APKDock Logo
Chapters
share
My Mate Gave Our Bond To His Mistress Novel Cover

My Mate Gave Our Bond To His Mistress

Ava’s eighteenth birthday ends in agony when her fated mate, the future Alpha Lucas, rejects her. In an act of ultimate betrayal, Lucas utilizes a forbidden ritual to rip away their sacred bond, granting it to his rogue mistress instead. Shattered and vulnerable, Ava faces the relentless cruelty of her pack. However, amidst the suffering and loss, she uncovers a dormant power within herself that promises to reshape her future and her legacy.
Chapters
share

Chapter 2

The snow started falling harder somewhere past the second ridge.

I didn't remember crossing the first border. I remembered the gate of the Stewart pack house closing behind me. I remembered the weight of the leather notebook against my ribs, tucked inside my coat. I remembered Barnaby's breath puffing white at my hip, and the way the wind caught the inside of my collar and wouldn't let go.

After that, the world narrowed down to one foot, then the other.

*This way,* Solene said. Not in words. In a tilt. A pull, low under my breastbone, like a compass needle finding north.

I followed it.

The first night I walked until the moon set. I slept three hours under a fallen pine with Barnaby pressed against my chest, and when I woke my fingers were stiff and my mark — the place where the mark used to be — burned cold. I stood up. I kept walking.

By the second night I was not entirely sure I was still inside my own body. My feet moved. The pull moved them. Somewhere behind my eyes I was running supply numbers, the way I always did when I needed to stay awake — eastern grain, heating oil, the warrior barracks, the Healer's apprentice with the new baby, who would sign for the December delivery now that I was gone, who would notice the rerouting orders I had set in motion before I left, how long before Jameson —

*This way,* Solene said. Sharper. Closer. Almost a voice.

I crossed a frozen creek. I crossed a fence I did not remember climbing. The trees changed. Pine gave way to cedar — tall, dark, the kind of cedar that grew thick and old in only a few territories in the Pacific Northwest, and only one of them was royal land.

I stopped walking.

The snow was up to my knees. Barnaby was shaking. I knelt down and put my arms around his neck because he was the warmest thing in the world and because my legs had decided, without asking me, that they were finished.

"It's okay, baby," I whispered into his fur. "It's okay. We made it somewhere."

I did not know where somewhere was.

The last thing I saw before the dark closed in was a pair of boots in the snow — and a man's face going very still above them, his nostrils flaring once, twice, his hand already going to the side of his head where the mind-link sat.

I heard him say, very quietly, *She is here.*

Then nothing.

---

I did not freeze. That was the first strange thing.

The second was the smell.

I woke up slowly, the way you wake from a fever — in pieces, the body before the mind. White ceiling. Clean sheets. The dry warm air of a medical wing. An IV taped to the back of my hand. Barnaby, impossibly, curled against my side with his chin on my ribs, breathing the slow even breath of a dog who had decided he was safe.

And cedar.

Not the cedar of the trees outside. A different cedar — warmer, deeper, threaded through with something like rain on hot stone, and underneath that, faint and impossible, something I could not name and had never smelled before in my life and somehow recognized down to the marrow of my bones.

My chest opened around it before my eyes did.

*Malcolm.*

The word arrived inside my skull fully formed. Solene's voice — low, warm, absolutely certain — speaking a name I had never heard.

I froze with my eyes still closed.

"Solene?" I breathed.

*Malcolm,* she said again. Softer. Like a hand laid flat on a wound. *Vic. Malcolm.*

I opened my eyes.

He was standing in the doorway.

He was tall in the way that made rooms reorganize themselves around him — broad through the shoulders, dark-haired, dressed in plain black, no insignia, no display. His hands were loose at his sides. He was not moving. He was looking at me the way a man looks at a thing he has been carrying in his chest for a very long time and has just been allowed to set down.

I had never seen him before in my life.

My wolf knew his name.

My body did something I did not authorize. Heat ran up the inside of my arms. The place at the curve of my throat — the empty place, the place where the mark used to be — pulsed once, hard, like a second heartbeat starting up under the skin. I felt the mate-pull the way a person standing too close to a fire feels the fire: not as decision, as fact.

I sat up very slowly.

Barnaby lifted his head, looked at the man in the doorway, and thumped his tail twice against the blanket. Twice. Like he had already met him.

I put my hand flat on the dog's back to steady myself. I cleared my throat. When I spoke, my voice came out exactly the way I had trained it to come out in difficult rooms — level, unhurried, courteous in the way a drawn blade is courteous.

"Forgive me," I said. "I'd like to confirm where I am before I say anything else."

He didn't move from the doorway. He didn't come closer. I understood, without being told, that he was not coming closer on purpose.

