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After His Mistress Humiliated Me, I Planned My Revenge
After His Mistress Humiliated Me, I Planned My Revenge

After His Mistress Humiliated Me, I Planned My Revenge

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Tuesday mornings at the bistro always smelled like burnt sugar and fresh bread. I'd learned to like that. Five years of early shifts will do that to a person — take something ordinary and turn it into something close enough to comfort that you stop noticing the difference. I was at the espresso machine when Mr. Hale came in. Retired schoolteacher, always sat at the corner table by the window, always ordered a flat white with oat milk and a blueberry scone, even though he spent a full minute every single time pretending to look at the menu. He'd been coming in for three weeks. I had his order memorized after the first Tuesday. "The usual?" I called before he'd even sat down. He looked up, surprised and pleased in the way regulars always are when you remember.

Chapter 1 of After His Mistress Humiliated Me, I Planned My Revenge

Tuesday mornings at the bistro always smelled like burnt sugar and fresh bread.

I'd learned to like that. Five years of early shifts will do that to a person — take something ordinary and turn it into something close enough to comfort that you stop noticing the difference.

I was at the espresso machine when Mr. Hale came in. Retired schoolteacher, always sat at the corner table by the window, always ordered a flat white with oat milk and a blueberry scone, even though he spent a full minute every single time pretending to look at the menu. He'd been coming in for three weeks. I had his order memorized after the first Tuesday.

"The usual?" I called before he'd even sat down.

He looked up, surprised and pleased in the way regulars always are when you remember. "You know, one of these days I might try something different."

"You won't," I said, and turned back to the machine.

He laughed. I didn't smile, but something in my chest loosened a little.

I had a small envelope tucked inside my apron pocket. "Mom — Week 14" written on the front in my own handwriting. I'd already counted the tips twice. Forty-three dollars and change. The healer's next payment was due Friday. I was sixty short. I'd figure it out by Thursday. I always did.

The lunch rush hit hard and ended fast, the way it always did on weekdays. By one-thirty the place had emptied out and I was standing at the espresso machine again, not making anything, just standing there with my hand on the handle and my mind somewhere I didn't want it to be.

I caught myself and stepped back.

A mug appeared at my elbow. Tea, not coffee — the dark roast blend I'd never actually ordered out loud but somehow always needed around this time of day.

River.

I didn't turn around. He didn't say anything. By the time I picked up the mug, his footsteps had already moved back toward the kitchen. That was the thing about River Lawson — he paid attention without making you feel watched. I'd spent two years working in his bistro and I still wasn't entirely sure how he did it.

I drank the tea standing up and didn't think about Friday.

---

Chase's rehab center was six blocks east. He always walked home the same route, the one with the wide sidewalks and the slower crosswalks, because the rehab therapist said routine was good for his processing. I knew his schedule down to the minute. I'd memorized it the same way I memorized orders — not because it made me feel better, but because not knowing would feel worse.

I heard the SUV brake hard from inside the bistro.

The sound was sharp and close, the kind that turns your stomach before your brain has finished registering it. I was through the front door before I'd consciously decided to move.

Chase was standing in the crosswalk, blinking at the black SUV that had stopped maybe two feet from him. He had his left hand pressed to his temple the way he always did when something confused him. He was okay. He was standing. I got my breathing under control in the half-second it took me to reach him.

Then the driver's door opened.

I knew before I saw his face. The scent hit me first — pine resin and cold iron and something underneath that I had spent five years training myself not to recognize. My wolf, Sera, went absolutely rigid inside me. Not a sound. Just a full-body stillness, like an animal that has spotted a predator and is deciding whether to run or disappear.

Knox Carter was taller than I remembered. Or maybe just heavier in the shoulders, broader in the way that five years of unchallenged Alpha authority tend to build a man. He was wearing a dark jacket, and he was looking at Chase with an expression of cold assessment that made something clench hard in my gut.

Then he looked at me.

I watched the exact moment he caught my scent. Something moved behind his eyes — fast, involuntary, gone before I could name it. His jaw tightened.

