
When My Alpha Punished Me for His Mistress’s Lies
Chapter 1
I should have knocked.
That thought came to me later — much later, when I was sitting on the floor of my room with my back against the door and my hands pressed flat against the cold wood, trying to remember how to breathe. I should have knocked. I should have waited. I should have done a hundred things differently.
But I didn't knock. I just opened the door.
The fresh change of clothes was folded over my arm — Kingsley's gray training shirt, the one he'd asked me to bring up before the afternoon session. A small thing. An errand. The kind of thing I'd been doing for months without being asked twice, without complaint, because that was what I did. That was what I had always done.
The office smelled like her before I even registered what I was seeing. That sharp, sweet perfume Stella Ortiz wore like a second skin — jasmine and something darker underneath, something that always made my wolf go quiet and low in my chest. I noticed the scent first. Then I noticed everything else.
They were at his desk.
I won't describe it in detail. I don't need to. What I will say is that Kingsley's hands were in her hair and her blouse was half-undone and neither of them heard me come in. Not at first.
But Stella saw me.
She looked right at me over his shoulder. Didn't flinch. Didn't pull away. Just held my gaze with those dark, steady eyes and let the corner of her mouth curve up — slow, deliberate, satisfied — like she had been waiting for exactly this moment. Like she had arranged it.
Maybe she had.
Kingsley turned when he felt her shift. He looked at me the way you look at something that has wandered into the wrong room. Not guilt. Not shame. Just cold, flat irritation.
He didn't move away from her.
The clothes slipped off my arm. I didn't pick them up.
I don't know how long I stood there. Long enough for something inside me to go very still — the part of me that had been holding on, that had been telling itself things would change, that the man who had pressed his forehead to mine five years ago and sworn on his life to protect me was still somewhere inside the Alpha staring back at me now. That part went quiet. And in the quiet, something else came forward. Something that had been waiting a long time.
"I want to reject the bond," I said.
My voice came out steadier than I expected. Stella's smile didn't waver.
Kingsley's expression shifted — not toward remorse, not toward anything I could have called human. His jaw tightened. His eyes went flat in a different way, the way they did right before he reached for his authority like a weapon.
"Excuse me?"
The Alpha tone hit me before I finished processing the words. It rolled out of him in a wave — heavy, suffocating, the kind of pressure that doesn't just push you down but makes your own wolf turn against you. My knees buckled. I caught myself on the doorframe, but only barely, and then I was on the floor anyway, one hand braced against the wood, the scar on my palm burning the way it always did when I was under stress.
He didn't raise his voice. He didn't need to.
"Your wolf can barely hold a shift," he said, looking down at me from behind his desk, Stella still half-draped against him like she belonged there. "And you think you're in a position to make demands? This is what you do when you want attention, Mackenzie. You make a scene."
Stella touched his arm. A small gesture. Gentle. Proprietary.
"Let her go, King," she said softly, like she was being generous. "She's upset."
The pressure lifted just enough for me to breathe. I got to my feet. I didn't look at either of them again.
I walked back to my room. I locked the door. I sat down on the floor.
For a while I just pressed my hands against the wood and let myself feel it — all of it, the full weight of what I had just watched, what he had just done, what I had just understood with a clarity I couldn't unfeel. The mate bond ached in my chest like a bruise being pressed. My wolf was silent. Not gone — just done.
We were both done.
I reached for the mind link before I'd fully decided to. My mother's presence came through immediately, warm and steady and unsurprised, like she had been waiting by an open door.
I need to leave, I told her. I need to leave now.
A pause. Then: I know, baby. I've already started making calls.
I closed my eyes and pressed my thumb against the scar on my palm.
Somewhere in Los Angeles, a man I had never met was about to get on a plane to Seattle.
I just had to stay alive long enough for him to arrive.
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