The morning sun filtered through the barred window of my cell, casting prison-bar shadows across the damp floor. I'd barely slept, my body aching from the wolf suppressant injection and the hard stone beneath my thin mattress. The sound of footsteps echoing down the corridor made me sit up, my heart racing with dread.
It wasn't Diana this time. Xavier himself appeared at my cell door, his imposing figure blocking the light from the corridor. The key turned with a metallic scrape that set my teeth on edge.
"You," he said, his voice cold and commanding. "Clean the Alpha quarters today. Every inch."
Two guards flanked him, their expressions impassive as they unlocked my cell. I rose shakily to my feet, the suppressant still making my limbs feel like lead.
"Now," Xavier snapped when I hesitated.
They marched me up the stairs, through corridors I once walked freely, and into the Alpha quarters—the very rooms that should have been mine. The spacious suite was immaculate, sunlight streaming through large windows that overlooked the training grounds. It was beautiful, and it should have been my home.
A bucket of soapy water and a scrub brush waited in the center of the room.
"On your knees," Xavier ordered, nodding toward the bucket. "Starting with the floors."
I bit my lip until I tasted blood, fighting back tears of humiliation as I sank to my knees. The stone floor was cold against my skin as I dipped the brush into the water and began scrubbing.
"Faster," Xavier demanded, pacing behind me. "A slave shouldn't take all day to do simple work."
I scrubbed harder, my knuckles turning raw against the rough brush. Hours passed as I worked my way across the entire suite—bedroom, bathroom, living area—while Xavier watched from his comfortable chair, occasionally sipping wine.
When I reached the area where he sat, he deliberately kicked over my bucket, sending dirty water spreading across the floor I'd just cleaned.
"Oops," he said with a cruel smile. "Looks like you missed a spot."
I had to bite back a scream of frustration as I refilled the bucket and started the section over. My back screamed in protest, my knees bruised and bleeding from kneeling on the hard floor.
"Perfect," Xavier finally said when the sun was setting. "You can do this every day. It's all you're good for now."
---
That evening, the pack gathered for dinner in the great hall. I hadn't eaten all day, my stomach cramping painfully as the scent of roasted meat filled the air. Instead of being allowed to eat, I was ordered to serve.
"Bring me that platter," Xavier commanded from the head table, where he sat with Diana draped possessively across his lap.
I moved to obey, my legs shaking with exhaustion and hunger. The heavy silver platter nearly slipped from my hands as I carried it to them.
"Careful, slave," Diana hissed. "That's worth more than you are."
Xavier pulled her closer, nuzzling her neck as he reached for a slice of meat. Instead of eating it himself, he held it to Diana's lips.
"Feed her," he ordered me.
I stood frozen, unable to process his command.
"I said feed her," he repeated, his eyes flashing dangerously.
With trembling fingers, I took a piece of meat and offered it to Diana. She smirked triumphantly as she leaned forward to take it from my fingers, deliberately letting her teeth graze my skin.
"Mmm," she purred. "Almost as tasty as you look, Alpha."
The pack members around us snickered, some openly mocking me while others averted their eyes in uncomfortable silence.
"Now us," Xavier said, gesturing for me to continue serving as they fed each other intimate bites, whispering and laughing as if I weren't even there.
I felt something inside me harden with each passing moment, a tiny spark of rage igniting where there had only been pain before.
---
Later that night, I slipped into the kitchen to find scraps to eat. The cook had left hours ago, and the room was empty except for me and the remnants of the feast.
"Looking for food?" Diana's voice sliced through the silence as she entered, her father Marcus following close behind.
I straightened immediately, backing away from the counter. "I was just—"
"Just stealing," she finished for me, her eyes narrowing. "Like the worthless stray you are."
Marcus watched impassively as Diana moved toward the fireplace where an iron poker glowed red-hot in the embers.
"Let me teach you a lesson about boundaries," she said, reaching for the poker.
Before I could react, she pressed the burning metal against my forearm. The sizzle of flesh and the scent of burning hair filled the air as agony exploded through my arm. I bit through my lip to keep from screaming.
"Remember your place, reject," Diana hissed as tears streamed down my face. "You are nothing."
Two kitchen workers entered but froze when they saw what was happening. Their eyes widened in horror, but neither moved to help me. They looked away, too afraid to intervene.
As Diana finally pulled the poker away, leaving a perfect burn mark in the shape of a crescent moon on my arm, I caught Marcus's eye. There was something there—not sympathy or regret, but a flicker of calculation.
"Enough for tonight," he said quietly to his daughter. "We don't want her dead yet."
As they left me crumpled on the kitchen floor, clutching my burned arm, that tiny spark of rage inside me grew stronger. One day, I promised myself through gritted teeth, they would pay for every moment of this humiliation.
I just had to survive long enough to make them suffer.
I heard the heavy footsteps before I saw him. Xavier's presence filled the narrow dungeon corridor, his Alpha aura pulsing with dominance and cruelty. Two guards flanked him, their expressions blank as they unlocked my cell.
