The forest was silent except for the soft crunch of leaves beneath my feet. Moonlight filtered through the canopy, casting silver patterns on the ground as I knelt beside a patch of lunar herbs. Their luminescent blue petals seemed to pulse with the rhythm of the night, just as Eleanor had once shown me.
"These only bloom during the waxing moon," she had whispered, her gentle hands guiding mine. "They connect us to the Moon Goddess during the passing ceremony."
I carefully cut the stems with a silver blade, my hands trembling. Lyra whimpered inside me, our shared grief a physical ache that hadn't subsided since Eleanor's final breath three days ago.
*We should have been able to save her,* Lyra mourned.
"I know," I whispered, gathering the herbs into a small bundle. Next, I retrieved the silver thread I'd hidden in my pocket—another element Eleanor had entrusted to me months ago, as if she'd somehow known.
"The silver thread binds the spirit to the Moon Goddess," I recited, wrapping it around the herb bundle. "The lunar herbs guide the way."
The ceremonial items felt heavy in my hands, weighted with responsibility. Eleanor deserved a proper moon ceremony, one that honored her years of service as Luna. One that recognized her kindness in a pack that had grown cold under Marcus's leadership.
I made my way back through the trees, clutching the precious bundle to my chest. The pack house loomed ahead, windows ablaze with light despite the late hour. Something was happening—something I hadn't been informed of.
Lyra's hackles rose. *Something's wrong.*
I slipped through the side entrance, following the sound of voices to the ceremonial hall. Pack members filled the space, their expressions a mixture of confusion and anticipation. Marcus stood at the center, Victoria at his side, her hand possessively wrapped around his arm.
"As your Alpha," Marcus announced, his voice carrying across the hushed room, "I have decided that my mother's moon ceremony will be postponed."
A collective gasp rippled through the crowd. I froze, the ceremonial bundle clutched tightly against my chest.
"Instead," he continued, his eyes gleaming with an emotion I couldn't place, "tomorrow at dawn, we will celebrate Victoria's marking ceremony. It is time she took her rightful place as Luna of the Shadowcrest Pack."
Victoria's smile was radiant, triumphant. Her eyes found mine across the room, a flash of malice in their depths before she turned her adoring gaze back to Marcus.
"My mother would have wanted us to move forward," Marcus declared, though the slight tremor in his voice betrayed his uncertainty. "The pack must always come first."
Lyra snarled inside me, her rage matching my own. *Liar! Eleanor is not even cold, and he dishonors her memory!*
I stood rooted to the spot as pack members began to disperse, some casting uncomfortable glances my way. No one spoke to me—no one dared to acknowledge the mate of their Alpha, even one as thoroughly rejected as I was.
Beta James was noticeably absent. I wondered if he even knew what his brother had planned.
---
Dawn broke with cruel brightness. I hadn't slept, spending the night clutching Eleanor's ceremonial bundle and fighting back tears of rage and grief. The sound of excited voices and movement outside drew me to my window.
The pack had gathered in the central clearing, dressed in their finest clothes. Marcus stood tall, addressing them with grand gestures, Victoria beaming at his side in a white dress adorned with silver embroidery—traditional marking ceremony attire.
"Before Victoria receives my mark," Marcus called out, his voice carrying to where I stood watching, "we will honor her with the traditional pack run!"
Cheers erupted as pack members began to strip, shifting into their wolf forms in a cascade of magic and movement. Marcus transformed first—his massive black wolf form towering over the others, his Alpha aura pulsing with dominance. Victoria followed, her small brown wolf form pressing against his side.
I clutched Eleanor's ceremonial bundle tighter as I made my way down to the clearing. The few remaining human-form pack members parted before me, their expressions a mixture of pity and discomfort.
Victoria's wolf caught sight of me and deliberately rubbed against Marcus, marking him with her scent. Her wolf eyes gleamed with malicious triumph.
"Look at our Luna-to-be," someone whispered loudly enough for me to hear. "So much more fitting than the rejected one."
Another voice joined in. "At least she can give the Alpha pups. Not like the barren one."
Lyra howled in anguish inside me, the pain of our losses—our pups, our mate bond, and now Eleanor—threatening to bring me to my knees. But I stood firm, Eleanor's bundle pressed to my heart, as the pack began their celebratory run.
Marcus's wolf paused briefly, his amber eyes meeting mine across the clearing. For a moment, I thought I saw something—regret? Confusion? But then Victoria nipped playfully at his flank, and he turned away, leading the pack into the forest with a triumphant howl.
I remained alone in the clearing, clutching all that remained of the woman who had been more mother to me than Luna, while her son ran to celebrate her replacement.
The wind shifted, carrying a familiar scent—old parchment, cedar, and mountain air. I turned to find Beta James watching from the edge of the trees, his expression unreadable but his eyes filled with a storm of emotions that mirrored my own.
