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My Mate Left Me for the Enemy Pack’s Omega Novel Cover

My Mate Left Me for the Enemy Pack’s Omega

I have stood at the head of this pack for seven years. Seven years of early mornings and late nights, of border disputes settled before dawn, of warriors trained until they bled and healers stretched past their limits. Seven years of carrying the Moonveil Pack on my back without once letting my knees buckle. I know what it means to lead. I know what it costs. I am Louisa Nelson, Alpha of the Moonveil Pack, and I have never once broken in front of my people. Tonight will not be the first time. The bonfire is at full height when I hear the disruption at the tree line. I am mid-address, standing on the raised platform at the center of the gathering ground, when the murmur moves through the crowd like a current. Heads turn.
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Chapter 2

By morning, Declan is gone.

I know because the pack mind link goes quiet in the place where he used to be — not silent exactly, but hollow, the way a room feels after furniture has been moved out. I stand at the eastern window of the pack house and drink my coffee and feel the shape of that absence. It is smaller than I expected.

Sera tells me later that he left before dawn. That Emerson was already waiting at the border with two bags and a car she had apparently arranged in advance. That Declan walked out of Moonveil territory without looking back once.

I am not surprised. He always did know how to make an exit.

What I learn by midday is where he went. Hollowfang Pack. Rowan Hale's territory, forty miles northeast, a pack that has been circling Moonveil's eastern border like a dog waiting for a fence to come down. Rowan is not subtle about his ambitions, and he is not stupid about opportunity. A disgraced Beta with five years of Moonveil's combat strategies in his head and a grudge the size of his ego — of course Rowan opened the door.

I file that information away and say nothing. There will be a time for it. That time is not today.

Today, I have a new Beta to install.

---

The training ring is already crowded when I arrive. Word travels fast in a pack, and the word this morning is that Aidan Rogers — a Delta, a quiet one, a man most of the senior warriors have spent years looking past — is now the second-highest rank in Moonveil. I can feel the skepticism before I even reach the ring. It sits in the air like humidity.

Aidan is already inside, standing at the center with his arms loose at his sides, wearing the same expression he always wears: patient, unreadable, slightly bored. He has not changed anything about himself to mark the promotion. No new posture, no performance. He is simply there, the way he is always simply there.

The challenge comes from Garrett Cole, a senior Delta who has been with the pack for eleven years and has the kind of seniority that makes some men mistake longevity for rank. He steps into the ring with his chest out and his voice carrying.

"No offense to the Alpha," Garrett says, which is always how sentences begin when someone is about to give offense to the Alpha, "but a Beta leads warriors. And warriors follow someone who's earned it in the ring, not someone who was handed a blade at a bonfire."

A few murmurs. Not many. Enough.

Aidan looks at him for a moment. Then he says, very quietly, "Okay."

That's all. Just: okay.

What follows is not a long fight. That is the thing about watching Aidan move — it is never long. He doesn't waste motion. He doesn't perform. Garrett is bigger and louder and he telegraphs every strike with the confidence of a man who has won most of his fights, and Aidan simply isn't where Garrett expects him to be. Three exchanges. No shifting, no wolf form, just Aidan's hands and his footwork and that absolute, unhurried efficiency. Garrett goes down on the third, flat on his back, staring up at the sky with the expression of a man recalculating several things at once.

Aidan steps back. Doesn't offer a hand. Doesn't say anything.

The ring is very quiet.

Then, one by one, the senior warriors lower their eyes.

I watch from outside the ropes and feel something settle in my chest. Not pride exactly. Something quieter than that.

---

Sera finds me in the afternoon, in the small infirmary off the east corridor. I have a scrape along my forearm from the morning's border patrol — a branch, nothing worth mentioning — and she cleans it with the focused efficiency she brings to everything, her dark eyes moving over the wound with professional calm.

"You're not weakened," she says, without looking up.

"I know."

"Most wolves, after a rejection—" She pauses, selects a different cloth. "The aura dims. Sometimes for months."

"I know what happens after a rejection, Sera."

She is quiet for a moment. Her hands are steady and careful. "He wasn't really yours, was he."

It is not quite a question. I look at the far wall and say nothing, which is its own kind of answer.

Sera doesn't push. She never does. She finishes the bandage, smooths the edge down with her thumb, and then just sits with me in the silence the way she has always sat with me in silences — without filling them, without asking me to explain what lives inside them.

It is the most comfort I know how to accept.

"Thank you," I say finally.

She nods once, stands, and begins putting her supplies away. "The new Beta," she says, her back to me. "He didn't even blink out there."

"No," I agree. "He didn't."

She glances back at me over her shoulder, and there is something in her expression — careful, knowing, the look of a woman who has been watching longer than anyone realizes.

She doesn't say anything else.

Neither do I.

But I think about it for the rest of the day.

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