Chapter 1

Ten years. Ten years of my life given to this man, to this pack, to this mate bond that I thought was sacred. I stood frozen in the doorway of our bedroom, watching as Lucas adjusted his tie in the mirror, his broad shoulders squared with the confidence of an Alpha who had never doubted his worth.

"Are you ready for tonight?" I asked softly, smoothing down the silk dress I'd chosen for our anniversary dinner. "The pack is gathering in the main hall."

Lucas barely glanced my way. "Change of plans, Naomi. We're not attending."

My fingers stilled on the fabric. "What? But it's our tenth anniversary. The entire pack has prepared—"

"I've made my decision." His tone carried that familiar edge of finality that brooked no argument. "You should rest tonight. You've been... fragile lately."

Fragile. The word stung like a slap. I'd endured his mother's ritual of dancing barefoot on broken glass last month without complaint. I'd continued my Luna duties despite the blood disorder that made even small cuts dangerous. And now, on our anniversary, I was being dismissed as fragile.

Before I could respond, voices echoed from downstairs. Lucas straightened, a smile spreading across his face—the kind of smile I hadn't seen directed at me in years.

"They're here," he said, almost to himself.

I followed him downstairs, my heart pounding with a strange foreboding. The pack members gathered in the foyer fell silent as we descended, their eyes darting between Lucas and me with uncomfortable glances.

And then I saw her.

A young woman with honey-blonde hair and delicate features that mirrored my own stood beside Lucas. Her hand rested possessively on his arm, and when she smiled up at him, something inside me shattered.

"This is Elodie Brooks," Lucas announced to the pack. "She'll be staying with us indefinitely. Naomi needs rest, and Elodie will be helping with some Luna duties while Naomi recovers."

The room spun slightly. "Lucas," I whispered, "what are you doing?"

He didn't even look at me. "The pack needs to understand that Elodie is to be treated with the same respect as our Luna."

Our Luna. Not his Luna. Our Luna. The distinction cut deeper than any claw.

---

Three days later, I found her in my private chamber—the one place I thought was still mine alone. Elodie stood before my ceremonial wardrobe, her fingers trailing over the delicate Luna robes I'd worn for a decade.

"These are quite lovely," she said without turning. "Though they could use some updating."

Before I could stop her, she grabbed the silver scissors from my sewing table and began cutting. The sound of fabric tearing filled the room as she systematically destroyed each robe, each veil, each piece of my Luna heritage.

"Stop!" I cried, lunging forward. "Those are sacred!"

She turned then, her eyes gleaming with something dangerous. "Sacred? Oh, I hardly think so." She moved to my jewelry box next, pulling out the Luna pendant Lucas had given me on our first anniversary.

With deliberate slowness, she dropped it to the floor and crushed it beneath her heel.

"Elodie!" I gasped, reaching for the broken pieces.

"Don't touch me!" she snapped, then immediately softened her voice as footsteps approached. Lucas appeared in the doorway, his expression darkening as he surveyed the scene.

"What happened?" he demanded.

"She destroyed everything," I said, holding up the broken pendant. "My ceremonial robes, my jewelry—"

"I was just trying to help clean," Elodie said, tears welling in her eyes. "I'm so clumsy, and Naomi was so angry..."

Lucas's gaze hardened as it fell on me. "Naomi, you need to be more understanding. Elodie is trying to help."

"Help?" I echoed in disbelief.

"Yes, help," he said firmly. "And you will make her feel welcome, won't you?"

---

The pack clinic was silent except for the soft beeping of machines. Dr. Elena's face was carefully neutral as she reviewed the test results, but I could see the discomfort in her eyes.

"You're both pregnant," she confirmed, looking between me and Elodie.

The room seemed to tilt. I was carrying Lucas's heir—the future Alpha of Silvermoon Pack.

Elodie's hand rested protectively over her still-flat stomach. "How wonderful," she breathed, her eyes finding Lucas's. "Our baby..."

Lucas's expression transformed with joy as he looked at Elodie. Then his gaze fell on me, and that joy vanished.

"Naomi," he said, his voice cold and decisive. "You will schedule a termination immediately."

My blood ran cold. "What?"

"Your blood disorder makes pregnancy dangerous," he said flatly. "And Elodie needs to be my sole focus right now."

"But this is your heir," I whispered, my hand instinctively moving to my stomach. "Our child—"

"Schedule it," he repeated, turning away. "Tomorrow."

As he walked out with Elodie clinging to his arm, I caught Dr. Elena's horrified expression. She knew what this would do to me—not just physically with my condition, but to my very soul.

