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When My Alpha Chose His Mistress Over Me Novel Cover

When My Alpha Chose His Mistress Over Me

I woke at two in the morning to an empty bed. Callum's side was cold. Not the kind of cold that comes from slipping out for a glass of water — the sheets had lost his warmth entirely, like he'd been gone for hours. I lay still for a moment, one hand resting on my belly, listening to the pack house breathe around me. Seven months along, and sleep had already become a negotiation. I told myself that was why I'd woken. I told myself a lot of things in those days. Then I caught his scent. It was faint in the room, but the thread of it pulled north, toward the clinic. And underneath the familiar cedar-and-smoke of him was something else — something sharp and urgent, the particular edge of Alpha pheromones that a male releases when he is protecting something he considers his.
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Chapter 3

I sent the first message to Sienna Voss on a Tuesday morning, while the pack house was loud with breakfast and no one was watching me.

I used the secure mind-link channel — the kind that leaves no scent trace, no paper trail, nothing a Beta could find if he went looking. I identified myself as Duncan. Not Luna. Not Rose Perry. Duncan, the way my father had always said it, like a door closing on something solid.

Sienna responded within the hour.

She didn't ask why. She didn't ask what had happened or how bad it was. She said: *I know the Duncan bloodline. Tell me what you need.*

That was all. Four words, and something in my chest loosened by exactly one degree.

Over the following week, we worked in writing. I passed her notes in my shorthand — the script that looks like nothing to anyone who hasn't been taught it — and she passed back clean legal language, precise and cold and exactly what I needed. Formal rejection procedure. The exact wording required by wolf law. The documentation framework that, once signed and witnessed, could not be undone by any Alpha tone or any mate bond or any Moon Goddess who had made a mistake.

I read every page three times.

I did not yet know when I would use them. I only knew I needed them ready, the way you need a door before you need to run.

I kept the correspondence under the loose board at the foot of my bed, tucked inside the journal, and I went to breakfast every morning and sat at the table and ate my food and said the right things to the right people, and no one looked at me twice.

That was the thing about being systematically diminished. After a while, people stopped expecting you to do anything surprising.

---

Callum came to my room on a Thursday evening.

He knocked. He had started knocking.

I was sitting in the chair by the window with my feet up on the footstool, one hand on my belly, a book open in my lap that I hadn't been reading. I said come in, and he did, and he stood in the middle of the room with a folder in his hand and the particular expression he wore when he had already decided something and was now performing the consultation.

"I have something I need you to look at," he said.

I held out my hand.

The document was four pages. It was titled, in clean formal type, *Temporary Separation of Luna Duties — Black Ridge Pack.* I read it the way Sienna had taught me to read things: slowly, from the bottom up, looking for what the language was doing underneath what it was saying.

What it was saying was: *Virginia will handle certain pack responsibilities during your late pregnancy, as a consideration for your condition.*

What it was doing was building a legal record that the Luna's duties had been formally transferred. A framework. A foundation. The kind of document you draft when you are planning something that needs to look like it happened gradually.

I read all four pages. I did not let my face change.

"This is thoughtful," I said.

Callum's shoulders dropped a fraction. He had been bracing for an argument. "It's only temporary. Until after the pup comes and you've recovered."

"Of course." I turned to the signature page. "Do you have a pen?"

He handed me one. I signed my name — Rose Duncan Perry, Luna of Black Ridge — in the clean, unhurried script I had practiced since I was twelve years old. I dated it. I handed the folder back.

He looked at me for a moment. Something moved behind his eyes that I couldn't quite name — relief, maybe, or something that wanted to be guilt but hadn't finished forming yet.

"Thank you," he said. "For being reasonable about this."

I smiled. "Good night, Callum."

He left.

I waited until his footsteps faded down the hall. Then I reached under the board at the foot of the bed and I took out Sienna's last letter, the one I had been waiting to act on, and I read the single line she had written at the bottom.

*The separation document grants you access to the pack's formal documentation process. Use it within seventy-two hours.*

I used it in forty-eight.

The rejection papers were complete and filed with Sienna's office by Saturday noon. Signed, witnessed by two Ashford Pack members whose names I would never need to say aloud, sealed under wolf law. Waiting.

I put the confirmation letter under the board with everything else. I replaced the rug. I went downstairs and helped with the afternoon meal, and I chopped onions until my eyes watered, and no one could tell the difference.

---

I found out about the naming ceremony from Eli.

He was the tall recruit I'd flagged in my training notes — the one who kept dropping his left guard. He was nineteen and earnest and had not yet learned to be careful about what he said in front of the Luna. He mentioned it while I was crossing the courtyard on Sunday morning, the way you mention something to someone you assume already knows.

"Big week coming up," he said. "The naming ceremony for the little one. Whole pack's invited. They're setting up the main hall."

I stopped walking.

"When?" I asked.

He told me. Friday evening. Five days away. A lavish event, he said, the way young warriors say things — openly, without calculation, because he had no reason to think the information would land the way it did.

I thanked him. I kept walking.

That night I lay in my diminished room with the lamp off and the window cracked and the cold air coming in off the northern hills, and I thought about Friday. About the whole pack gathered in the main hall. About the particular quality of a public moment — how it witnesses things, how it makes certain acts irreversible in a way that private ones are not.

My daughter kicked.

Not the soft, rolling movement I had grown used to — this was sharp and deliberate, a hard press against the inside of my ribs, like a fist against a door.

I put my hand over the spot.

And something stirred beneath my sternum that was not the mate bond. The mate bond I knew — I had lived inside it for two years, learned every frequency of its hum, every flicker and pull. This was different. Older. Quieter. Something that had been waiting in the dark at the bottom of me for a very long time, patient in the way that only things with no deadline can afford to be.

I pressed my palm flat against my sternum.

For the first time in two years, I wasn't trying to hold something steady.

I was feeling something wake up.

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