Chapter 2

I picked up my phone and dialed a number I knew by heart. It rang twice before a gravelly voice answered.

"Luna," Conrad Ashby said. As the senior pack elder of Ironvale, Conrad was a man of tradition. He rarely took calls this late, but he always answered for me.

"Conrad, I need you to call a formal pack assembly for tomorrow at noon," I said. My voice was steady and cool.

He paused. "A full assembly? Vivienne, what is this about?"

"I have evidence that requires the elders' full presence and jurisdiction," I replied simply. "I can't say more over the phone. Just gather everyone."

Conrad didn't push. He had watched me run Ironvale's operations for ten years. He knew I didn't waste time, and I never acted without reason. "I'll make the calls," he agreed quietly.

"Thank you."

I hung up and looked back at my laptop. The folder was still sitting there on my desktop. I opened it one final time. I clicked through the thumbnails, watching the silent, damning clips of my mate and my best friend. I didn't feel the sharp sting of betrayal anymore. The tears were gone. All that was left was a cold, hard resolve.

I closed the folder. I didn't need to watch it again. I already knew every frame by heart.

The next day, the assembly hall was packed. Sunlight streamed through the high windows, illuminating the dust motes dancing in the air. The murmurs of hundreds of wolves filled the room. They were confused. Formal assemblies were rare, usually reserved for acts of war or treason.

I stood near the front, my posture straight. I wore a tailored black suit. I looked like I was going to a funeral. In a way, I was.

Raymond strode into the hall a few minutes late. He walked with the heavy, confident stride of an Alpha. His aura pushed against the crowd, making lower-ranking wolves lower their heads respectfully. He spotted me and frowned, marching over.

"Vivienne, what is the meaning of this?" he demanded, his voice dropping into his Alpha tone. It was a sound meant to intimidate, to force submission. "Conrad said you called this. You didn't even consult me."

I didn't flinch. I just looked at him. "You'll understand soon enough."

Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Mara. She was standing near the back with a few other she-wolves. She wore a soft yellow sundress, looking innocent and sweet. When she caught my eye, she offered a small, questioning smile. I looked right through her.

Conrad stepped up to the wooden podium. The hall instantly fell silent. The five pack elders sat in a row behind him, their faces grave.

"We are gathered today at the request of Luna Vivienne," Conrad announced. His voice echoed off the stone walls. He gestured to me. "Luna, the floor is yours."

I walked up the steps. I didn't look at the crowd. I turned and faced Raymond. He crossed his arms, looking annoyed but entirely unbothered. He truly had no idea what was coming.

I took a deep breath. My inner wolf braced herself.

"I, Vivienne Crawford, Luna of Ironvale Pack," I began. My voice did not shake. It rang out clear and cold, carrying to every corner of the silent hall. "Reject you, Alpha Raymond Mitchell, as my mate."

The words hung in the air like a dropped guillotine.

A collective gasp ripped through the crowd. But before anyone could speak, the bond snapped.

It was a violent, physical tearing inside my chest. I gripped the edge of the podium, locking my knees so I wouldn't fall. I forced myself to breathe through the soul-crushing pain.

Raymond wasn't so lucky.

He gasped, his eyes going wide with sudden agony. He stumbled backward, clutching his chest as if he had been shot. His knees hit the floor hard. "Vivienne!" he choked out, staring up at me in pure shock. "What... what are you doing?"

I ignored him. I reached into my pocket and pulled out a silver flash drive. I turned and placed it gently on the table in front of Conrad.

"On this drive is irrefutable video evidence of Alpha Raymond carrying on an affair under my roof," I said, my tone as measured as someone reading a legal document. "With Mara Webb."

The hall erupted. Shouts and whispers collided in a deafening roar.

I looked past the chaos, straight to the back of the room. Mara had gone completely white. The color drained from her face, leaving her looking like a ghost. The she-wolves standing next to her immediately took a step away, their eyes wide with disgust.

Conrad slammed his gavel down. "Silence!" he roared. The room quieted, though the tension was thick enough to choke on. Conrad picked up the flash drive. He looked at me, his eyes filled with a deep, sorrowful respect. "The elders will review this in chambers. We will return shortly."