"Riley Foster." His voice was the same. Lower, maybe. Still that particular quiet that made it worse than shouting. "Funny place to find a traitor."

I stepped in front of Chase.

"He didn't see the signal," I said. "He has a neurological injury. The car wasn't touched."

"Your brother," Knox said. Not a question. He looked Chase over once, the way you'd look at something that had gotten in your way, and then he looked back at me. "He stepped in front of an Alpha's vehicle."

"Knox—"

"You'll address me as Alpha Carter." The tone dropped into something with edges. Around us, three or four pedestrians had slowed to watch. "And you'll kneel. Both of you will apologize for obstructing—"

"Chase didn't do anything wrong." My voice came out exactly as I intended it: level, quiet, giving nothing away. "This was an accident."

"Then you'll apologize on his behalf." He looked at the wet pavement between us. "On your knees, Riley."

I felt Chase's arm tense under my hand. He was starting to understand that something was wrong, even if he couldn't map the shape of it. I could feel his confusion, the beginning of fear in his breathing.

I pressed his arm once, firmly. He went still.

I looked at Knox for one long moment. The Alpha tone was pressing against the edges of my skull, that particular frequency that made your body want to comply before your mind caught up. I let it wash over me and I went down. Both knees. Wet pavement. My good work jeans.

I kept my chin level. I kept my voice completely steady.

"On behalf of my brother, I apologize for the obstruction."

The words cost me something I did not let my face show.

Knox looked down at me for a moment that lasted considerably longer than it needed to. Something moved across his face that I refused to try to read. Then he turned, got back in the SUV, and drove away.

I stood up. I brushed nothing off my knees because there was nothing to brush. I took Chase's arm and walked him to the corner and asked him about his session and listened to him talk about the new therapist until his breathing evened out and the confusion left his face.

"Rey," he said, when we reached the next block. "That man. He knew you."

"Yeah," I said. "He did."

Chase touched his temple. "He wasn't nice."

"No," I said. "He wasn't."

---

I sent Chase home in a cab and went back to close the bistro.

River had already locked the front door by the time I got there. I sat down at the corner table — Mr. Hale's table, which felt appropriate for some reason — and stared at the two pale scuff marks on my knees.

Knox hadn't come to negotiate. He hadn't come to warn me or collect information or deliver a legal document. He'd come to put me on the ground in front of strangers on a Tuesday afternoon, and he'd looked satisfied when he did it.

He'd come to finish something.

I heard River's footsteps and then the chair across from me pulled out.

He sat down. He didn't ask what happened. He didn't ask about Knox. He set a fresh mug in front of me — tea again — and said, "Did Chase get home safely?"

I looked at him. The bistro light caught the side of his face, and he was watching me with the particular quality of attention he always had, the kind that didn't ask anything back.

"He's fine," I said. "I got him a cab."

River nodded. That was all.

I wrapped both hands around the mug and stared at the steam.

Knox had found me. He had my address, my schedule, my brother's face. He knew exactly how much leverage he had, and he'd used five minutes of it to remind me what the rest would feel like.

I needed to think. I needed to count every exit and every contingency and every dollar I had until Friday, and I needed to do it before I let myself feel anything.

River stood up quietly, the way he always moved, and went back to the kitchen without being asked.

I stayed there until I was ready to think clearly. It didn't take as long as I expected.

---

I didn't sleep much.

I lay in the dark and ran numbers — healer payment, Chase's weekly copay, the bistro hours I couldn't afford to lose, whether my savings account could absorb one missed shift or two but not three. The ceiling didn't offer anything useful. I ran the numbers again.

Sera surfaced around two in the morning. Not loud. Not the way she used to howl when the rejection was fresh and every night was its own particular cruelty. She just... appeared. A quiet presence at the edge of my mind, silver-grey and still.

I hadn't realized how much I'd missed that until it was there again.

Is he going to destroy everything again? I asked her.

She didn't answer. She didn't tell me it would be fine or that I was strong or any of the things the inside of your own head is supposed to say when you're scared.

She just stayed.

I stared at the ceiling and listened to her breathe, and told myself that was enough for tonight. Tomorrow I'd figure out the rest.

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