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After My Alpha Left Me for His Sick Mistress Novel Cover

After My Alpha Left Me for His Sick Mistress

Elara’s world crumbles when her mate, Alpha Kaelen, deserts her to attend to his unwell mistress. Abandoned and isolated, she unearths a sinister layer of secrets regarding the woman's strange sickness and Kaelen’s actual intentions. As the truth surfaces, Elara faces a pivotal choice: reclaim her status in the pack or create her own future. This werewolf tale delves into deep betrayal and the dark schemes hidden inside a rigid wolf hierarchy.
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Chapter 1

The Ironcrest banquet hall glittered like something out of a magazine spread. Crystal chandeliers. White roses on every table. A long ribbon of candlelight running down the head table where I stood beside Alpha Julien Dunn in full Luna regalia — silver gown, pearl pins, the mating pendant at my throat heavy as a stone.

I had arranged every detail myself. The seating chart. The toast order. The honored placement of the visiting Beta from the Northpoint Pack — a man named Aldous who had worked with "S" through encrypted channels for two years and had no idea "S" was the woman currently smiling at him from across the room.

Three years I had been Baylee Lawson, contract Luna of Ironcrest. Three years I had stood at this man's side and signed pack treaties under another name in the dark.

My wolf stirred under my sternum. Quiet. Tired. One thought.

*Last night.*

Julien lifted his champagne glass. The hall hushed. He was beautiful in the way storms are beautiful — black tie, dark hair, the kind of face that made warriors drop their eyes. His Alpha aura pressed gently against the room out of habit, not effort.

"Tonight," he began, "the Ironcrest Pack honors—"

The doors slammed open.

A young warrior stumbled through, snow on his boots, panic on his face. "Alpha — it's Lexi. She collapsed at the gate. Her wolf — she says her wolf is failing again—"

I did not turn my head. I did not need to. I felt the change in the air beside me, the way Julien's whole body tilted toward the door before his mind caught up.

His champagne glass hit the table. Not set down. Dropped. Crystal rang against wood, and a thin line of gold spilled across the linen.

He did not look at me. He did not finish the sentence. He moved.

The hall watched him go. Two hundred pack members, three allied Betas, every elder of the Ironcrest bloodline — all of them watching their Alpha walk out of his own Mate Ceremony toward another woman in the snow.

Then, slowly, every head turned back to me.

I was still holding my glass.

Across the room, Beta Aldous met my eyes. He did not look surprised. He did not look pitying. He looked the way a man looks when a long suspicion has just confirmed itself in front of him. He inclined his head — a small, precise bow that no one else in the room understood.

*Hello, S,* his eyes said.

I inclined mine back.

Then I lifted my glass.

"On behalf of Alpha Dunn," I said, in the same warm Luna voice I had practiced for three years, "and the Ironcrest Pack — we welcome our allies, our elders, and our warriors to the Winter Mate Ceremony. May the Moon Goddess bless every bond formed under her light tonight."

My voice did not shake. My smile did not slip. I had hosted this hall through fire drills and rogue scares and one minor poisoning. I could host it through this.

"To Ironcrest," I said.

"To Ironcrest," the hall echoed, ragged, uncertain, and then steadier as my composure pulled them back into shape.

I drank. I sat.

Near the back of the hall, Cole Ashby — Gamma commander, six-foot-four, scarred jaw, the kind of warrior who had never once in three years lowered his eyes for me out of mere protocol — was looking at me. His unit sat around him in a loose half-circle, and not one of them was watching the door Julien had walked through. They were all watching me.

It was not pity. I knew pity. I had received pity from Lexi's allies in soft, sugared doses for three years, and this was not that.

It was acknowledgment.

Cole did not look away until I had set my glass down. Then, very slightly, he nodded.

I felt something in my chest — not warmth, not yet, but the place where warmth might one day live again — note the moment and file it away.

Through the tall windows behind the head table, I could see them. Julien crouched in the snow with his coat thrown around Lexi's shoulders, his hand splayed wide across her back, his head bent close to hers. She was trembling beautifully. She had refined that tremble over years. I had watched her practice it once, three winters ago, in a hallway mirror when she thought she was alone.

She was murmuring his name. I could see the shape of it on her lips even through the glass. *Julien. Julien.* Never *Alpha*. Always the name, always the intimacy above hierarchy.

I looked for exactly four seconds.

Then I turned back to Beta Aldous and asked him about the trade routes through the northern corridor, and I did not look at the window again.

---

The ceremony ended at eleven-forty. I shook every hand. I thanked every elder. I kissed the cheek of the Northpoint Beta's wife and complimented her brooch. I performed the final Luna duty of my contract with the same precision I had performed the first.

Julien did not come back inside.

At eleven-fifty-six, I excused myself.

The corridor to his study was lit by a single sconce. My heels were silent on the runner. I had walked this hallway a thousand times — bringing him post-shift tonics, leaving treaty drafts on his desk for him to sign without reading, pretending I had not been the one to write them.

I pushed the study door open.

The room smelled like him. Cedar, leather, the faint trace of the cologne he wore for formal nights. His desk was exactly as I had last arranged it. Three pens, aligned. A folder of correspondence I had drafted that morning, awaiting his signature.

I walked to the desk.

I reached up and unclasped the mating pendant from my throat. The chain was warm from my skin. I set it down on the leather blotter, dead center, where he could not miss it.

From my coat pocket I took two things.

The first was a sealed envelope. Cream paper. My handwriting on the front: *Alpha Julien Dunn.* Inside, the Rejection Letter, drafted in clean black ink three weeks ago and rewritten twice for precision.

The second was a bound folder, navy blue, gold lettering on the spine.

*Alpha Dunn — User Manual.*

Three hundred and twelve pages. Every herbal tonic. Every hunting route. Every mood his wolf cycled through after a full moon. Every warrior who needed a private word after a hard training session. Every alliance protocol. Every ward anchor location. Every small, invisible thing I had done for three years that he had never noticed because notice would have required looking.

I laid it beside the pendant. I squared the edges.

The clock on his mantel struck midnight.

I drew a breath.

"I, Baylee Lawson," I said to the empty room, "contract Luna of the Ironcrest Pack — reject you, Julien Dunn, Alpha of the Ironcrest Pack, as my mate. By bond. And by choice."

The pain hit.

It was not the sharp shatter I had been warned about. It was slower. A blade drawn through my chest in one long, deliberate stroke — sternum to spine — and my wolf, who had been quiet all evening, let out a single low sound inside me and then went still.

I did not cry. I had never cried in front of another person, and I was not going to start by crying in front of his furniture.

I picked up my coat from the chair where I had left it. I walked out of the study. I walked down the corridor and through the side door and across the gravel drive to where a black car was already idling at the gate, headlights low.

The driver opened the door. I got in.

As we crossed the territorial line — the moment my tires touched the road that ran into the land I had quietly bought and warded and named *Silvermoon* two years ago — I closed my eyes and opened the private mind-link channel only one person on the East Coast had access to.

*S to all anchors,* I sent. *Authorization Lawson-Midnight. Revoke.*

One by one, across a network Julien Dunn had never known existed, the wards I had spent three years weaving into Ironcrest's bones began to unravel.

I did not look back at the pack house.

I had already looked enough.

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