I stood in Eleanor's chamber, my fingers trembling as I arranged the sacred items for her passing ceremony. Though Marcus had postponed the official ritual, I couldn't bear the thought of her spirit wandering without proper guidance to the Moon Goddess. The ancestral veil—shimmering silver threads that had adorned generations of Shadowcrest Lunas—lay delicately across the ceremonial table. Beside it, the lunar chalice gleamed in the soft candlelight, its surface etched with ancient pack symbols.
*She deserves this much,* Lyra whispered inside me. *Even if no one else honors her.*
"I know," I murmured, carefully positioning the bundle of lunar herbs I'd gathered. Each item held memories—Eleanor showing me their significance, teaching me the traditions that Marcus so carelessly discarded.
The door burst open without warning. Victoria stood in the threshold, her eyes narrowing as they swept over the ceremonial display. The scent of her artificial perfume—cloying and overwhelming—flooded the room, making Lyra recoil.
"Playing Luna again?" Victoria's voice dripped with contempt as she sauntered toward the table. "How pathetic."
I stepped protectively in front of Eleanor's treasures. "These are sacred items for her passing ceremony. Please leave."
Victoria's laugh was sharp, cutting. "Sacred? They're just old trinkets from a woman who couldn't even protect herself from a few rogues." Her hand shot out, knocking the lunar chalice to the floor with a sickening clang. "Your self-indulgent drama is becoming tiresome, Aria."
Horror froze me as she deliberately swept her arm across the table, sending the ancestral veil fluttering to the ground. The lunar herbs scattered, their precious blue petals crushed beneath her heel as she ground them into the floor.
"Stop!" I lunged forward, but she was already lifting Eleanor's silver ceremonial dagger—the final piece I'd laid out.
"What will you do?" she taunted, dangling the blade before me. "Call for your mate? Oh wait—he rejected you." With a flick of her wrist, she sent the dagger clattering across the room. "Just like everyone else."
Lyra snarled inside me, her rage building as Victoria systematically destroyed each sacred item. The sound of footsteps in the hallway drew my attention—pack members gathering, drawn by the commotion. Their expressions ranged from shock to uncomfortable fascination as they witnessed Victoria's desecration.
"She's destroying Luna Eleanor's ceremonial items," someone whispered.
Another voice joined in. "This isn't right..."
The murmurs grew, a current of unease rippling through the onlookers. Victoria's smile faltered slightly as she sensed the shift in atmosphere.
Heavy footsteps silenced the whispers. Marcus appeared in the doorway, his imposing figure casting a shadow across the threshold. His eyes took in the scene—the scattered items, Victoria standing triumphantly amid the destruction, my trembling form trying to salvage what I could.
For one breathless moment, I thought he might see the truth. That he might honor his mother enough to stop this sacrilege.
Instead, his face hardened. He slammed his Alpha staff against the floor, the sound reverberating through the chamber like a crack of thunder.
"Enough!" His Alpha tone washed over the gathering, making several pack members flinch. "Once again, you sow discord in my pack, Aria."
Disbelief rendered me speechless. "I—"
"Silence!" Marcus cut me off, his eyes flashing dangerously. "You dare to taint my chosen Luna's joy with your theatrics? On the eve of her marking ceremony?"
Victoria moved to his side, pressing herself against him with practiced vulnerability. "She frightened me, Marcus. I only came to pay my respects to your mother."
The lie was so blatant, so absurd that I expected someone—anyone—to speak up. But the pack members lowered their eyes, their silence a betrayal that cut deeper than any knife.
"You have disrespected me for the last time," Marcus declared, his voice cold with finality. He turned to the gathered pack. "From this moment forward, you will ignore the rejected mate. She is nothing to this pack."
His gaze returned to me, and I saw no trace of the man who had once been my mate. Only the Alpha remained—cruel and unyielding.
"As punishment for your actions," he continued, his Alpha tone intensifying, "you are stripped of your rank. You will be moved to the omega quarters immediately."
Gasps rippled through the crowd. Even by the standards of our harsh pack, this was extreme—to demote a true mate, rejected or not, to omega status was almost unheard of.
"Marcus, please," I whispered, one final appeal to whatever remained of our bond.
He turned away, dismissing me entirely. "See that she receives only what an omega deserves," he instructed a nearby Delta. "Stale bread. Water. Nothing more."
As rough hands guided me from the room, I caught a final glimpse of Eleanor's treasures—broken, scattered, desecrated. Just like the last shreds of my dignity in this pack that had never truly been mine.
Lyra curled inside me, her presence a small comfort in the growing darkness. *This isn't over,* she promised fiercely. *Something is coming. I can feel it.*
I didn't know then how right she was—or how soon the tides would turn.