The Sterling Pack council chamber felt suffocating as I took my seat beside Marcus's empty Luna chair. My mate had called this emergency meeting without consulting me—the first of many slights I'd endured since discovering him with Amanda in my lab three days ago.
I smoothed my charcoal pencil skirt, keeping my expression neutral as pack members filed in. Sarah, my wolf, paced restlessly within me. 'Be patient,' I soothed her. 'We're playing the long game now.'
Marcus strode in, commanding the room with his presence. I noted how he deliberately avoided my gaze, focusing instead on the Beta and Gamma seated across from us. Amanda slipped in behind him, wearing a cream blouse that complemented her artificially demure demeanor. She took a seat not at the far end where guests belonged, but directly across from me.
'She's taunting us,' Sarah growled.
'Let her,' I replied internally. 'Every move they make is evidence I'm collecting.'
Marcus called the meeting to order, his voice carrying that distinctive Alpha resonance that once made my heart flutter. Now it just made my skin crawl.
'Before we discuss territory matters,' he announced, 'I'd like to recognize a significant achievement for our pack.'
He nodded to Beta Daniel, who distributed copies of the Werewolf Scientific Journal. My breath caught as I recognized the cover—a molecular diagram of my regeneration serum.
'Our newest pack member, Amanda Walsh, has published a groundbreaking article on werewolf regeneration techniques,' Marcus continued, his chest puffing with pride. 'This research will elevate Sterling Pack's standing in the scientific community.'
Applause erupted around the table. I flipped to the article with trembling hands, scanning the text I knew by heart—my unpublished manuscript, word for word, equation for equation. The work I'd spent eighteen months perfecting, now under Amanda's name.
Sarah howled in outrage, clawing at my restraint. The mate bond between Marcus and me throbbed painfully, stretched to near-breaking.
'This is my research,' I said, my voice cutting through the congratulatory murmurs. The room fell silent. 'Every word, every formula—stolen from my unpublished manuscript.'
All eyes turned to Amanda, who widened her eyes in practiced innocence. 'Dr. Blackwood, I understand you might feel... competitive. But these formulas are my work.'
'The molecular structure on page forty-seven still has my lab notation system,' I pointed out, keeping my voice steady despite the rage building inside me. 'The control group data comes directly from my Sterling Pack subjects.'
Marcus's jaw tightened. I could see the calculation in his eyes—weighing his new infatuation against the mate the Moon Goddess had chosen for him. The pack members shifted uncomfortably, sensing the tension between their Alpha and Luna.
'Enough,' Marcus finally said, his voice dropping into the commanding Alpha tone that could silence an entire pack. 'Jealousy suits a spiteful Luna poorly. Amanda's work stands on its own merit.'
The Alpha command hit me like a physical blow. Not because it compelled me—as his equal, I was immune to that particular power—but because he had wielded it against me publicly, undermining my position before the entire council.
Sarah snarled, ready to challenge, but I held her back. This wasn't the battlefield I would choose for our war.
'As you say, Alpha,' I replied with a measured nod, my voice cool and detached. The surprise in his eyes was worth the momentary submission. He had expected tears, expected a scene. Instead, I closed the journal and placed it precisely in the center of the table.
The meeting continued, but I barely heard the words. My mind was already plotting, calculating the exact pressure points where I would begin dismantling his power structure.
Three hours later, I arrived at the territorial negotiation session with the neighboring River Creek Pack. As Luna, I had spearheaded these discussions for years, leveraging my scientific innovations to expand our boundaries.
I froze in the doorway of the conference room. Amanda sat in the ornate ceremonial Luna chair—my chair—at Marcus's right hand. Around her neck gleamed my custom-made silver wolf pendant, the one Marcus had commissioned for our third mating anniversary.
The River Creek representatives glanced between us, clearly uncomfortable with the breach in protocol. Marcus merely offered Amanda a proud smile, his hand covering hers on the table.
I stood perfectly still, allowing the moment to burn itself into my memory. This wasn't just betrayal anymore. This was declaration of war.
'The Luna chair suits you, Amanda,' I said softly, ensuring every ear in the room caught my words. 'Enjoy it while you can.'
I turned and walked out, my heels clicking a steady rhythm on the marble floor. Behind me, I heard Marcus call my name, but I didn't look back. Sarah's fury had crystallized into something colder, more dangerous.
'He thinks he's winning,' she whispered in my mind.