"Moonveil territory," he said. "Central estate. Medical wing."

His voice was lower than I expected. Even. The kind of voice that did not need to be raised because it had never, in its life, needed to be.

"Thank you." I drew in a breath. The cedar-and-rain scent went into my lungs and Solene made a small sound inside me that was almost a whimper and almost a laugh. I ignored her. I had to. "I'd like to ask about Moonveil's neutrality law. Specifically the sanctuary provisions. Section four, if I remember correctly — the clauses that govern an unaffiliated she-wolf seeking protection across a royal border without prior diplomatic notice."

Something moved at the corner of his mouth. Not a smile. The shadow of one. Gone before I could be sure of it.

"Section four, subsection two," he said. "A she-wolf who crosses Moonveil's border under duress and without hostile intent is granted immediate sanctuary for a period of no less than thirty days, during which no external pack — including her pack of origin and any pack claiming bond rights — may compel her return, question her, or contact her without her written consent. The Moonveil Bloodline assumes responsibility for her safety, her medical care, and her legal representation if she chooses to pursue grievance proceedings." He paused. "Did I miss anything."

It was not a question.

I did not answer for a moment, because my throat had closed.

No one had recited a law to me, exactly as asked, in three years. Jameson had given me summaries. Mrs. Stewart had given me reassurances. Hollis Crane had given me ceremonies. No one had simply given me the words.

"No," I said. "You didn't miss anything."

*Malcolm,* Solene whispered, a third time, like a person learning to speak again.

I met the dark gaze of a Lycan Prince I had never been introduced to, and I did not look away.

"My name is Victoria Lawrence," I said. "I'm requesting sanctuary under section four."

He inclined his head — once, slowly, the way a man bows to something he has been waiting a very long time to bow to.

"Granted," he said.

And that was all he said. He did not step into the room. He did not ask me a single question. He turned, spoke quietly to someone in the corridor I could not see — a low voice answered, surprised, *Malcolm, what in the —* and was cut off — and then his footsteps moved away down the hall.

The scent stayed.

I lay back against the pillows very slowly, one hand on Barnaby's warm back, the other drifting up, without my permission, to the empty place at my throat.

For the first time in three years, it did not feel cold.

You may also like

Abandoned by False Mate Novel Cover
9.2
Betrayed by Alpha Silas for a politically superior match, Elara is cast into the brutal wilderness. While struggling to survive her exile, she uncovers a secret heritage that triggers the awakening of incredible dormant powers. Her transformation sparks instant regret in the mate who discarded her, but Elara is no longer the same. She must now choose between seeking revenge or embracing a future with a mysterious guardian who values her soul.
After My Alpha Chose His New Mate Novel Cover
9.4
Cast aside by her Alpha mate for a new partner, a rejected werewolf faces the agony of a severed bond and the cruelty of pack politics. Watching her former lover dote on another, she must forge a new identity away from his betrayal. As tribal laws and intense feelings clash, she uncovers a buried inner power. This poignant tale follows her path to resilience, proving that one can find belonging even after the most devastating heartbreak.
From Rejected Mate to Alpha Novel Cover
8.0
Cast aside by her fated mate, a werewolf girl faces the agony of betrayal alone. Once stripped of her status and forced into exile, she chooses to rise above her heartbreak rather than be destroyed by it. By tapping into a dormant, hidden power, she begins a grueling ascent through the supernatural hierarchy. Her transformation from a discarded outcast into a formidable Alpha proves that she alone commands her destiny, regardless of her past.
His Rejected Luna's Vengeance Novel Cover
9.0
After her fated mate, a powerful Alpha, betrays her and leaves her to perish, Elara survives against all odds. Years later, she emerges as a formidable leader of rogues, fueled by a desire to tear down the pack that discarded her. As she orchestrates her ruthless retribution, Elara navigates a treacherous path of political schemes and old desires. She must decide if she can finish her mission or if past feelings will survive the carnage.
Mated To The Scarred Alpha Novel Cover
9.6
In a realm of shifting dynamics, a young woman is tethered to a formidable leader defined by his deep physical and emotional trauma. Navigating their sudden bond, she strives to see beyond his rugged facade to find his true self. This fated union defies pack customs and sparks a perilous desire. To protect their future, the pair must battle outside enemies and personal shadows in a high-stakes journey of passion and survival.
My Alphas Rejected Our Pups Novel Cover
9.7
Cast out by her fated mates while expecting, a devastated werewolf must navigate the hardships of exile as a single mother. Her Alphas chose betrayal over protection, abandoning her to a lonely fate. Years later, as her children reveal an extraordinary power, the men who once spurned her are consumed by remorse. Now, she faces a difficult choice: grant them forgiveness or secure a future for her family far away from their toxic influence.