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Mate's VENGEANCE
img img Mate's VENGEANCE img Chapter 7 Observation
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Chapter 7 Observation

They continued their work, moving through the main floor with practiced efficiency. The house slowly came to life around them-more staff arriving, ranked pack members heading to breakfast, the ordinary business of a large household beginning its day.

At seven-thirty, they took a break in the kitchen for more coffee and a quick snack.

"You're doing great," Rosie said encouragingly. "Natural at this. Have you worked in large houses before?"

"A few," Sera said vaguely. "Hotels, mostly. I'm used to staying out of the way."

"Well, you're good at it." Rosie checked the time. "The Alpha should be done with training soon. We can tackle his study while he's at breakfast."

They climbed the main staircase-sweeping and elegant, with a bannister of polished dark wood-to the second floor. The Alpha's study was at the end of a long corridor, a set of double doors that spoke of importance.

Rosie knocked softly, then opened the door when there was no answer.

The study was impressive-floor-to-ceiling bookshelves, a massive desk made of dark wood, comfortable leather chairs, windows overlooking the forest. It smelled like paper and leather and something else-pine and mountain air and wolf.

It smelled like him.

Sera's hands tightened on her cleaning caddy. Somewhere in this room were probably files, documents, evidence that might explain why he'd ordered Marcus killed. What Marcus had discovered that was worth assassination.

But she couldn't search. Not now. Not with Rosie here and her position too new and vulnerable.

Patience. She'd have opportunities later.

"We don't touch the desk," Rosie instructed. "Or any of the papers. Elder Moira is very strict about that-only she's allowed to clean the desk surface, and only when the Alpha gives permission. We do everything else."

They worked carefully, dusting shelves and windows, vacuuming the rug, polishing the wood paneling. Sera's eyes catalogued everything-the locked filing cabinet, the computer on the desk, the photographs on the shelves.

Several photos of a young woman with light hair and a bright smile. Elena, Sera realized. The first mate who'd died so young. The photos were old, probably taken shortly before her death.

There was something poignant about them-the way they were placed prominently, obviously valued. This wasn't a shrine, exactly, but it was clear that Kael hadn't forgotten her.

"That's Elena," Rosie said softly, noticing Sera's attention. "The Alpha's first mate. She died in an accident when they were teenagers. So tragic."

"That must have been terrible for him," Sera said, and was surprised to find she meant it.

Losing your mate was devastating. She knew that better than anyone.

But then why had he been able to order Marcus's death? If he understood that pain, how could he inflict it on someone else?

The contradiction bothered her more than she wanted to admit.

They finished the study and moved on to the guest suites. The morning passed in a blur of cleaning and learning routines. Sera kept her head down, her presence minimal, absorbing information while projecting competence and harmlessness.

At noon, they broke for lunch in the staff dining room. Sera was exhausted-five hours of constant work, much of it physical labor-but she forced herself to eat and stay alert.

"You're doing really well," Elder Moira said, stopping by their table. "No complaints, everything up to standard. Keep it up, Sera."

"Thank you, ma'am."

After lunch, they were assigned to clean the formal sitting rooms and prepare them for the afternoon visitors.

"Important allies," Rosie whispered as they arranged fresh flowers in vases. "From the eastern packs. The Alpha's been negotiating with them for months."

Sera filed that information away. Allies who might be affected if the Ravencroft mating fell through. More collateral damage when her revenge came to fruition.

They were just finishing when she heard voices approaching-multiple people, talking in the easy tones of business being conducted.

"Quick," Rosie hissed, and they both grabbed their caddies and moved toward the servants' door.

But they weren't quite fast enough.

The door opened and three men entered-two she didn't recognize, both clearly Alphas by their bearing and the power that rolled off them.

And Kael Stormridge.

Sera froze, trapped between the door and the furniture, too visible to be properly invisible.

For the first time, she saw him clearly.

He was taller than she'd realized-easily six-two, broad-shouldered and powerfully built. Dark hair, slightly tousled. A strong jaw and high cheekbones that would have been beautiful on anyone else but on him were just... masculine. Commanding.

And his eyes.

Storm-grey, sharp and intelligent, scanning the room with the efficiency of someone who missed nothing.

Those eyes landed on her.

Sera felt the full weight of an Alpha's attention, and despite everything-despite her wolf's silence and her emotional numbness-something in her responded. Not attraction, exactly. More like recognition.

*This is a dangerous man*, some instinct whispered. *Powerful. Deadly.*

She dropped her gaze immediately, clutching her cleaning caddy, projecting submissive deference.

"Sorry, Alpha," Rosie stammered, also keeping her head down. "We were just finishing. We'll go."

"It's fine," Kael said, his voice deep and measured. Then, to Sera specifically: "You're new."

