery room and I'll be there in twenty minutes."
I looked at him for a long moment. Cedar and rain. The mate bond pulling, quiet and insistent, the way water pulls at the edge of things.
Then I looked at Estella's hand on the box his money had paid for, and at the timestamp I already had photographed in my journal, and at the fetal heartbeat that no longer had a body to live in.
"Of course," I said.
I turned and walked back down the corridor. Unhurried. Head level. The junior healer glanced up and I gave her the Luna's smile — the smooth one, the one that meant nothing at all.
Behind me, through the door I hadn't bothered to close, I heard Estella's voice, low and shaped like compassion.
*She's really not doing well, Jaden.*
I kept walking.
Sable had gone very, very still again. And somewhere in the weight of that stillness, in the cold, clarifying quiet that had replaced the part of me that used to press its thumb against its wrist and hope — something that had been building for four days sharpened into a shape I finally recognized.
Not grief. Not rage.
Strategy.
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