The morning light filtered through the windows of the pack's medical cabin as I sat perched on the edge of Elara's examination table. My hands wouldn't stop trembling. The elderly healer moved around me with practiced efficiency, her silver-streaked hair tied back in a neat braid as she prepared her instruments.
"How long have you suspected?" Elara asked, her weathered hands gentle as she pressed against my abdomen.
"A few weeks," I whispered, unable to meet her eyes. "The nausea, the sensitivity to scents..." I trailed off, the image of Ryan and Madison flashing through my mind again. The mate bond throbbed painfully in response.
Elara's knowing eyes narrowed as she placed a hand over mine. "Your aura is troubled, Luna. This isn't just about the pregnancy, is it?"
I bit my lip, fighting back tears. Elara had been the pack's healer since before I was born. If there was anyone I could trust with this burden, it was her.
"Ryan is having an affair," I admitted, the words burning my throat. "With Madison Clarke."
Elara's sharp intake of breath was the only indication of her surprise. She squeezed my hand before returning to her examination, pressing her palms gently against my stomach and closing her eyes in concentration.
"Yes," she confirmed after a moment, her voice soft but certain. "About six weeks along. The pup's energy is strong, but..." She hesitated, her brow furrowing.
"But what?" Panic rose in my chest.
"This pup feels your distress," Elara said firmly, meeting my gaze. "Werewolf pregnancies are sensitive to emotional turmoil. Protect you both first."
A sob escaped me before I could stop it. "I don't know what to do. I thought when he found out about the baby, maybe..."
"Hope is a beautiful thing, child," Elara said, pressing a small pouch into my trembling hand. "But not when it blinds us to reality. This is a soothing herbal poultice. Use it when the anxiety becomes too much."
I clutched the pouch to my chest, inhaling its calming scent of lavender and chamomile. "Thank you."
"What will you do now?" she asked, her voice carefully neutral.
"I need more evidence," I said, surprising myself with the steadiness in my voice. "Before I confront him."
* * *
The next three days passed in a blur of meticulous documentation. I reviewed every patrol log Ryan had filed over the past month, noting the discrepancies between his reported locations and the surveillance footage timestamps. I collected scent samples from his discarded shirts, carefully preserving Madison's distinctive floral notes that he didn't even bother to wash away anymore.
Each piece of evidence was another crack in my heart, another confirmation that the mate bond I'd cherished for three years had been nothing but a convenient arrangement for him.
My wolf paced restlessly within me, her grief mingling with a growing rage that I'd never felt before. *He doesn't deserve us*, she growled. *He never did*.
* * *
On the third night, alone in our chambers while Ryan claimed to be handling "urgent pack business," I finally broke. The evidence was spread across our bed—photos, logs, scent samples—each item a testament to his betrayal. I sank to the floor, my arms wrapped protectively around my middle as sobs tore through me.
"Victoria?" My mother's voice, warm and concerned, filtered through our mind-link. The distance between our packs usually made communication difficult, but a mother's connection to her daughter transcended ordinary limitations.
"Mom," I gasped, unable to hide my distress.
"I'm here, sweetheart. What's happened?" The warmth of her presence enveloped me even across the miles.
I opened my mind fully, letting her see everything—the footage, the cabin, the pregnancy, the shattered remains of my mate bond.
Her silence lasted only a moment before her fierce love surged through our connection. "Come home, Victoria. You don't have to face this alone."
"I can't just leave," I whispered, though every part of me longed for the safety of my parents' pack. "I'm his Luna. The pack needs me. And now there's the baby..."
"Listen to me," my mother's voice hardened with the authority of a Luna who had ruled alongside my father for decades. "You were Victoria Hayes long before you were Ryan Sterling's Luna. Your worth isn't tied to a mate who betrays you."
Her words pierced through the fog of pain and self-doubt. "I don't know if I'm strong enough to confront him."
"You are stronger than you know," she insisted. "And you are not alone. Whatever you decide to do, your father and I stand with you."
As our connection faded, I remained on the floor, one hand pressed to my stomach, the other clutching the pouch Elara had given me. The scent of the herbs mingled with the lingering traces of my mother's presence, offering a small measure of comfort.
Tomorrow, I decided. Tomorrow I would gather the last pieces of evidence I needed. And then Alpha Ryan Sterling would learn exactly what happened when you betrayed your Luna.
