APKDock Logo
Chapters
share
When His Mistress Lied About Carrying the Alpha’s Heir Novel Cover

When His Mistress Lied About Carrying the Alpha’s Heir

Desperate to flee a life of grueling servitude, low-ranking wolf Elena claims she is pregnant following a night with Alpha Silas. Driven by his need for a successor, Silas grants her immense power and luxury. However, as a genuine bond forms between them and their wedding approaches, the deception haunts her. With enemy packs closing in and Silas expecting an heir, Elena must turn her lie into reality before the truth destroys her entire world.
Chapters
share

Chapter 1

I spent three hours on the cake.

Not baking it — I'd ordered that from the bakery in town, a three-tier vanilla buttercream with pink frosting roses and a sugar wolf howling at a crescent moon on top. Daisy had described it to me no fewer than eleven times since March. "Mama, the wolf has to be white. And the moon has to be the skinny kind, not the fat kind." I'd sketched it on a napkin and handed it to the baker myself.

The three hours were for everything else. The streamers — lavender and silver, because Daisy had changed her mind from pink two days ago and I was not about to argue with a girl who knew what she wanted. The balloon arch over the entrance to the Alpha suite's living room. The little party crowns I'd made by hand from gold cardstock and stick-on gems, one for each of the six pack pups Daisy had invited. And the big crown. Daisy's crown. Gold glitter, purple ribbon, and a plastic jewel the size of my thumbnail that she'd picked out at the dollar store with the seriousness of a jeweler selecting a diamond.

I set the crown on the kitchen counter and stepped back to look at the room.

It was good. It was exactly what she'd asked for.

My phone buzzed.

Scott.

*Emergency border patrol. Rogue activity near the eastern ridge. Taking a team out tonight. Probably won't be back until Sunday. Tell Daisy I'm sorry.*

I read it twice. Then I set the phone face-down on the counter and adjusted a streamer that didn't need adjusting.

It was Friday. The party was Saturday. He knew that. He'd known for two months, because Daisy had told him at dinner every single night, counting down the days on her fingers. "Fourteen more sleeps, Daddy. Thirteen more sleeps."

I picked up the phone and typed: *It's her birthday tomorrow, Scott.*

Three dots appeared. Disappeared. Appeared again.

*I know. Can't be helped. Victor Crane's rogues don't check the calendar.*

Victor Crane. Alpha of the Blackmoor Pack. Our ongoing territorial headache — one I had personally mapped every strategic response to, including the eastern ridge patrol rotation that I had designed to require exactly four wolves and a Gamma, not the Alpha himself.

I typed: *The eastern ridge rotation doesn't need you. Send Ethan.*

Ethan Howell. Scott's Beta. Perfectly capable.

A longer pause this time.

*I'm the Alpha, Madelyn. I decide what needs me.*

I stared at the screen. There it was. That tone, even in text. The subtle pull of rank. The reminder that questioning him was the same as questioning the pack's chain of command.

I deleted the three responses I drafted in my head and sent: *I'll tell Daisy.*

He didn't reply.

The party was everything Daisy wanted it to be.

Six pups in gold crowns chasing each other through the living room. Cake smeared on faces. A game involving a blindfold and a stuffed wolf that devolved into cheerful chaos within thirty seconds. Daisy stood in the middle of it all wearing her big crown, cheeks flushed, laughing so hard she hiccupped.

She asked once.

Only once.

"Where's Daddy?"

I was cutting cake. My hand didn't pause. "He had to go help the pack with something important, baby. He's really sorry he couldn't be here."

She looked at the door. Then she looked back at me. "Will he come for cake later?"

"I'll save him a piece."

She nodded. Accepted it the way five-year-olds accept things — completely, because they have no reason yet to doubt the people they love. Then she ran back to her friends and forgot about it, or seemed to.

I finished cutting the cake. My hands were steady. My chest was not.

By nine o'clock the pups were gone, the living room was a disaster of streamers and frosting, and Daisy was asleep on the couch with her crown still on. I carried her to bed. She weighed almost nothing. I tucked the blanket around her and set the saved slice of cake on the nightstand — a fat piece with an extra frosting rose, wrapped in plastic, with a note she'd dictated to me before her eyes got heavy.

*For Daddy. From Daisy. Happy birthday to me. I love you.*

She'd signed it with a wobbly D and a drawing of a wolf that looked like a potato with legs.

I stood in the doorway and watched her sleep for a long time.

I cleaned up alone.

It took an hour. I swept frosting off the floor, popped balloons, stuffed streamers into trash bags. The suite was quiet. The kind of quiet that presses in.

I was carrying the last trash bag to the hallway when I saw it. Scott's patrol jacket, tossed over the bench by the front door. He must have changed before he left. He did that sometimes — swapped his good jacket for the field one, left the other behind like a shed skin.

I picked it up to hang it in the closet.

The scent hit me before I'd lifted it past my waist.

Sweet magnolia. And underneath it, cheap vanilla — the synthetic kind, the body spray you buy at a drugstore for six dollars.

I stopped.

My fingers tightened on the collar. I brought it closer. Slowly. The way I'd been trained at Silvercrest Academy to parse a scent — not just the top notes but the layers beneath. Duration. Intensity. Source proximity.