'Let him think that,' I replied as I pushed through the pack house doors into the sunlight. 'The higher he builds his house of cards, the further he'll fall when we pull out the foundation.'
The ancient Silvermoon Pack archives smelled of parchment and power. I sat alone at a massive oak table, surrounded by centuries of werewolf history as moonlight filtered through stained glass windows. My fingers trembled slightly as I dialed a number I hadn't used in years.
'Silvermoon legal offices, this is Gregory Winters speaking.'
'Gregory, it's Elena Blackwood.'
The silence on the other end spoke volumes. Our pack's lawyer had known me since I was a pup, had watched me grow into the scientist and Luna I'd become.
'Dr. Blackwood. It's been some time.'
'I need your assistance with an intellectual property theft.' My voice remained steady despite Sarah's restless pacing within me. 'The Sterling Pack has published my regeneration serum research under another wolf's name.'
I detailed the plagiarism, sending him digital copies of both my original manuscript and Amanda's published article. Gregory's breathing grew heavier with each example I provided.
'This is... egregious,' he finally said. 'And your Alpha mate permitted this?'
'He facilitated it.' The words tasted bitter. 'I need everything reclaimed immediately. Patents, research grants, all of it.'
'Consider it done,' Gregory replied, his tone hardening with the protective instinct of the Silvermoon Pack. 'We'll begin proceedings at dawn.'
As I hung up, Sarah's voice rumbled through me. 'It's not enough.'
'It's just the beginning,' I promised her.
* * *
The Silvermoon Pack house glittered with celebration lights for my father's birthday gala. Crystal chandeliers cast prismatic patterns across marble floors as pack members from both Silvermoon and Sterling mingled in formal attire. I stood beside my father, former Alpha Kaelen Blackwood, greeting guests with practiced grace.
'You seem distant tonight, daughter,' my father murmured between handshakes.
I forced a smile. 'Just tired from the lab, Father.'
His knowing eyes saw through the lie, but before he could press further, the grand doors swung open. The room's chatter dimmed as Marcus strode in, commanding attention in his tailored black suit. But it wasn't his presence that caused my breath to catch—it was Amanda clinging to his arm, draped in a silver gown that mimicked traditional Luna ceremonial colors.
Sarah howled in outrage, clawing so violently at my control that I had to grip a nearby column to steady myself. 'How DARE he bring her here.'
My father's hand tightened on my shoulder as Marcus approached, leading Amanda directly to us—the highest insult he could deliver on Silvermoon territory.
'Alpha Kaelen,' Marcus greeted with a respectful nod. 'May I present Amanda Walsh, the Sterling Pack's rising scientific star. Her recent publication has brought unprecedented honor to our pack.'
The room fell silent. Even wolves with no knowledge of pack politics could sense the deliberate humiliation. My father's eyes narrowed dangerously, his former Alpha aura flaring despite his retirement.
'Interesting,' he replied, his voice glacial. 'I was under the impression my daughter's research was the cornerstone of Sterling Pack's scientific achievements.'
Amanda's smile never faltered. 'Dr. Blackwood has made... contributions. But science must move forward with fresh perspectives.'
I met her gaze steadily, noting the triumph gleaming in her eyes. This wasn't just about Marcus or position—she wanted my complete destruction. The realization crystallized something inside me.
'If you'll excuse me,' I said calmly, 'I have pack business to attend to.'
I walked away with measured steps, ignoring the whispers that followed. Marcus had chosen his battlefield—public humiliation. He would soon learn I preferred a different kind of warfare altogether.
I found Beta Iliana in the eastern study, away from the celebration. Her eyes reflected the torchlight as I closed the heavy door behind me.
'You were right,' she said simply. 'He brought her here.'
'Have you prepared what I asked for?'
She nodded, sliding an ancient leather folder across the desk. Inside lay parchment papers, the formal rejection documents that would sever a mate bond recognized by the Moon Goddess herself.
'Once filed, there's no turning back,' Iliana warned. 'The pain will be... substantial.'
I traced the silver-inked letterhead with my fingertip. 'Pain is temporary. His destruction will be permanent.'
Together under the flickering torchlight, we began drafting the words that would change everything. With each line, each formal clause of rejection, I felt Sarah's approval growing stronger. The mate bond throbbed between my ribs, as if sensing its impending execution.
'When will you present these?' Iliana asked as we finished.
I signed my name with a flourish, watching the silver ink glimmer before absorbing into the parchment.
'When he has nothing left to lose but me.'