THE PACK LEDGER · PREVIEW
Becoming My Ex's Mother In Law
Read the first two chapters before you buy Becoming My Ex's Mother In Law.
THE PACK LEDGER · PREVIEW
Becoming My Ex's Mother In Law
Read the first two chapters before you buy Becoming My Ex's Mother In Law.
CHAPTER ONE
Honey, You're Home
The day that I was released from prison, all of my fellow inmates lined up to get a hug from me. Some of them nearly crushed my spine from how tightly they squeezed, and others di…
The day that I was released from prison, all of my fellow inmates lined up to get a hug from me. Some of them nearly crushed my spine from how tightly they squeezed, and others didn’t want to let go. They all knew that Bob was waiting for me on the outside, and we would be starting our life together as soon as I left—in marriage, in business, everything.
Then I came to Sydney. She was an older inmate, in for life for killing her abusive husband over a decade ago. We had never really gotten along, and yet there she was, her arms wide open, expecting a hug just like everyone else.
I was only happy to oblige.
As we squeezed each other tightly, Sydney whispered in my ear, “Do not trust men’s sweet talk.”
We pulled apart. I stared at her, confused. What could that mean?
Apparently, Sydney hadn’t been quiet enough for the sharp ears of the other inmates, as they all started to share their opinions of her advice.
“Oh, don’t be such a buzzkill, Syd!” one said.
“Yeah, let the girl have a little hope!” another added.
“Boo!” a third simply exclaimed.
I grinned at their antics and shook my head.
“Don’t worry about it,” I said. I turned to Sydney. “I wish you nothing but the best, Sydney.”
Sydney waved me off as the door to the prison yard opened.
“C’mon, Blanchard, it’s time to go,” the guard, Tom, called.
I gave the other inmates one last wave before I followed the guard out of the prison.
* * *
With a clear plastic bag of my belongings in hand, I stood at the gate with Tom, ready to leave my literal prison. It could have been worse. At least I had gotten a reduced sentence for good behavior.
It felt so good to wear street clothes again. Even if it was only a now slightly faded red dress Bob had gotten me five years ago and a pair of flats, it was still better than that orange jumpsuit and white nurse’s shoes. They still fit me well, too.
Tom smiled at me as he held the gate open for me. I gave him a quick hug, one that he hesitantly returned.
“If you ever need any help in the future, feel free to contact me,” he said as we parted.
I grinned.
“Don’t worry, I won’t need to. Bob and I are about to live a happy life together, just as he promised.”
Tom’s smile disappeared. He nodded, but he didn’t say anything.
“I’ll see you later.”
Again, Tom nodded, but he didn’t say anything. As I turned to walk to the curb, I could’ve sworn that I heard him sigh behind me.
I stood on the edge of the curb, certain that it wouldn’t be long before Bob pulled up. Bored and without much to do, I looked around curiously at how the world around me had changed.
On a towering building across the street, the news played on a LED screen. Though the voices boomed, I couldn’t quite decipher what was being said. The screen, however, told me all that I needed to know: the man on the left was the United States President, and to his right was the Alpha King of the Werewolves.
The last I had known, the Alpha King was an old, white-haired man limping on his last leg. This new Alpha King seemed very different. He was tall and elegant, and even without understanding what he was saying, I could feel the charm and charisma pouring off of him.
I could not avert my gaze. An eternity must have passed before I finally ripped my eyes away from his beautifully dark features.
My, how five years had changed everything! The low-cut necklines I had preferred in my dresses now seemed out of style, replaced by one almost like a turtleneck with a jewel in the center of the throat. So many women in this new fashion craze passed me that I was almost embarrassed to be seen in such an old style—even if it accented my breasts perfectly.
Then I saw how many of the men turned my way as they walked by. A few even cat-called and wolf-whistled. I would have normally boxed them for being so publicly inappropriate, but it felt good knowing that I hadn’t lost my looks.
“Hey, sweetheart,” one man said as he parked his black Ford mustang beside me. “How’s it going?”
“Fine, thank you,” I replied.
“What’s someone as pretty as you doing all the way out here by yourself?”
The man lowered his sunglasses, and his eyes roved over me. Our eyes met.