They deliberated for less than an hour.

I stood by the window the entire time, staring out at the forest. I didn't look at Raymond, who was still kneeling on the floor, surrounded by his confused and panicked Beta and Gamma. I didn't look at Mara, who was shrinking against the back wall, crying silent tears.

When the heavy wooden doors opened, Conrad led the elders back to the front. His face was like stone.

"The evidence is verified," Conrad announced. The finality in his voice made Raymond flinch. "Alpha Raymond has broken the sacred mate bond through betrayal. By pack law, the rejection is recognized and justified."

Conrad looked down at his notes. "Furthermore, due to the nature of the betrayal and Luna Vivienne's decade of unblemished service to the treasury and operations of this pack, the elders grant her the majority of all shared pack assets in the separation."

Raymond's head snapped up. "What? You can't do that!"

"It is already done," Conrad said firmly.

And then, it happened.

Raymond tried to stand tall, tried to project his dominance to regain control of the room. But his aura—the heavy, commanding weight that made him an Alpha—flickered.

It was like watching a light bulb lose power. The oppressive, powerful scent of pine and ozone suddenly went stale. The invisible pressure in the room vanished. The pack members closest to him blinked, instinctively stepping back. They didn't lower their heads anymore. They just stared at him.

Without his mate, without his honor, and without his pack's respect, Raymond's Alpha aura dimmed right before our eyes. He looked suddenly ordinary. He looked small.

I didn't stay to watch him crumble.

I turned and walked down the center aisle. The crowd parted for me instantly. No one said a word. They bowed their heads, not out of Alpha command, but out of genuine respect. I walked out the heavy oak doors and into the afternoon sun.

My bags were already packed and waiting in my car. I didn't need to go back to the bedroom.

That night, as I drove down the winding mountain road, leaving the Ironvale borders behind me, a sound echoed through the trees. It was a wolf's howl. It was loud, desperate, and filled with agonizing regret.

Raymond's wolf.

He howled for days after I left. But I never looked back. I kept my eyes on the road ahead. I was leaving with my reputation intact, my head held high, and his kingdom in ruins.

Chapter 3

The first thing I learned about freedom was that it hurt. I rented a modest, one-bedroom apartment in a neutral border town, two hours away from Ironvale. It was small. The walls were thin, and the kitchen counter was cheap laminate instead of marble. But the name on the lease was mine. It was the first space that belonged entirely to me in over a decade.

I thought I was fine. I thought the worst was behind me. But without the heavy, daily duties of running a pack to distract me, my body finally kept the score.

The crash hit me on a Tuesday afternoon. I was unpacking a box of books when a cramp tore through my lower abdomen. It was so sudden and sharp that my knees literally gave out. I hit the hardwood floor hard, gasping for air.

I dragged myself to the bathroom, my fingers digging into the grout of the cold tiles. My hands shook violently. Sweat dripped down my neck. The hormonal crash from three years of aggressive fertility treatments ravaged my system without mercy. My body was a battlefield, pumped full of synthetic hormones and healer herbs, trying to create an environment for a pup that never came. Now, it was just tearing itself apart.

I curled into a tight ball on the bathmat. I closed my eyes and reached inward, looking for the fierce, towering she-wolf that used to pace in my mind.

*Hurt...*

The voice was so faint it barely registered. My wolf didn't roar. She didn't pace. She just lay there in the dark, communicating in broken, exhausted fragments.

*So tired...*

"I know," I whispered to the empty room, clutching my stomach. "I know."

I stayed on that floor for hours. When the pain finally dulled to a heavy ache, I slowly pulled myself up. I looked in the mirror. My face was pale, and there were dark circles under my eyes. I was free, yes. But I was also broken.

And I couldn't stop thinking about the look in Elara's eyes on my last night in the clinic. That heavy, guilty hesitation when she told me my body needed a break.

I needed to know why.

I called Elara the next morning. Since I was no longer her Luna, I didn't demand. I simply asked her to meet me at a quiet diner just outside Ironvale's borders.