It wasn't a question, but Sera answered anyway, keeping her eyes on the floor. "Yes, Alpha. I started this morning. I'm sorry for being in the way."

There was a pause. She could feel him studying her, assessing.

"What's your name?"

"Sera, Alpha. Sera Blackwood."

Another pause. Then: "Welcome to Silvermoon, Sera. I hope you're settling in well."

"Yes, Alpha. Thank you, Alpha."

"You may go."

It was a dismissal, gentle but absolute. Sera and Rosie practically fled through the servants' door, not stopping until they were safely in the back corridor.

"Oh my god," Rosie breathed. "That was so embarrassing. We should have been gone before they arrived."

Sera's heart was pounding, adrenaline flooding her system. She'd just been face to face with Marcus's killer. Had heard his voice. Had been the focus of his attention for those few brief seconds.

And she'd felt... nothing. No rage. No grief. No instinctive hatred.

Just that cold, analytical assessment: *Dangerous. Powerful. Must be careful.*

Her wolf remained silent, offering no guidance, no instinctive response to being near an Alpha.

"Are you okay?" Rosie asked. "You're shaking."

"Fine," Sera managed. "Just nervous. First day and I already embarrassed myself in front of the Alpha."

"It wasn't that bad," Rosie assured her. "He was nice about it. See? I told you he's fair."

Fair. That word again.

How could a man who ordered assassinations be fair?

The contradiction gnawed at her as they finished their afternoon work. She kept replaying that brief encounter-the sound of his voice, the weight of his attention, the way he'd looked at her with those grey eyes.

He'd barely noticed her. She was just another servant, forgettable and beneath his notice.

Perfect.

That's exactly where she needed to be. Invisible until she chose to be seen.

---

At six PM, after her shift finally ended, Sera stumbled back to her room, every muscle aching. She'd forgotten how physically demanding this kind of work was-twelve hours of constant movement, bending, lifting, scrubbing.

But it had been worth it. She'd learned the layout of the main floor, identified security patterns, begun to understand the household dynamics.

And she'd seen him. Alpha Kael Stormridge, in the flesh.

Marcus's killer.

Sera pulled out her phone and scrolled to the photos she'd saved-pictures of Marcus, smiling and alive. The evidence of his murder. The anonymous note that had started everything.

She needed to remember. Needed to keep the hatred sharp and clear.

But when she tried to summon rage, tried to feel that burning need for vengeance...

Nothing. Just exhaustion and emptiness.

Her wolf was silent. Her heart was numb. She was a weapon, yes, but weapons didn't feel. They just cut.

A knock at her door interrupted her thoughts.

"Sera?" Rosie's voice. "We're going down to dinner. Want to come?"

Sera tucked her phone away and opened the door, forcing a tired smile. "Sure. I'm starving."

Dinner was similar to the night before-good food, friendly conversation, the easy camaraderie of people who worked together. Sera listened more than she spoke, gathering more information about pack dynamics.

She learned that Beta Lucas was respected but intimidating. That Celeste was beautiful but distant. That the upcoming mating ceremony was causing tension-excitement about the alliance, but unease about Celeste herself.

"She doesn't seem to understand pack dynamics," one of the older staff members said quietly. "Everything is about appearances and status with her. Not about the people."

"She'll learn," Elder Moira said firmly. "Once she's Luna, once she understands her responsibilities, she'll adapt."

But Sera saw the doubt in the older woman's eyes.

After dinner, she returned to her room and collapsed onto the bed, too tired to even shower.

One day down. Countless more to go.

She'd been invisible today. Had blended into the background, played her role perfectly.

But soon-very soon-she'd need to become visible. Would need to engineer encounters with Kael. Would need to begin the seduction that would lead to his destruction.

She pulled out a small notebook and began making notes. His schedule. His habits. The layout of the house. Security weak points. Everything she'd learned today.

Knowledge was power. And she was gathering an arsenal.

Somewhere in the main wing, Alpha Kael was probably in his study, working late like Rosie had said he often did. Unaware that the weapon designed to destroy him was taking notes just a few corridors away.

Sera stared at Marcus's photo on her nightstand.

"I saw him today," she whispered. "I was in the same room with him. I heard his voice."

Marcus smiled back at her, frozen forever at twenty-four, never to age or change or forgive.

"I'll make him pay," she promised. "I just need time. I need to be patient, to plan perfectly. But I'll make him pay for what he did to you."

The photograph didn't answer. The dead never did.

Sera turned off the light and lay in the darkness, too exhausted to sleep, too numb to cry.

Tomorrow she'd be invisible again. She'd blend into the background, learn more, position herself for future moves.

But eventually-soon-she'd step out of the shadows.

And when she did, Alpha Kael Stormridge wouldn't know what hit him until it was far too late.

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