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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 3

The letter arrives on a Tuesday.

It comes through official channels — a formal pack missive, sealed with Hollowfang's new crest, addressed to the Alpha of Moonveil. Rowan Hale's signature is at the bottom, but the language is Declan's. I can hear his voice in every sentence.

He challenges us to the Fall Pack Training Championship. Standard enough. What is not standard is the paragraph in the middle, the one that reads like a speech he has been rehearsing in a mirror.

*The Moonveil Pack's recent record speaks for itself. Without the strength and leadership of its former Beta, what remains is a diminished force held together by sentiment and a title. We look forward to demonstrating, before the full council of eastern packs, precisely what Moonveil is worth without the man who made it competitive.*

I read it twice. Then I fold it, set it on my desk, and go find Aidan.

He is in the training yard, running drills with a group of junior warriors. I stand at the fence and watch him for a moment before he notices me. He moves through the corrections with the same economy he brings to everything — a hand on a shoulder here, a single word there, nothing wasted. The junior warriors are paying attention in the way people pay attention when they are slightly afraid of disappointing someone.

When he sees me, he crosses the yard without being called.

I hand him the letter.

He reads it. His expression doesn't change. He folds it along the same crease I made and hands it back.

"When do we start?" he says.

That is when I know we are going to be fine.

---

We start the next morning.

The weeks that follow are the hardest training cycle Moonveil has run in three years. I push everyone — the warriors, the scouts, the combat pairs, myself. I am on the field at dawn and in my office until well past midnight, and the hours in between are filled with the particular exhaustion that comes not just from the body but from the constant, grinding work of strategy. Declan spent five years inside our formations. He knows our patterns. Which means we have to build new ones.

Aidan is everywhere I need him to be. He does not complain. He does not ask how I am holding up. He simply works, and the pack works harder because he does.

It is on a Thursday night, late — past midnight, maybe closer to one — that it happens.

The rest of the strategy team has filtered out over the last hour. Sera left first, with a look over her shoulder that I chose not to interpret. The senior warriors went next, one by one, until it is just me and Aidan and the map spread across my desk and the cold dregs of a coffee I stopped tasting an hour ago.

I am staring at the eastern formation grid. I know the answer is in there somewhere. I can feel it the way you can feel a word sitting at the edge of your tongue — present, almost reachable, refusing to come.

I hear Aidan move behind me. The small sounds of the office: the kettle, a cabinet, the quiet clink of ceramic. I do not look up.

A cup appears at the edge of the map. Black coffee, fresh. Steam rising in a slow curl.

I look at it for a second. Then I reach for it.

"Thank you," I say.

He doesn't answer. I hear him settle back into his chair across the desk.

I drink the coffee and go back to the grid. The room is quiet in the particular way that late nights get quiet — not empty, just settled. I am aware of him the way you become aware of a steady sound only when you stop expecting it to stop.

I don't know when the exhaustion finally catches up to me. I am reaching for a marker to adjust the eastern flank line and then I am not, exactly — I am still upright, still technically present, but the map has gone slightly soft at the edges and my hand has stopped moving.

Then something settles over my shoulders.

Warm. Substantial. The smell of it reaches me before I fully understand what it is — something clean and grounded, pine and cold air and something underneath that I don't have a word for.

His jacket.

I go very still.

Aidan is already back in his chair when I look up. He is studying the formation grid with the same calm expression he always wears, as though he has done nothing, as though the jacket on my shoulders is simply a fact of the room that requires no acknowledgment.

I should say something. I am the Alpha. I do not wear other people's jackets. I do not sit in late-night offices going soft at the edges while my Beta watches without comment.

I say nothing.

I pull the jacket slightly closer and look back down at the map.

And I think, with a clarity that has no business arriving at one in the morning: he has been doing this for years. Not this exactly. But this. Showing up in the exact shape of what is needed, without being asked, without making it a thing that requires anything from me.

I don't know what to do with that.

I'm not sure I'm ready to find out.

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