She arrived looking nervous, her hands clutching her purse tight. She slid into the booth across from me and ordered a black coffee. She couldn't meet my eyes.

"Elara," I started, keeping my voice gentle but firm. "You've been my healer for three years. You've watched me suffer through every cycle, every injection, every failure. But the night I left, you looked at me like you were hiding a ghost. What aren't you telling me?"

She swallowed hard. Her fingers traced the rim of her coffee cup. With Raymond no longer my mate, and with my rejection recognized by the elders, her pack loyalty to him was no longer absolute.

"The treatments, Vivienne..." Her voice trembled. "They were never going to work."

I frowned. "I know my wolf was weak, but you said—"

"Not you," she interrupted, a tear finally slipping down her cheek. "Him. Raymond."

I froze. The diner around us seemed to drop away. The clatter of silverware and the chatter of the waitress faded into a dull buzz. "What do you mean?"

"I ran tests on both of you during the very first month of your treatments," Elara whispered, leaning in so no one else could hear. "Raymond's results came back first. He is completely sterile, Vivienne. He has been since the beginning. He is biologically incapable of fathering a pup."

I sat perfectly still. My lungs forgot how to pull in air.

"I flagged it immediately," Elara continued, her voice breaking. "I took the results straight to him. But he was furious. He said an Alpha cannot be seen as defective. He commanded me to seal the records. And he... he ordered me to continue treating you. To make the pack believe the issue was yours."

Every painful injection. Every night spent crying on the bathroom floor. Every time I felt like a failing, broken vessel. It was all for nothing. Raymond knew. He watched my body break down, cycle after cycle, just to protect his own pathetic Alpha pride.

I didn't scream. I didn't cry. A terrifying, absolute calm washed over me. The armor around my heart didn't just harden; it turned to ice.

"Do you still have the records?" I asked. My voice didn't even shake.

Elara nodded quickly. She reached into her large tote bag and pulled out a thick, sealed manila envelope. "I made certified copies. I couldn't destroy them. It felt too wrong. I'm so sorry, Vivienne. I was bound by his Alpha command."

"You aren't bound anymore," I said, taking the envelope. It felt heavy in my hands. It felt like a loaded gun. "Thank you, Elara."

I drove back to my apartment and locked the medical records in a small safe in my closet. Raymond's ruin was already set in motion. But I wasn't finished. I still had a score to settle with Mara.

Mara thought she had won. She thought she had taken my mate, my title, and my life. But I knew Mara better than anyone. I knew her deepest, most pathetic obsession.

Kieran Morales.

For years, at every regional pack gathering we attended as teenagers, Mara would drag me to the training grounds just to watch him. He was a quiet, devastatingly handsome wolf from a small mountain pack. Mara obsessed over him. She learned his habits, his favorite foods, his fighting style. But Kieran never gave her a second glance. It ate her alive.

Through a few carefully placed inquiries on the pack-circuit gossip chain, I found out Kieran was currently staying near the border town. He frequented a neutral-ground bar called The Rusty Nail.

My plan was clean, cold, and merciless. I was going to seduce the one man Mara had always wanted, make sure she found out, and twist the knife where it would never stop hurting.

I stood in front of my bedroom mirror that Friday night. I didn't look like the Luna of Ironvale anymore. I brushed my hair out until it fell in loose, wild waves over my shoulders. I lined my eyes with dark kohl and painted my lips a deep, blood red.

I pulled a dress from the back of my closet. It was black silk, clinging tightly to every curve, with a neckline that dipped low and a slit that rode high up my thigh. It left little to the imagination, but it screamed control. I slipped my feet into black stiletto heels.

I wasn't a broken wife tonight. I was a weapon.

I drove to The Rusty Nail. The parking lot was packed with motorcycles and beat-up trucks. A neon sign buzzed above the heavy wooden door, casting a harsh red glow over the pavement. The faint smell of cheap beer and supernatural energy drifted into the night air.

I killed the engine. I took a deep breath, feeling the cold armor lock securely into place around my soul. I stepped out of the car, my heels clicking sharply against the asphalt, and walked straight toward the door.

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