This was not a casual brush in a hallway. Not a handshake. Not a crowded room.

This was hours. Hours of skin-to-skin contact. The magnolia had settled into the fabric the way a scent only does when it's been pressed there — by a neck against a collar, by hair against a shoulder, by a body curled close enough and long enough to leave a stain.

I stood in the hallway holding my mate's jacket and breathing in another woman's scent, and the world went very, very still.

My wolf, Sera, stirred.

*Madelyn.*

I didn't answer her.

*Madelyn. That's not ours.*

I know.

*That's —*

I know.

I hung the jacket in the closet. I closed the door. I walked to the bathroom, washed my hands, and looked at myself in the mirror. My face was calm. My eyes were dry.

Inside, Sera was pacing. I could feel her — restless, agitated, her hackles up in a way I hadn't felt since the last real territorial threat two years ago. But this wasn't a threat from outside the borders.

I went to bed. I did not sleep.

Sunday morning, I made Daisy pancakes.

She ate them with syrup on her chin and told me about a dream where Buster — a dog she'd seen in a picture book — could fly. I listened. I smiled. I poured her juice.

Then I dropped her at the pack's pup-care center, walked back to the pack house, and followed the scent.

It wasn't hard. Silvercrest had trained me to track a single scent thread through a battlefield. A pack house hallway was nothing. The magnolia-vanilla trail was faint here — older, layered under cleaning products and foot traffic — but it was consistent. It moved through the east corridor, past the meeting rooms, down the stairs to the main floor.

It converged at the front desk.

A she-wolf sat behind it, filing paperwork. Young. Dark hair pulled back. Omega rank — I could tell from the way she held herself, the slight deference in her posture that pack hierarchy drills into the lowest-ranked wolves from childhood. She wore a name tag.

Camila Flores.

She looked up as I approached. Her smile was automatic — the front-desk smile, polite and practiced.

Then she saw who I was.

The smile didn't drop. It shifted. Just slightly. A flicker behind the eyes, like a door closing.

"Luna Madelyn," she said. "Good morning."

I looked at her. I took in the magnolia perfume — stronger here, at the source. The vanilla body spray underneath. The way her fingers paused on the file she was holding, just for a half-second, before resuming.

Sera growled low in my chest.

I said nothing.

I held Camila's gaze for exactly three seconds — long enough for her to understand that I knew, short enough that she couldn't be sure what I knew — and then I turned and walked away.

My phone was already in my hand. I opened the pack's financial portal — full Luna-level access, every ledger, every line item — and began to scroll.

Behind me, I felt Camila's eyes on my back.

Good. Let her watch.

I had work to do.

You may also like

Alpha's Betrayal, Luna's Rebirth Novel Cover
8.5
After being cruelly betrayed by her Alpha mate, a fallen Luna receives a miraculous second chance at life. Reawakening in her past with full knowledge of the treachery that caused her death, she resolves to alter her fate. To secure justice, she must navigate the lethal complexities of pack politics and shifting loyalties. Using her foresight to outmaneuver her enemies, she embarks on a journey to find a devotion that is finally worthy of her heart.
Enchanted Twilight Novel Cover
9.1
As the sun dims and magic wanes, Elara, an exiled mage of great talent, unearths a primal force capable of saving her world. Her path intersects with Kaelen, a reserved protector from an opposing group. While traversing a treacherous land filled with betrayal and secrets, the two develop a surprising connection. To protect their people's future, they must face their histories and work together to stabilize the realm before the light vanishes forever.
His Forbidden Omega Novel Cover
9.7
Alpha Xander, a dominant pack leader, is consumed by a desperate longing for Elara, the woman he is legally barred from claiming. Despite the rigid ancient laws governing his status, his primal nature insists she is his fated mate. Elara finds herself torn between her intense pull toward Xander and the lethal risks of their forbidden bond. To find a future together, the pair must survive a treacherous landscape of lethal secrets and pack politics.
Midnight Bride Novel Cover
8.0
To rescue her family from ruin, Elena enters a loveless marriage with Silas, a distant and enigmatic Alpha. Within his palace, Silas guards a lethal secret tied to a dark lunar curse. Elena must survive the lethal politics of the werewolf pack while uncovering the man behind the monster. As ancient feuds ignite and war looms, she faces a choice: can she truly love a beast, or will the encroaching midnight shadows destroy their future?
My Alpha Begged Me to Return After Choosing Another Novel Cover
9.2
Alpha Kael publicly abandons his fated mate, Elara, to be with someone else, leaving her exiled and devastated. While building a new life away from her pack, Elara discovers unexpected power and a second chance at happiness. However, a looming darkness forces a desperate Kael to realize his error and plead for her return. Elara faces a difficult choice: forgive the man who broke her or embrace a future entirely independent of her past.
My Mate Declared Me Luna Before the Winter Solstice Novel Cover
8.2
Within a realm defined by ancient werewolf pacts, a young woman’s destiny shifts when her fated mate publicly names her the pack's next Luna. This sudden proclamation, delivered just before the Winter Solstice, forces her into a life of unexpected authority and duty. As the frost sets in, she must learn to balance her growing romantic bond with the heavy demands of leadership, navigating the complexities of her newfound royal status.