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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 5

The neutral territory smells like dust and adrenaline and too many wolves in one place.

I can feel the weight of it the moment we arrive — the gathered packs, the council members seated in their elevated boxes, the arena floor stretched out below like a stage waiting for blood. The Fall Pack Training Championship is not subtle. It is designed to be spectacle, and every Alpha here knows it.

Moonveil's warriors file in behind me, silent and focused. I can feel their tension through the pack link, the way they are holding themselves ready. Aidan is at my right shoulder, exactly where a Beta should be, his expression unreadable.

Then I see them.

Declan and Emerson enter from the opposite side of the arena, flanked by Hollowfang warriors. Declan is wearing new colors — Hollowfang's dark green and silver — and he is walking like he owns the ground beneath his feet. Emerson is draped on his arm, her head tilted just so, her smile sharp and performative.

They cross the arena floor toward us.

I do not move. I simply watch.

Declan's eyes find mine, and for a second, I see something flicker there — uncertainty, maybe, or the ghost of whatever he thought were. Then it hardens into something uglier. He adjusts his trajectory, angling directly toward my warriors, his shoulders squared, his stride deliberate.

He is trying to intimidate them.

Before I can even consider stepping forward, Aidan moves.

He doesn't rush. He doesn't make a show of it. He simply steps into Declan's path and stops, his arms loose at his sides, his gaze flat and cold entirely without expression.

Declan pulls up short.

For a moment, they just stand there, two feet apart, staring at each other. The arena noise dims. I can feel the attention of every wolf in the space narrowing to this single point.

Aidan doesn't say a word. He doesn't need to. His eyes are dead calm, the kind of calm that comes right before violence, and Declan — Declan, who has spent his entire life being the biggest presence in any room — takes a step back.

Then another.

Emerson tugs at his arm, her voice too bright, too loud. "Come on, babe, they're not worth it."

Declan lets her pull him away, but I see the way his jaw tightens, the way his hands curl into fists at his sides.

Aidan watches him go. Then he turns and walks back to my side without a word.

I don't say anything either. But something in my chest loosens, just slightly.

---

The first bouts are standard. Moonveil holds its ground. Hollowfang does the same. The council watches from their boxes, making notes, their faces carefully neutral.

I am backstage in the VIP council area, reviewing the next rotation with two of my senior warriors, when I hear the comotion.

A high, sharp cry. The sound of something clattering. Voices rising in alarm.

I step out into the corridor and see a crowd gathering near the equipment staging area. At the center of it, Emerson Shaw is on the ground, clutching her ankle, her face twisted in pain. Declan is crouched beside her, his hands hovering over her leg, his expression frantic.

"She tripped," someone is saying. "Over the equipment—"

"No." Emerson's voice cuts through, loud and trembling. "Someone pushed me. One of the Moonveil warriors — I saw them—"

I go very still.

Declan's head snaps up. His eyes find mine across the corridor, and what I see there is not grief or concern. It is rage, pure and unfiltered, the kind that has been waiting for an excuse.

He stands. "Your pack did this."

"No one touched her," I say evenly.

"She's lying on the ground, Louisa." His voice is rising now, drawing more attention. "She's hurt, and you're going to stand there and—"

"I'm going to stand here and tell you that no one from Moonveil was anywhere near her." I keep my tone flat, factual. "If she tripped, that's unfortunate. But it's not our responsibility."

Emerson lets out a small, choked sob. It is perfectly timed.

Declan's hands curl into fists.

Before he can say anything else, a new voice cuts in — low, rough, and far too close.

"Seems like your pack has a problem with accountability, Nelson."

I turn.

Rowan Hale is standing three feet away, his arms crossed, his expression dark. He is a big man, broad-shouldered and blunt-featured, and he is looking at me like I am something he would very much like to break.

"My pack," I say carefully, "has no problem at all."

"Really." He takes a step closer. "Because from where I'm standing, it looks like you've lost control. Lost your Beta. Lost your reputation. And now your warriors are out here attackingOmegas."

"No one attacked anyone."

"You calling her a liar?" Another step. He is in my space now, close enough that I can smell the aggression rolling off him in waves.

I do not back up. "I'm saying your new pack members are making accusations they can't support."

Rowan's eyes narrow. Then, before I can react, he moves — fast, brutal — and shoves me hard against the wall behind me.

The impact knocks the air out of my lungs. My shoulders hit stone, and for a second, the world tilts.

"You want to call me a liar too?" Rowan's voice is a snarl now, his face inches from mine. "I'll slaughter every one of your warriors in that arena, Nelson. I'll make sure the council sees exactly what Moonveil is worth without—"

He doesn't finish.

Because Aidan is there.

I don't even see him move. One second Rowan is in my face, and the next, Aidan is between us, his hand locked around Rowan's wrist, his body angled like a blade. His eyes are glowing — bright, molten gold — and the sound coming from his chest is not human.

It is a growl. Low, lethal, and absolutely uncontrolled.

"Touch her again," Aidan says, his voice barely recognizable, "and I will tear your throat out."

The corridor goes silent.

Rowan stares at him, his face going pale. The council members in the nearby boxes have turned to watch, their expressions sharp with attention.

Aidan doesn't let go. His grip tightens, and I see Rowan wince.

"Aidan," I say quietly.

He doesn't move. His eyes are still locked on Rowan, his wolf so close to the surface that I can feel the heat of it from where I stand.

"Aidan," I say again, and this time I put hand on his shoulder.

He blinks. The glow fades, just slightly. His grip loosens, and Rowan jerks his arm back, stumbling a step away.

Aidan turns to me, his breathing still uneven, his gaze searching mine for something I don't have words for.

I nod once. Just once.

He steps back, but he doesn't go far. He stays between me and Rowan, his posture still coiled, still ready.

Rowan looks between us, his face twisted with something that might be anger or might be fear. Then he spits on the ground and walks away, Declan and Emerson trailing behind him.

The corridor is still silent.

I look at Aidan. He is staring at the place where Rowan was standing, his hands still trembling slightly.

"Thank you," I say quietly.

He doesn't answer. He just looks at me, and the expression on his face is so raw, so unguarded, that I have to look away.

Because I know what it means.

And I am not ready.

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