“Eighty-eight,” Susan, my wolf, said, confirming my suspicions. This man liked what he saw.
I wasn’t like most werewolf-hybrids, who got their wolves at 18. Mine did not awaken until I was 22, on the day of my imprisonment. She gave me the ability to assess the level of people’s fondness for me, and I trusted her implicitly.
“I’m waiting for my boyfriend,” I said, hoping he would get the hint.
“Oh,” he said, disappointed. “I’ll just be on my way, then.”
With a slight wave, the man took off.
I grinned. Yup, I still had it.
* * *
Orange and pink gently painted the sky as the sun began to set. My legs ached from standing, and sweat had smeared my already inelegant makeup job. Anxiety ate at my stomach and throat.
Where was he? He couldn’t have possibly forgotten.
I started pacing to stretch out my legs. Besides, what else was I going to do? Even if he had forgotten, I had nowhere else to go.
No, he couldn’t have forgotten. He had promised to be here the minute I was released.
I continued to pace as the sky darkened around me. I thought about Sydney’s final words to me and how hesitant Tom had looked after I had brought up my plans with Bob. My heart ached worse than my legs.
Bob hadn’t just forgotten me. He had purposefully left me.
I sank to the ground as night fell. I had no clue what I was going to do. Why would Bob do this to me?
Just as I fell deeper into my dread, a pair of headlights pulled up to the curb, blinding me. After I blinked away the spots in my eyes, I stood up and got a good look at the car: a black Porsche. The window rolled down to reveal Bob’s face.
Even after seeing him every week for the past five years, Bob somehow looked both unfamiliar yet familiar.
He was better groomed than usual, with his characteristic Van Dyke gone, leaving nothing but smooth skin behind. His typical collared shirt had been replaced by an immaculate three-piece suit. Even the expression he wore was harder than I was accustomed to.
“Sorry, Crystal,” he said, although it didn’t sound entirely sincere. “I just finished a meeting. I’ve been really busy—”
“Who is she?” I asked, motioning to the woman in the passenger seat.
The woman wore the trendiest purple Chanel suit, an expensive gold and diamond-encrusted watch, and enormous dangling diamond earrings. Her makeup was exquisite, as though an entire team had spent the day perfecting her smokey eye. Her dark hair had been pulled back into a tight, impeccable bun with an amethyst scrunchy.
She turned her head slightly. Her gaze drifted over me, as though scanning a trash can on the street. Our eyes locked.
“Her affinity towards us is zero,” Susan said. I tensed. “She dislikes us.”
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CHAPTER TWO
Amour
Since the day she emerged, Susan had never been wrong about someone’s affinity towards me. I wasn’t about to doubt her now.
Unease began to grow in my heart.
“Should we get in the car first?” Bob offered. “This isn’t the right place to talk.”
I stood in place, frozen.
“I think you need rest and a good meal right now,” he continued. “What do you think?”
He smiled, but I could tell it wasn’t genuine. It did not reach his eyes.
He had not answered my question about who the woman was, but I could probably guess. I just didn’t like the answer.
I glanced into his eyes. He tried hard to look away, but he could not avoid my stare.
“Twenty,” Susan said.
He didn’t love me anymore—maybe. I hoped in my heart it wasn’t true. Yet even my heart knew better than to doubt Susan.
* *
Bob took us to Amour, an expensive French restaurant downtown—a very expensive restaurant. Last I knew, the average cost per person was $3,000. Even five years ago, when I still had a substantial inheritance left from my mother, I would only go there on special occasions.
A part of me hoped that this meant my release was something special to Bob, something to celebrate. The rest of me could not forget the 20 that Susan had revealed as his affinity towards me.
When we walked in, we were surrounded by elegance and refinement.
Chandeliers hung from a high, ornate gold ceiling over onyx tables. Black carpeting stretched before us with a red walkway leading down the center of the restaurant. Golden statues of Greek gods and goddesses were scattered throughout the building, and a massive bar was tucked into the rear.
Everyone was dressed in designer suits or dressers. Some were tame, black-and-white affairs, while others were more exotic, colorful pieces straight off the runways of Paris and Milan. All of them, however, were upscale…far more upscale than a dress that had been waiting five years to be worn.
