"You need to understand the situation," Alec said, his voice carrying that same measured authority he used during pack council meetings. "The pack has moved forward. Keira has been an excellent Luna, and the members have accepted her."
I rose from the unfamiliar leather chair, forcing my weakened legs to support me. "I've been saving the Lycan Queen's life, Alec. Four years of blood transfusions that nearly destroyed my wolf." My hand instinctively touched the scar on my wrist, the one that never quite healed. "And you replaced me?"
"You were gone." He didn't even have the decency to look ashamed. "The pack needed a Luna. Raylan needed a mother."
The mention of our son sent a sharp pain through my chest. "I am his mother."
"You were his mother." Alec's correction felt like a blade. "Keira raised him while you were playing savior at the royal court."
Playing savior. The words ignited something in my weakened wolf, a flicker of the Luna authority I'd thought lost to the transfusions. "I have a proposal," Alec continued, pulling a document from his jacket. "Your service to the Queen has earned you significant favor at the royal court. Use it to secure official recognition for Keira as Luna of the Silvermoon Pack. In return, you can remain here as... an honored pack member."
The paper trembled in my hands as I read the carefully worded request. He wanted me to legitimize my own replacement. To use the credit I'd earned through sacrifice and suffering to validate his betrayal.
"No." The word came out stronger than I expected.
Alec's expression hardened. "Emryn, be reasonable. This is what's best for everyone."
"Best for everyone?" I could feel my Luna aura trying to surface, pushing against the weakness that had plagued me for years. "You want me to erase myself so your chosen mate can take what's rightfully mine?"
"What's rightfully yours?" His voice rose, and I caught the flash of his Alpha authority preparing to strike. "You abandoned this pack. You abandoned your son. For four years, we heard nothing but occasional messages through official channels. Keira was here. She held us together."
My aura flared, surprising us both. It wasn't strong—the transfusions had seen to that—but it carried the weight of royal backing, of four years spent in the presence of the most powerful wolves in the realm. "Don't you dare use your Alpha tone on me."
Alec's eyes widened slightly before narrowing with calculation. He'd felt it too—that my authority, weakened as it was, now carried traces of something beyond a simple pack Luna. The royal court had changed me in ways he hadn't anticipated.
Footsteps echoed in the hallway, and suddenly the room filled with curious pack members. They must have heard our raised voices, drawn by the scent of conflict between an Alpha and a Luna who shouldn't exist in their carefully reconstructed reality.
"Submit the request, Emryn." Alec's Alpha tone pressed down, commanding obedience from every wolf in the room—except me. "I won't ask again."
I met his eyes, seeing a stranger where my mate should have been. "I would rather run as a lone wolf than accept this disgrace."
The gasps from the doorway told me our audience had grown. Through the crowd, I caught sight of a woman with perfectly styled auburn hair and a dress that bore the subtle markings of Luna authority. Keira Brooks, I presumed. She watched with calculating interest, one hand resting possessively on the shoulder of a young boy whose features were achingly familiar.
Raylan. My son stared at me with confusion rather than recognition, pressing closer to the woman who'd stolen my place.
Alec's jaw clenched. "You're making this harder than it needs to be."
"No," I said quietly, folding the document and placing it on the table between us. "You made this hard the moment you betrayed our mate bond. I'm making it impossible."
I turned toward the crowd, letting my gaze sweep across faces that should have been familiar, loyal. "I leave for the Lycan Royal Court at dawn. The King and Queen will be very interested to hear how their savior has been welcomed home."
Keira's musical voice cut through the tension. "Perhaps if Lady Emryn had spent more time with her family instead of seeking glory at court, we wouldn't be in this position." She smiled warmly at the gathered pack members, playing her role perfectly. "But we mustn't blame her. Some wolves are simply better suited to service than to the messy reality of raising a child and leading a pack."
The murmurs of agreement from the crowd felt like physical blows, but I held my ground. My wolf, Jasper, stirred in the depths of my consciousness, offering silent support.
"I'll be staying at the border inn tonight," I announced, my voice carrying despite its hoarseness. "Tomorrow, I seek an audience with the Lycan King and Queen. If anyone wishes to testify about what truly happened during my absence, they know where to find me."
As I walked toward the door, the crowd parted reluctantly. Just before I crossed the threshold, I heard Raylan's small voice: "Who is she, Mother Keira?"
Mother Keira. The title that should have been mine, spoken with innocent trust by my own child.
I didn't look back. I couldn't. Not when my weakened wolf was barely holding together the fragments of my shattered heart.
