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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 4

Emerson's campaign starts quietly.

I don't notice it at first — not until Sera mentions, almost offhand, that the Alpha of Ridgecrest Pack sent his regrets for the upcoming championship. Something about scheduling conflicts. Then the Alpha of Pinewood does the same. Then Silverfang.

Three withdrawals in two days.

I am in my office when the first gift arrives. A bottle of imported wine, expensive enough to make a statement, with a card that reads: *To Alpha Nelson, with sympathies for your recent difficulties. May you find the strength to lead through such trying times.* No signature. The return address traces back to a neutral courier service that could have been hired by anyone.

The second gift is a floral arrangement so large it barely fits through the door. The card is more direct: *Wishing you clarity and peace as you navigate your pack's transition.*

I don't need to guess who is behind this.

By the third day, I hear the rumors. They filter back through the pack mind link, through warriors who have cousins in other territories, through traders at the border markets. Whispers about Moonveil's Alpha losing her grip. About instability. About a pack in decline, held together by a woman too proud to admit she's unraveling.

Emerson Shaw is good at this. I'll give her that.

I burn the cards and donate the gifts to the pack's community hall. I do not respond. I do not dignify any of it with acknowledgment. But I feel it — the slow tightening of isolation, the careful architecture of a woman who understands that power is as much about perception as it is about strength.

She is trying to make me look weak before the championship even begins.

I make a note to remember that.

---

Margaret Payne finds me in the gardens on a Thursday afternoon.

I am inspecting the eastern herb beds — Sera needs more valerian root for the infirmary stock — when I hear footsteps on the gravel path behind me. I know who it is before I turn. There is a particular hesitance to the approach, a rhythm that suggests someone who is not sure they should be here.

Margaret is a small woman, slight in the way of people who have spent their lives making themselves smaller. Her hair is streaked with gray now, pulled back in a braid that has come slightly loose. Her hands are clasped in front of her, and her eyes are red.

She has been crying.

"Alpha," she says, and her voice breaks on the word.

I straighten. I do not move toward her. "Margaret."

"Please." She takes a step forward, and I see her hands trembling. "Please, I know I have no right to ask, but — Declan is my son. He made a mistake. A terrible mistake. But he's still my son, and I—" Her voice cracks entirely. She presses a hand to her mouth, trying to hold herself together, and fails. "You saved my life. Ten years ago, when the fever came through, you used your healing gift on me when no one else could. I wouldn't be standing here if it weren't for you."

I remember. I remember the fever, the way it moved through the pack like a wildfire, the way Margaret's pulse had gone thin and thready under my hands. I remember the exhaustion that came after, the way my wolf had curled up inside me for two days to recover.

I also remember that I did not do it for leverage.

"Margaret," I say quietly. "I'm glad you're alive. I would make the same choice again."

"Then please—" She steps closer, her voice rising with desperation. "Please forgive him. Let him come home. He's lost without the pack. Without you. I know he hurt you, I know he was wrong, but he's paying for it now, and I just — I can't watch him destroy himself."

I look at her for a long moment. I see the mother in her, the woman who would beg on her knees if she thought it would bring her son back. I see the debt she thinks I owe her, the life I saved that she believes should count for something now.

I feel nothing but a distant, tired kind of sadness.

"Declan made his choices," I say. "He rejected the mate bond. He left the pack. He aligned himself with Hollowfang and challenged us publicly. Those were his decisions, Margaret. Not mine."

"But you could take him back," she says, and now she is crying openly, her voice breaking into something raw and pleading. "You're the Alpha. You could forgive him. You could—"

"No," I say.

The word lands between us like a stone.

Margaret stares at me. Her mouth opens, closes. She looks like I have struck her.

"I saved your life because it was the right thing to do," I say. "Not because I wanted you to owe me. And I will not take Declan back because you think that debt is something you can spend."

She takes a step back. Her face crumples.

I do not soften. I cannot afford to.

"I'm sorry," I say, and I mean it. "But this is not something I can fix for you."

I turn and walk back toward the pack house, leaving her standing alone in the garden.

I do not look back.

---

I find Aidan just past midnight.

I am not looking for him. I am walking the grounds because I cannot sleep, because the conversation with Margaret is still sitting in my chest like a stone, because sometimes the only thing that helps is moving.

The training yard is empty except for him.

He is in the center ring, shirtless, moving through a combat sequence with the kind of focus that makes the rest of the world irrelevant. His skin is slick with sweat, his breathing controlled, every strike precise and deliberate. He is not training form. He is training like he is trying to break something.

I stop at the edge of the ring and watch.

He doesn't notice me at first. He finishes the sequence, resets, starts again. It is only when he pauses to catch his breath that he looks up and sees me standing there.

He goes still.

For a moment, neither of us speaks.

Then he crosses the ring and stops a few feet away, his chest still rising and falling with exertion, his dark eyes fixed on mine.

"I'm going to win it," he says.

I blink. "What?"

"The championship." His voice is low, steady absolutely certain. "I'm going to win the trophy. For you."

I stare at him.

He doesn't look away. There is something in his gaze — something intense and unwavering and entirely without hesitation — that makes my wolf stir for the first time in years. Not the restless, anxious stiring I have learned to ignore. Something else. Something that feels like recognition.

I don't know what to say.

Aidan doesn't wait for me to figure it out. He just holds my gaze for one more second, then turns and goes back to the center of the ring.

I stand there, watching him move, and feel something shift inside me that I am not ready to name.

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