And your unborn heir.
I spent the morning organizing my evidence in Ryan's private office, arranging everything with methodical precision. The patrol logs with their glaring inconsistencies. The time-stamped photos from the cabin. The sealed collection bags containing Madison's scent samples. Each item represented another crack in what I'd once believed was sacred—our mate bond.
My hand rested protectively over my stomach as I waited. Six weeks. Our child was just six weeks along, already feeling my turmoil through our connection. The thought strengthened my resolve.
*We deserve better than this*, my wolf whispered. For once, I agreed with her completely.
The door swung open, and Ryan strode in with his usual Alpha confidence. He paused when he saw me sitting behind his desk, his expression shifting from surprise to irritation.
"Victoria? What are you doing in here?" His voice held that edge of authority he used when something displeased him.
"We need to talk." I gestured to the chair across from me, reversing our usual positions. "Please, sit."
His eyebrows rose at my tone, but he complied, dropping into the chair with casual grace. "This better be important. I have a territory meeting in twenty minutes."
"It is." I slid the patrol logs across the desk. "You filed these reports stating you were conducting border patrols on the north ridge last Tuesday and Thursday nights."
He glanced at them dismissively. "Yes, and?"
I placed the time-stamped photos next to the logs. "These were taken at the same time. At a cabin fifteen miles south of the border."
Ryan's expression didn't change, but I caught the slight tensing of his shoulders. He leaned back, crossing his arms. "You're mistaken. Those timestamps must be wrong."
"I'm not mistaken." My voice remained steady as I laid out the scent samples. "These are from your shirts. Three different days. All carrying the same scent—Madison's scent."
Ryan's eyes narrowed, but his posture remained relaxed, almost bored. He examined his fingernails as if we were discussing something as trivial as the weather. "You're being delusional, Victoria."
The casual dismissal stung worse than anger would have. He didn't even consider me worth the effort of a convincing lie.
"I saw you with her," I pressed on, pushing the photos closer. "At the cabin. I heard what you said to her."
"And what exactly did you hear?" His tone was condescending now, as if humoring a child.
"That you could never be happy without her." The words burned my throat. "That I was never enough."
Ryan sighed, flicking his hand dismissively. "You're overreacting to something you clearly misunderstood."
The casual way he invalidated everything—the evidence, my pain, our bond—ignited something fierce within me. I stood, placing both hands on the desk.
"I understand perfectly. You've been betraying our mate bond. Betraying me. Betraying our pack."
Something dangerous flashed in his eyes. He leaned forward, and the full force of his Alpha aura crashed over me like a physical wave.
"STOP THIS NONSENSE," he commanded, his Alpha tone reverberating through the room, "OR FACE THE CONSEQUENCES."
My knees trembled violently. The weight of his command pressed down on me, trying to force submission. For three years, I had yielded to that voice, believing it was my duty as his Luna.
Not today.
My wolf surged forward, lending me her strength. I straightened my spine and met his gaze, refusing to bow.
"No," I said simply.
Shock registered on his face. "No?"
"No," I repeated, stronger this time. "I won't stop. I won't pretend anymore."
Ryan's expression shifted, calculation replacing anger. He relaxed back into his chair, a strange smile playing at his lips.
"Fine. You want the truth? Yes, I've been seeing Madison. I'm in love with her. I always have been."
The casual admission knocked the breath from my lungs. Despite all the evidence, despite what I'd seen with my own eyes, some part of me had still hoped for denial, for some explanation that would make this all a terrible misunderstanding.
Instead, he offered the truth with cruel indifference.
My wolf howled in anguish, the sound echoing through my mind as something final and irrevocable shifted within me. I felt the mate bond—already weak and strained—begin to tear.
"You know what?" I said, my voice low and steady as my eyes began to glow with silver light. "I don't need you."
Ryan's smirk faltered.
"I, Victoria Hayes," I continued, each word gaining strength and purpose, "reject you, Alpha Ryan Sterling, as my mate."
The words hung in the air between us, heavy with power and finality. Ryan's face drained of color as the first tremors of the rejection rippled through the bond we'd shared for three years.
And in that moment, as pain and freedom warred within me, I knew nothing would ever be the same again.