As the maître d’ escorted us to our table, curious gazes turned our way. I shifted uncomfortably. In such a faded dress with sweat-smeared makeup, I had to look dingy compared to my surroundings…and my cohorts.
The young woman whose name Bob still hadn’t mentioned yet clung to Bob in a way that made my heart drop. He disentangled himself from her to pull out both our chairs, but I could feel the woman’s glare burning a hole into me as I sat down.
I looked around to see people still staring at us—at me. I had never felt so low before. Everyone was looking at me as though I were some piece of gum stuck to the bottom of their shoe, and at that point, that was how I felt.
Couldn’t Bob have at least taken me somewhere to get changed into something nicer if we were going to Amour? And why were we there, anyway? It was far too expensive for either of us.
Did this have something to do with this new mystery woman? Was Bob trying to impress her? Belittle me in front of her?
I had never doubted going to jail for Bob before now, but all this…it didn’t really feel worth having wasted five years of my life.
Once Bob sat down, I could take the waiting no longer.
“Bob, what is going on?” I demanded, my voice more bitter than I had intended. “Who is she?”
Bob sighed and set down the menu that he had just picked up.
“I’m sorry, Crystal. Perhaps I should’ve told you earlier. Lisa is my girlfriend—”
“Girlfriend?” I said, aghast. “I’m your girlfriend. When did we break up?”
Lisa frowned, her eyes darting between Bob and me.
“Bob, you didn’t break up with her?”
“Darling—” Bob took her hand in his— “she was in prison. I was her only hope for parole. She doesn’t have any family, and she was all alone in there.”
His words stabbed my heart like a knife.
“How pitiful,” he whispered, though I could hear him clearly.
Lisa eyed me for a moment but nodded and put her hand over Bob’s.
“I know, Bob. It’s just…you’re too gracious sometimes, too kind,” she said. “You gave her false hope.”
I growled low at Lisa before I could control it. Bob and Lisa glanced over at me, but otherwise, they did not pay me any heed.
Tears pricked the edges of my eyes. How could Bob do this to me? After what I did for him, after all those promises that he made to me?
I wanted to yell at him. I wanted to storm out of the restaurant and find some way out of there on my own. Anything to show him how badly he had hurt me and to tear him out of my life for good.
Instead, I shook my head and let my tears fall unchecked.
“How-how could you?” I sobbed.
Bob tentatively reached out and touched my arm, glancing at Lisa as though for permission. Her lips pursed, but she nodded her consent. Bob squeezed my arm gently.
“I had no choice,” he said, his voice calm and soothing. “She’s my fated mate.”
I paused at those words. I couldn’t really be mad at Bob for that. If a werewolf finds their fated mate, then they must be together.
It stung that Bob and I were clearly not fated mates. Nevertheless, I had to try to be happy for Bob that he had found his, no matter how much it hurt. Maybe, someday, I would find my fated mate as well.
“You still should have told me,” I said, the pain evident in my voice.
“I know, I’m sorry. I promise that I will make it up to you.”
The look in Bob’s eyes seemed earnest. Maybe he truly meant it. There was only one way to know for certain.
He just had to grant me what I wanted.
“Well then,” I said slowly, “I would like to reclaim our company.”
Five years ago, I had invested all of my inheritance into a clothing company that I had co-founded with Bob. Since I ended up in jail, I asked Bob often how things were going with it, and Bob had ensured me that the business was thriving.
Maybe if I couldn’t have love, I could still have a career.
The more I thought about it, the more I liked the idea of being a businessperson on my own. With Susan’s ability to tell how much someone likes me, it would give me a huge advantage in the sales department and with making partnerships. It might even be fun to try my hand at designing clothes again, even if that had always been more Bob’s side of the business.
It was a little scary to think about navigating the modern business world without Bob, but maybe he would be willing to help me in the beginning. He was trying to make it up to me for this whole messed-up situation, after all. There wasn’t any reason why our relationship couldn’t end amicably…as amicably as possible, given the circumstances.
Then I noticed Bob’s eyes cast down to the table.
“Crystal, there’s something I need to tell you.”
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