"Get up," Xavier commanded, his voice cold as the stone beneath my feet.
My body trembled as I rose. Three days in the dungeon had weakened me, the wolf-suppressant drugs making my limbs heavy and unresponsive. The guards seized my arms, dragging me from the cell when I stumbled.
"Where are you taking me?" I dared to ask, my voice barely above a whisper.
Xavier's smile was sharp enough to cut. "To show you exactly what you missed out on."
They marched me through the packhouse, past wide-eyed omegas who quickly averted their gaze. No one intervened. No one even met my eyes. I was a ghost now, less than nothing in their world.
The guards stopped outside Xavier's private chambers—the Alpha suite I should have shared with him as his Luna. My heart clenched painfully as the door swung open.
Diana lounged across Xavier's bed, her golden hair spilling over silk pillows. She wore nothing but one of his shirts, which barely covered the essentials. Her eyes gleamed with malicious triumph when she saw me.
"Perfect timing," she purred, stretching languidly. "We were just about to start."
One of the guards produced a chain from his belt and secured it around my wrists before fastening the other end to a hook in the wall—forcing me to stand just feet away from the bed, unable to turn away.
"Watch and learn," Xavier said, his voice thick with satisfaction as he moved toward Diana. "This is what a real mate does for her Alpha."
I closed my eyes, but Xavier's hand shot out, gripping my jaw with bruising force. "Watch," he growled. "This is what you'll never have."
Tears streamed down my face as Xavier and Diana performed for me, their bodies entwined in the bed that should have been mine. Every moan, every whispered word was a knife twisting in my gut. The mate bond might be broken, but the phantom pain lingered, a cruel reminder of what I'd lost.
"You're pathetic," Diana whispered when they finished, her eyes alight with sadistic pleasure as she noted my tears. "So weak, so useless."
Xavier released my jaw with a contemptuous shove. "Take her back to her hole."
* * *
The next morning marked the beginning of my new life as the pack's living entertainment.
"Clean my boots," sneered Tomas, one of Xavier's favorite fighters, sticking his mud-caked footwear directly in front of my face. "With your tongue."
I hesitated, the wolf-suppressant drugs making it hard to summon even basic defiance.
"I said clean them," he repeated, shoving my head down toward the filthy leather.
Behind him, several other pack members gathered, snickering and placing bets on how long it would take me to comply.
"Come on, rejected," another called. "Show us how low you can go."
Slowly, feeling every ounce of dignity drain away, I extended my tongue and began to clean the mud from Tomas's boots. The taste was revolting, but resistance meant worse punishment.
Later that day, they made me carry firewood from the forest edge to the packhouse kitchens—a task that would have been simple for any werewolf, but with my strength suppressed, each log felt like it weighed a hundred pounds. My arms screamed in protest as I staggered under the load.
"Faster!" Diana shouted from her perch on the training field's edge. "Or there's no food for you tonight."
I stumbled forward, legs shaking, determined not to give her the satisfaction of seeing me fall.
* * *
"You need to eat more than this," Elena whispered, her weathered hands pressing a small bundle into mine as we worked in the kitchens. The elderly Omega had raised me after I was found abandoned on pack territory—the closest thing to a mother I'd ever known.
"Elena, if they catch you—"
"They won't," she insisted, her eyes darting nervously around the empty kitchen. "Besides, what kind of mother would I be if I let them starve you?"
Inside the bundle was bread—real bread, not the moldy scraps I'd been given—and some cheese. Tucked beside it was a small vial of salve for the welts on my back from yesterday's "accident" with a training whip.
"Thank you," I whispered, hiding the food in my pocket.
Elena squeezed my hand briefly. "Be strong, little one. The Moon Goddess sees all."
* * *
The town square bustled with activity as Diana finished her shopping spree. Four large bags dangled from my arms—designer clothes and luxury items she'd purchased to celebrate being Luna.
"Move faster," she snapped as I struggled to keep pace. "Some of us have a pack meeting to attend."
My foot caught on an uneven stone, sending me stumbling forward. One of the bags ripped open, spilling expensive bottles across the cobblestones.
Diana's shriek could have shattered glass. "Look what you've done!"
Before I could apologize or gather the scattered items, Marcus Thornfield materialized beside us, his face thunderous with rage.
"Incompetent slave," he growled, seizing a whip from his belt. "You'll learn respect for your Luna's property."
The first lash caught me across the back, tearing through my thin shirt and into flesh. I bit my lip until I tasted blood, determined not to scream.
"Second strike for dropping your burden," Marcus announced to the growing crowd of onlookers. "Third for daring to damage Luna Diana's purchases."
As the whip whistled through the air again, I caught sight of Elena in the crowd, her face pale with horror. Behind her stood Dr. Hendricks, his medical bag clutched tightly in white-knuckled hands.
Neither moved to help me.
No one did.