I waited in our chambers, my fingers tracing the moonstone pendant at my throat. The identical one around Emma's neck burned in my memory. *The father of my pup.* Her words echoed in my mind, each syllable a dagger to my heart.
Lyra paced restlessly within me. *Confront him. Make him explain.*
The door opened, and Marcus entered, loosening his tie. He smiled—the same smile I'd trusted for thirty years.
"We need to talk," I said, my voice barely above a whisper.
He paused, studying my face. "What's troubling you, my Luna?"
"Emma." I watched his expression carefully. "She's wearing my pendant. She claims you're her mate. That she's carrying your pup."
Something shifted in his eyes—not guilt or shame, but irritation. As though I'd inconvenienced him by discovering his betrayal.
"I was going to tell you," he said flatly.
The casual admission stole my breath. "Tell me what? That you've betrayed our bond? That you've made a mockery of thirty years of marriage?"
"Don't be dramatic, Isabella." His voice hardened. "You've failed to give me an heir for decades. What did you expect?"
Lyra snarled, clawing at my insides. *He prevented our pups. He's lying.*
"I lost three pregnancies," I whispered, pain lancing through me at the memories. "I mourned our children while you comforted me. And now you blame me?"
Marcus's face darkened. "Because you were never what I needed." His voice shifted, taking on the resonant power of his Alpha tone. "You never knew how to submit properly."
The Alpha tone hit me like a physical blow, forcing me to my knees. Thirty years as his Luna, and he'd never used it against me before.
"Emma understands what a true Luna should be," he continued, looming over me. "She makes my wolf feel dominant again. She doesn't challenge me with her bloodline or her opinions."
I struggled against the compulsion of his tone, fighting to stand. "You're lying. About the miscarriages—"
"I made sure you wouldn't bear my children," he cut in coldly. "Your bloodline is too strong. Any pup of yours would have eventually challenged me."
The room spun around me. Thirty years of grief, of blaming my body for failing us, crashed down in a moment of horrific clarity.
"You monster," I whispered.
His laugh was cruel. "You should be grateful I kept you as Luna this long. Emma will take your place now. She's young, fertile, and knows her proper place."
I lunged at him then, decades of warrior training surging through my muscles. But he was ready, catching my wrist and twisting until I cried out.
"Don't forget who's Alpha here," he growled. "Your father was right about one thing—you never learned proper respect."
He released me with a shove that sent me sprawling across our bed—the bed we'd shared for thirty years. "Sleep here tonight if you wish. Tomorrow, you'll move to the Omega quarters where you belong."
I curled into myself as he left, Lyra howling in anguish within me. The mate bond stretched between us, tainted now with betrayal and lies.
* * *
I awoke to fire coursing through my veins. Daylight streamed through the windows, but I couldn't focus through the agony. My skin burned where it touched the sheets.
*Silver,* Lyra whimpered. *He's poisoning us with silver.*
I forced my eyes open, seeing the fine metallic powder scattered across the bed. Silver—the one substance toxic to our wolf halves. Marcus knew Lyra was particularly sensitive to it, a weakness in my otherwise powerful bloodline.
Female laughter drifted through the walls—Emma's voice, coming from the guest quarters adjacent to our room. "Is she awake yet?" I heard her ask, followed by Marcus's low rumble of response.
They were waiting for my suffering. Enjoying it.
I dragged myself from the bed, every movement torture as silver particles clung to my nightgown and skin. In the bathroom, I scrubbed myself raw under scalding water, washing away the poison while tears streamed down my face.
*We need to leave,* Lyra urged. *He'll destroy us.*
"Yes," I whispered. "But not as a broken Omega."
When the house fell quiet that afternoon, I slipped into my private study and withdrew the communication crystal I'd kept hidden for years. A gift from Alpha King Kaelan of the Crimson Moon Pack, offered when he'd proposed an alliance that would have made me his Luna instead of Marcus's.
I'd declined then, loyal to my mate bond. Now, I activated the crystal with trembling fingers.
"Alpha King Kaelan," I whispered, feeling the crystal warm beneath my touch. "This is Isabella of the Moonstone Pack. I need your help."
As the crystal pulsed with acknowledgment, I felt the first stirring of something I hadn't experienced in years—hope.