The royal decree felt like armor against my skin as I approached the pack house the following morning. The parchment bore the Lycan King's seal—undeniable, absolute, and backed by power that made even Alphas bow. Luna of the Moonflower Pack. The title was mine now, granted by the highest authority in our realm, yet the familiar stone walls ahead promised nothing but hostility.
I'd barely crossed the threshold when Keira's voice rang out, sharp and theatrical. "Everyone, please gather. We need to discuss this... situation." She stood on the main staircase, positioned like a queen addressing her subjects, one hand resting on the banister while the other clutched Raylan's shoulder. My son looked uncomfortable but didn't pull away.
Pack members emerged from various rooms, their curious glances sliding between Keira's confident posture and my travel-worn appearance. I recognized faces—Marcus Fletcher, the Beta, stood near the back with conflicting emotions playing across his features. Willow, my mother's trusted friend, watched from a doorway with concern etched into every line of her face.
"As you all know," Keira continued, her musical voice carrying false warmth, "Lady Emryn has returned from the royal court with certain... claims." She pulled a folded paper from her dress pocket—a copy of my decree, somehow already obtained. "She says the King has given her a new pack territory. How convenient."
Murmurs rippled through the crowd. I felt my weakened wolf stir, Jasper's presence a steadying force in my consciousness.
"The decree is legitimate," I said, my voice cutting through the whispers. "The Lycan King and Queen witnessed the betrayal of my mate bond and granted me what I'm rightfully owed."
Keira's laugh tinkled like breaking glass. "Betrayal? Is that what you're calling it?" She descended the stairs with practiced grace, Raylan trailing behind her like a shadow. "You abandoned this pack for four years. You abandoned your mate, your son, your responsibilities. When Alec needed support during the rogue attacks, where were you? When Raylan cried for his mother at night, who held him?" Her voice cracked with manufactured emotion. "I was here. Building what you destroyed through your selfish ambition."
The pack members' expressions shifted, doubt replacing curiosity. She was good—weaving truth and lies so seamlessly that even I might have believed her if I hadn't lived the reality of those blood-soaked years.
"I saved the Lycan Queen's life," I said quietly, but my words lacked the fire of Keira's performance. "That's not ambition. That's service."
"Service that came with pretty rewards, apparently." Keira gestured to the decree in my hands. "Tell me, did you negotiate for territorial rights before agreeing to help? Or did that benefit just... happen to fall into your lap?"
The accusation hit its mark. Several pack members exchanged glances, and I saw calculation replacing sympathy. Keira was painting me as an opportunist, someone who'd traded her family for political gain.
"I'm here to collect what belongs to me," I said, changing tactics. "Personal possessions, ceremonial items, and the royal gifts that were sent to this pack during my service. The Queen specifically mentioned jewelry and blessed artifacts that should have been kept in trust."
Keira's smile didn't waver, but something flickered in her eyes—calculation meeting threat. "Of course. Though I'm not sure what you're referring to. The pack treasury contains only items belonging to the current Alpha and Luna."
My gaze dropped to her neck, where a familiar pendant caught the morning light. Silver filigree wrapped around a moonstone that glowed with inner fire—the Queen's personal gift, sent after my second year of service. I'd never even seen it myself, had only read the accompanying letter describing its blessing.
"That pendant," I said, pointing. "The Queen sent it to me. It bears her personal mark."
Keira's hand flew to her throat, fingers closing around the stone. "This was a gift from Alec. To celebrate our bonding ceremony."
"It bears the Queen's mark," I repeated, my Luna authority finally finding strength. "And it will glow in the presence of royal blood—my blood, specifically, since I'm the one who saved her life."
For the first time, uncertainty crossed Keira's features. Marcus Fletcher stepped forward, his Beta training overriding his confused loyalties. "That's easily verified, Lady Emryn. If you're willing to undergo the test."
"I am." I moved toward Keira, watching her instinctively back away. "Unless the current Luna has reason to avoid such verification?"
Raylan suddenly pulled at Keira's dress, his young voice carrying across the silent room. "Mother Keira, why does she want to take your necklace? You said it was special."
Keira's expression transformed, maternal concern replacing calculation so quickly I almost missed the transition. "Darling, sometimes people who've been away too long forget what truly belongs to them." She knelt to his level, her voice dropping to an intimate whisper that somehow still carried. "She's confused, maybe even a little jealous of the family we've built. But we mustn't blame her. We just need to protect what's ours."
My son's eyes—Alec's eyes—met mine with something that looked dangerously close to resentment. "She wants to break us apart, doesn't she? Like you said."
The words pierced deeper than any rejection from Alec ever could. My own child, weaponized against me with surgical precision.