The Mate He Forgot Chapter 12
The photo lit up her screen.Â
Arabella stood in a white mermaid gown, smiling sweetly atÂ
the camera. Behind her, Rhett looked down at her with theÂ
kind of tenderness that used to belong to Isla.Â
A perfect picture of newlywed bliss.Â
The next few shots followed: a close–up of the engagementÂ
ring, and a family portrait–with both sets of parents smilingÂ
proudly in the center.Â
Isla’s grip on the phone tightened.Â
She didn’t need a caption to know what Arabella was tryingÂ
to prove. The message was crystal clear–Rhett had chosenÂ
her. Arabella had won.Â
Then came the texts.Â
[This is the dress I went with in the end. Pretty, right? IÂ
actually liked another one better, but Rhett said this one showed off my waist, so… he bought both. Same with the rings–I told him a smaller one was fine, but he insisted.]Â
[I was going to invite you to the mating ceremony, but RhettÂ
didn’t want to see you. Said he didn’t want you there on hisÂ
happiest day. Mom and Dad agreed. Said you’d bring badÂ
energy.]Â
[It’s official now. We’re marked. Whatever you and Rhett hadÂ
-if it ever meant anything–let it go. I’m his mate. I’m yourÂ
sister. And from now on, he’s your brother–in–law. Don’tÂ
forget that.]Â
Isla stared at the screen, Arabella’s smug tone practicallyÂ
echoing off the words. She could almost see the smirk onÂ
her sister’s face.Â
She didn’t reply. Just shut the app and tossed her phoneÂ
onto the bed.Â
A memory rose up, uninvited–Rhett brushing her hair back,Â
tracing the shape of her brow.Â
“You must have beautiful eyes,” he’d whispered once, backÂ
when he was blind. “Doesn’t matter what you look like. I’llÂ
know it’s you. You’re the most beautiful thing in my world.”Â
Back then, she’d blushed so hard her ears burned. She’dÂ
believed him.Â
She’d actually pictured a future with him. Marriage. A home.Â
Maybe even pups one day.Â
And sure, she’d let go of that hope long ago.Â
But seeing it paraded in front of her like this still stung.Â
Meanwhile, in the sacred altar of Echelon Pack-Â
Just before the mating ceremony began, a little boy cameÂ
barreling out of nowhere, holding a cup of grape juice. HeÂ
crashed straight into Arabella, soaking the front of herÂ
pristine gown in dark purple.Â
Arabella gasped, recoiling like she’d been slapped. “MyÂ
dress!”Â
“Whose kid is this?! Who let him in here? Get him out–now!”Â
The outburst caught Rhett’s attention. He hurried over, onlyÂ
to freeze in place when he saw her expression–irritated, sharp–edged. Not the sweet, composed Arabella he knew.Â
In his memory, she had always been calm, gentle.Â
Even–tempered.Â
But now, there was something… off.Â
“Rhett?” she chirped, noticing him. Her voice softenedÂ
instantly. “Didn’t see you there.”Â
He blinked.Â
Her tone was light again, her face all sugar and silk, as if thatÂ
flash of temper had never existed.Â
“I just wanted to make sure you’re okay,” he said slowly.Â
“Arabella?”Â
“I’m fine. A little grape juice, no big deal. I’ll go change–waitÂ
here, I’ll be right back.”Â
He nodded.Â
But as she walked away, something tugged at him. ThatÂ
feeling again. That whisper of wrongness.Â
It wasn’t new. It had been creeping up on him for weeks.Â
Something about Arabella wasn’t the same. Or maybe–justÂ
maybe–something about her never was.Â
Sometimes, without warning, Isla’s face flashed in his mindÂ
instead.Â
He clenched his jaw.Â
She was gone. She was just Arabella’s little sister. That’s all.Â
Just… Isla.Â
But then he remembered the small box she’d handed himÂ
that morning.Â
She’d looked so pale. So calm. Said her goodbyes like theyÂ
were final.Â
He hadn’t opened the gift. Hadn’t even glanced at it.Â
Now, suddenly, he needed to.Â
Rhett headed down to the parking lot and tore through theÂ
car, searching every inch. Nothing.Â
He turned to his Beta.Â
“The box I gave you this morning–where is it?”