The crystal pulsed with a warm glow as I waited, my heart hammering against my ribs. After thirty years of loyalty, I was reaching out to another Alpha—an act that would have been unthinkable mere days ago.
"Isabella." Kaelan's voice emanated from the crystal, deep and steady. No Alpha tone, just calm respect. "I've been waiting for your call."
I swallowed hard, shame burning my cheeks. "You knew?"
"I suspected Marcus wasn't worthy of you from the beginning," he replied. "Your situation... has been discussed among the Alpha Council."
The thought of other Alphas knowing about my humiliation made me flinch. Lyra growled low in my mind. *Pride later. Survival now.*
"I need sanctuary," I said, the words bitter on my tongue. "And the position you once offered, if it still stands."
There was a pause, and for a moment, I feared he would reject me—damaged goods, a cast-off Luna.
"The position has always been yours," Kaelan said finally. "The Crimson Moon Pack would be honored to welcome you as Luna. Not as a refugee, Isabella, but as the leader you were born to be."
Relief flooded through me, so intense I had to grip the desk to stay upright. "Thank you," I whispered. "I'll need time to—"
"Take what you need," he interrupted gently. "But be careful. A wounded Alpha is dangerous, especially one as insecure as Marcus."
I ended the communication with a promise to contact him again with my escape plan. The crystal cooled in my palm as I tucked it away, hope and dread warring within me.
*We have a way out,* Lyra whispered. *Now we just need to survive until we take it.*
* * *
That evening, Marcus commanded my presence at the pack feast—a monthly tradition where the entire pack gathered to strengthen bonds. I dressed carefully in a deep blue gown, my Luna pendant heavy around my neck. If this was to be one of my final appearances as Luna of the Moonstone Pack, I would not skulk in like a shamed Omega.
The great hall fell silent as I entered. News traveled fast in a pack, and the curious, pitying glances told me rumors were already spreading. I held my head high, taking my customary seat at Marcus's right.
He didn't acknowledge me, deep in conversation with Beta Elias. Emma sat three seats away, her youthful beauty enhanced by a dress that clung to her slender frame. The moonstone pendant—my pendant's twin—gleamed at her throat.
Dinner progressed with excruciating slowness. I picked at my food, stomach too knotted to eat, while maintaining the serene expression I'd perfected over three decades.
Then I saw it. Emma, reaching across the table for the salt, deliberately brushing her arm against Marcus's. A casual touch, but the reaction was immediate. Marcus's nostrils flared, his pupils dilating as his wolf responded to her scent. He leaned imperceptibly toward her, a possessive gesture so subtle only those watching closely would notice.
But wolves are observant creatures. Around the table, eyes widened. Conversations faltered. A Delta's mate whispered something to her husband, eyes darting between Emma, Marcus, and me.
Shame burned through me. Thirty years of dignity, reduced to this—the subject of pack gossip, the pitiful Luna whose mate had strayed.
Lyra snarled. *We are not pitiful. We are of the Silverwood bloodline. We are warriors.*
I straightened my spine, forcing myself to take a bite of food. I would not break here, not in front of them.
Marcus's voice cut through the murmurs. "Luna Isabella seems distracted tonight." His tone was light, but carried to every ear in the hall. "Perhaps the duties of Luna have finally become too much for her aging body."
The cruelty of it stole my breath. Fifty was hardly ancient for our kind, who often lived well past a century.
"I assure you, Alpha," I replied, my voice steady despite the rage boiling inside me, "my body and mind are more than capable of fulfilling all duties required of me."
"Are they?" His smile didn't reach his eyes. "Three decades, and not a single living heir. The pack needs continuity, Isabella. Security." His gaze slid meaningfully to Emma. "Youth."
Gasps rippled through the gathering. To speak of such intimate failure publicly was beyond cruel—it was a deliberate humiliation.
Emma's smile was triumphant as whispers erupted around us. The message was clear to everyone present: their Alpha had found a replacement for his failing Luna.
As I sat rigid in my seat, enduring the pitying glances and barely concealed gossip, one thought crystallized in my mind. I would not just escape this pack—I would make Marcus regret the day he betrayed me.
And Emma would learn what it meant to challenge a she-wolf of the Silverwood bloodline.