The mate bond that had sustained me for ten years was unraveling before my eyes, and with it, the last fragments of my heart.

Chapter 2

The sterile scent of antiseptic burned my nostrils as I lay on the cold examination table. Dr. Elena's hands trembled slightly as she prepared the instruments, her eyes refusing to meet mine.

"Naomi, I..." Her voice cracked. "I'm so sorry."

I closed my eyes, one hand resting protectively over my stomach—over the tiny life that would never have a chance. My blood disorder made pregnancy dangerous, but not impossible. With proper care, I could have carried this child—Lucas's heir.

"Alpha's orders," I whispered, the words bitter on my tongue. "You have no choice."

Dr. Elena's face contorted with guilt. "There are some things I shouldn't have to choose between."

The needle slid into my arm, and I turned my head away as she began the procedure. Each movement of her hands felt like a betrayal—not of her, but of the oath she'd sworn to protect life.

"Stay with me," she murmured as my vision began to blur. "Your blood pressure is dropping."

I felt the warm trickle between my legs before I saw it—bright crimson spreading across the white sheet. My body convulsed as pain ripped through me.

"Blood clotting," Dr. Elena gasped, grabbing emergency supplies. "Naomi, stay awake!"

But darkness was pulling me under, a merciful escape from the horror of what was happening. As consciousness slipped away, I heard Lucas's voice from the hallway.

"How much longer will this take? Elodie needs to see me."

---

I woke to silence and emptiness. My body ached, but the hollow space inside me hurt worse. The baby was gone.

Dr. Elena sat beside my bed, her face drawn with exhaustion. "You nearly died," she said quietly. "If I'd pushed any harder..."

"Thank you," I whispered, though I wasn't sure what I was thanking her for.

She squeezed my hand. "Rest. I've given you something for the pain."

But nothing could ease the agony of losing my child—our child.

---

The pack house buzzed with activity when I finally returned from the clinic three days later. Warriors carried elegant furniture up the grand staircase—pieces I recognized from the Luna suite.

"What's happening?" I asked a passing Delta, who couldn't meet my eyes.

"Alpha's orders," he mumbled before hurrying away.

I followed the sounds of laughter to the east wing. The doors to the Luna suite—my suite—stood open, revealing Lucas directing the placement of a delicate vanity set.

"Perfect there," he said, his voice warm with approval. "Elodie will love it."

Elodie stood in the center of the room, her hand resting on her still-flat stomach, directing the workers with the confidence of someone who'd always belonged here.

"Oh, Naomi," Lucas said, noticing me in the doorway. "You should be resting."

"This is my room," I said, my voice barely audible.

Was. This was my room.

"Elodie needs proper accommodations for her pregnancy," Lucas replied, as if explaining something to a child. "Your old room in the west wing has been prepared for you."

The west wing. Where the unmated females stayed. Where the pack's lowest members resided.

"Lucas," I began, but Elodie cut me off.

"The nursery will be perfect here," she said, opening the adjoining door—the room where my child would have slept. "We can start preparing it next week."

Lucas beamed at her, then turned to me with impatience. "You're still recovering. Go rest."

I stood there as pack members streamed past, carrying my belongings to my new quarters—a small room with a narrow bed and a single window overlooking the forest edge.

That night, I heard them through the walls. Lucas's deep laugh, Elodie's soft giggles. The pack gathering in the main hall to welcome her officially into the Luna suite.

---

I was sitting by the window, watching the moon rise, when the voice came.

*Naomi.*

I startled, looking around the empty room. "Who's there?"

*Someone who's watched over you for years.*

The voice was in my head—a mind-link. But it wasn't Lucas's voice. It was deeper, warmer somehow.

"Who are you?" I whispered aloud.

*My dream is to follow you, my true mate.*

I shook my head in confusion. "That's impossible. Lucas is my—"

*Lucas is not who you think he is.*

Images flashed through my mind—a forest clearing, moonlight, blood. A young girl surrounded by rogues. A figure fighting desperately to reach her.

"That's... that's the night Charlie died," I murmured, recognizing the memory of the rogue attack that had shaped my life.

*Look closer.*

I focused on the memory, and for the first time in ten years, I saw something different. The figure fighting through the rogues wasn't Lucas. It was someone else—someone with broader shoulders and a different fighting style.

*Remember who really saved you that night.*

The voice faded, leaving me alone with questions that burned brighter than any pain I'd felt today.

