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After My Mate Marked His Best Friend’s Widow Novel Cover

After My Mate Marked His Best Friend’s Widow

Elara’s mating night turns into a nightmare when Alpha Silas, her fated partner, marks his best friend’s widow instead. Claiming the act is a solemn duty to his fallen comrade, Silas leaves Elara’s soul bond broken and her heart shattered. Trapped in their pack house, she must endure the public shame of his betrayal. Amidst shifting loyalties and rigid laws, Elara fights to reclaim her dignity and survive the agony of a fractured connection.
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Chapter 3

Madeleine's perfume was everywhere by nightfall.

I noticed it first in the hallway — that heavy floral scent drifting out from under the Beta's door like smoke from a fire already burning. Then in the kitchen, where her bag sat open on the counter I had scrubbed three days ago. Then, faintly but unmistakably, in the air of the narrow guest room where I sat on the edge of a too-small bed and stared at the stack of my medical texts piled against the wall.

Someone had moved them from the hallway at least. I didn't ask who.

Through the wall, I could hear the low murmur of voices — Rhett's, and then hers, soft and satisfied — and the particular quiet that settles over a room when two people are comfortable in it. I pressed my back straight and looked at the stack of books. My mother's handwriting was on the spine of the top one, her name inked small in the corner the way she had marked everything she owned.

Sable was silent inside me. Not the weeping silence of the night before. Something older than weeping. The silence of a thing that has finished.

I got up. I opened the wardrobe.

At the back, under the folded winter blanket I had brought from the Beta's room, was the box. I had put it there years ago — our mating gifts, the photographs, the bonding tokens. The dried flowers from the ceremony. The note Rhett had written me the first winter he was posted at the border, two lines in his cramped handwriting: *Still thinking of your stew. Still thinking of you.* I had kept that note in the box for five years. I had read it when the waiting got long.

I carried the whole box downstairs in one trip.

The backyard fire pit was cold and clean — I had emptied it last week, the way I did every month. I set the box beside it and knelt in the grass and began to arrange the contents the way I arranged a treatment tray: methodically, without hurry. The photographs first, face down. Then the dried flowers, crumbling now at the edges. The note last, folded in thirds the way he had sent it.

I struck the match.

The paper caught fast. The photographs took longer, curling at the corners before the images finally went. I watched them go without looking away. Sable watched with me — still, present, bearing witness in the way she had always been better at than I was.

Eight years. They made less ash than I expected.

I stayed until the last ember went dark. Then I went inside, washed my hands at the kitchen sink, and went to bed.

---

The days that followed had a particular quality I recognized from medical training — the way a wound looks clean right before it turns. Everything on the surface was orderly. Civil. Almost polite.

Madeleine took my seat at the family table the first morning without comment or acknowledgment. Just sat down in it the way water fills the lowest available space. I moved to the chair by the window. No one said anything. Rhett was reading his phone.

Two days later, she leaned across the Luna's tea service and said, in that soft, considering voice she had, 'I've been thinking about the sitting room. The curtains are a bit heavy for this season, don't you think? I wonder if we might freshen things up.' She looked at the Luna. Not at me.

The Luna made an agreeable sound.

I was standing three feet away, holding the household accounts ledger. The curtains had been my choice, four years ago. I had saved two months of household budget to buy them.

I wrote *curtains* in the margin of the ledger and kept my face still.

The morning tea instruction came on the fourth day. Madeleine waited until Owen's two sisters were at the kitchen table before she told me, in a voice pitched just soft enough to sound like a favor, exactly how she took her tea — chamomile, not too hot, with honey from the second jar, not the first, because the first was a bit floral for her taste.

She looked at me while she said it.

I looked back at her. A long, level look. The kind I used in the clinic when a patient was lying about their pain level and I needed them to understand that I knew.

Her chin lifted a fraction. The apology in her eyes thinned into something closer to a test.

I made the tea. Chamomile, not too hot. Second jar.

I set it in front of her with both hands, the way I set everything in front of people in need of care, and I felt nothing except a distant, clinical clarity.

Rhett did not look up from his phone.

---

I went to see Magda the day before I planned to leave.

The pack Healer's cottage sat at the edge of the Crescent Hollow wood, the same place it had sat since I was small enough to reach her doorbell by jumping. Magda was sixty-something and silver-haired and had the hands of someone who had spent four decades pulling people back from the edge of things. She had known my mother. She had taught me my first suture.

I brought her the patient files in a canvas bag — every active case cross-referenced, every ongoing treatment charted, every note written out in full. I had spent three evenings on them. I was not going to leave anything half-finished.

Magda didn't ask why. She never wasted words on questions whose answers were already sitting in the room. She took each file as I handed it over and read through them with the thoroughness of someone who understood that these were people, not papers.

When the bag was empty, she set the last file down and looked at me.

'The Martinez boy,' she said. 'The one with the recurring joint inflammation. He won't tell anyone how bad the flares are. He's stubborn about it.'

'I know,' I said. 'I wrote it in the notes. He responds better if you don't name it as a flare. Just say you're checking his levels.'

Magda nodded slowly. Then she reached across the table and took both of my hands in hers — her palms warm and dry and steady — and held them.

She didn't speak. She just held on.

I let her. I kept my breathing even. Outside, the wind moved through the pine trees in a long, slow wave, and somewhere above us a bird called once and went quiet.

After a moment, she released my hands and sat back.

'Silvercrest is cold in winter,' she said. Her voice was ordinary. Practical. As if we had been discussing climate. 'Bring your good coat.'

'I will,' I said.

I picked up the empty canvas bag. I folded it over my arm.

At the door I paused, my hand on the frame. I did not turn around. I didn't need to.

'Thank you,' I said. 'For everything you taught me.'

Magda made a small sound — something between dismissal and grief — and I walked out into the pine-cold air, and I did not look back at the cottage, and I did not let myself think about how long it had been since anyone in this pack had held my hands and simply refused to let go.

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