If Lucas wasn't my savior... then who was? And why had I been living a lie for ten years?

Chapter 3

The ceremonial hall of the Silvermoon Pack gleamed under moonlight streaming through stained glass windows. Pack members gathered in a circle, their faces solemn as Margaret Mendez, Lucas's mother and former Luna, stepped into the center. Her silver hair was pulled back in a severe knot, her eyes cold as they fixed on me.

"Luna Naomi," she announced, her voice carrying across the hushed room. "You have failed in your most basic duty."

My heart sank. I knew what was coming.

"Step forward," Margaret commanded.

I moved to the center of the circle, feeling dozens of eyes upon me. Lucas stood at the edge, his expression impassive. Beside him, Elodie watched with barely concealed satisfaction.

"Remove your shoes," Margaret instructed.

Slowly, I slipped off my ceremonial sandals. The marble floor felt cold against my bare feet.

"And now," Margaret continued, "we will remind you of your place."

She nodded to two warriors who stepped forward carrying a crystal bowl filled with broken glass—sharp fragments that glittered wickedly in the moonlight.

"Since you have failed to maintain your mate's interest," Margaret said loudly enough for all to hear, "you will dance for us."

My breath caught. This was the ritual punishment I'd endured twice before—dancing barefoot on broken glass while the pack watched. A humiliation designed to remind me of my supposed failures as Luna.

"Begin," Margaret ordered.

I stepped onto the glass. Pain shot through my foot immediately as shards cut into my skin. Blood welled up, bright red against the clear crystal.

"One... two..." Margaret counted as I forced my body to move.

Each step was agony. Glass embedded in my flesh, and with my blood disorder, I knew the wounds would be slow to heal. But I refused to cry out. I would not give Elodie that satisfaction.

Through tears I refused to shed, I saw her lean close to Lucas, whispering something that made him smile. The smile he once reserved for me.

"Enough," Margaret finally declared after what felt like hours. "Remember this pain whenever you fail your Alpha again."

I stepped off the glass, leaving bloody footprints behind me.

---

Three days later, I slipped into Lucas's study while Elodie was occupied with her morning tea.

"We need to talk," I said quietly.

Lucas looked up from his papers, irritation flashing across his face. "Make it quick. Elodie is waiting for me."

"I want to complete the mate rejection ceremony," I said, the words burning my throat.

He blinked, surprise replacing irritation. Then a slow smile spread across his face. "You're finally ready to accept reality?"

I swallowed hard. "The ceremony. Tomorrow at midnight. In the sacred grove."

"And you understand what this means?" Lucas asked, leaning back in his chair. "Once done, there's no going back."

"I understand."

He studied me for a moment, then shrugged. "Fine. Tomorrow at midnight."

He didn't ask why. Didn't wonder about my sudden decision. He was too eager to be free of our bond—a bond he'd been slowly poisoning for months.

---

The sacred grove was silent except for the whisper of wind through ancient trees. Moonlight filtered through leaves, casting dappled shadows across the stone altar where Lucas and I stood facing each other.

The pack elders formed a circle around us, their faces grave. Mate rejection was rare—sacred bonds weren't meant to be broken.

"We gather under the Moon Goddess's light," the eldest began, "to witness the severing of a fated bond."

Lucas stood across from me, his expression impatient. Behind him, partially hidden by shadows, I glimpsed Elodie watching.

"I, Lucas Mendez, Alpha of the Silvermoon Pack," he began, his voice steady, "reject you, Naomi Hughes, as my mate."

Pain lanced through me immediately—white-hot and all-consuming. I gasped, clutching the edge of the altar.

"I release you from all bonds," Lucas continued, "all promises, all ties that bind us."

The pain intensified with each word. My vision blurred as something tore inside me—the mate bond stretching, fraying.

"By the power of the Moon Goddess," I managed through gritted teeth, "I, Naomi Hughes, accept this rejection."

The final words triggered an explosion of agony. I screamed as the bond snapped completely. Lucas staggered backward, his face contorted in pain.

For a moment, we stood frozen in shared torment—ten years of connection severed in an instant.

Then Lucas turned away. His eyes found Elodie in the shadows, and he moved toward her without a backward glance.

"Take care of her," he instructed an elder, gesturing vaguely in my direction.

I remained alone at the altar, doubled over in pain as the echoes of our broken bond reverberated through my body. No one came to help me. No one even looked my way.

Except for a shadow at the edge of the grove—a tall figure watching with intense eyes that reflected the moonlight.

A figure I somehow knew I'd seen before.

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