The cameras were already rolling when the first contraction hit.
I gripped the sides of the birthing chair, my knuckles white as pain ripped through my swollen belly. The pack meeting hall had been transformed into a makeshift delivery room, with medical equipment hastily arranged around the central platform where I sat exposed before dozens of cameras. The main screen displayed our livestream to the entire Silvermoon Pack and allied territories—hundreds of werewolves watching my most vulnerable moment.
"Please," I gasped between contractions, looking desperately at Dane who stood rigid beside the platform. "Turn off the cameras. Just for—"
"Silence." His Alpha tone crashed over me like a physical blow, forcing my protests back down my throat. "You wanted to prove your innocence, Iris. This is how you do it. Complete transparency."
Dr. Bennett moved between my legs, her face pale with professional distress. She'd been forced to induce labor with hormone injections, pushing my body into premature delivery for this spectacle. "Alpha, the baby is coming early. There could be complications—"
"The cameras stay on," Dane commanded, his dark eyes never leaving the main screen where pack members' comments scrolled past in real-time.
*Is that really the Alpha's child?*
*Look how she's crying—guilty conscience much?*
*Pathetic Luna can't even birth properly.*
Another contraction seized me, stronger this time, and I couldn't hold back the scream that tore from my throat. The pain was unlike anything I'd ever experienced—not just physical, but the agony of being stripped of every shred of dignity while hundreds watched and judged.
"Dane," I sobbed, reaching for him instinctively. "Please, I need you. Our baby needs—"
But he stepped away from my outstretched hand, moving instead to stand beside Lacey. She placed a comforting hand on his arm, her face a mask of sympathetic concern that didn't quite reach her calculating eyes.
"The Alpha must remain objective," she murmured, loud enough for the cameras to catch. "For the pack's sake."
The betrayal cut deeper than any physical pain. This was my mate, the man who'd promised to love and protect me, watching coldly as I endured the most traumatic experience of my life for the entertainment of his pack.
"Push, Luna," Dr. Bennett urged, her voice tight with suppressed emotion. "I can see the head."
I bore down with everything I had, tears streaming down my face as the comments on screen grew crueler.
*She's taking forever—weak bloodline.*
*My money says it's not even his.*
*This is what happens when Alphas choose mates beneath their station.*
The final push came with a rush of agony and relief. A thin wail filled the hall as my daughter entered the world—small, premature, but alive. Dr. Bennett quickly cleaned her before holding her up to the cameras.
"A female pup," she announced, her voice carefully neutral.
I reached for my baby with shaking arms, desperate to hold her, to comfort her after this traumatic entrance into the world. But Dane stepped forward first, his expression unreadable as he studied the tiny face.
The hall fell silent except for my daughter's cries. Everyone waited for the Alpha's reaction, for some sign of recognition or acceptance. Instead, Dane's jaw tightened.
"She's small," he said finally, his voice carrying clearly to every camera. "Premature births often indicate... stress. Or other complications."
The implication hung in the air like poison. Even now, even after witnessing our daughter's birth, he was still questioning her parentage.
"She's perfect," I whispered, finally gathering my baby against my chest. She was so tiny, so fragile, her little fists waving as she searched for comfort. "She's yours, Dane. She's ours."
But he'd already turned away, accepting congratulations from pack members who'd gathered at the edges of the platform. Lacey remained at his side, playing the role of supportive chosen mate while I sat bleeding and broken in the birthing chair.
The cameras kept rolling as I held my daughter close, her cries mixing with my own quiet sobs. This should have been the most joyful moment of my life—instead, it had become a public execution of my dignity.
Three days later, the pack gathered again for what should have been a celebration.
Finley's naming ceremony was traditionally a time of joy, when the Alpha would present his heir to the pack and formally acknowledge their bloodline. I stood on the ceremonial platform, my daughter sleeping peacefully in my arms despite the crowd's murmurs.
Dane took his place at the podium, his Alpha aura commanding immediate silence. But when he spoke, his words shattered what little hope I'd managed to rebuild.
"Pack members," he began, his voice carrying the weight of absolute authority. "We gather today not to celebrate, but to address a matter of grave importance to our bloodline."
My blood turned to ice. This wasn't how naming ceremonies began.
"Questionable bloodlines cannot inherit pack leadership," he continued, his eyes finding mine across the platform. "Until paternity can be conclusively proven, this child will not be acknowledged as my heir."
The pack erupted in whispers and pointed stares. Some members openly laughed, their cruel amusement echoing through the hall. I clutched Finley closer, her small body the only warm thing in a world that had suddenly turned arctic.
"Stand forward, Iris Chapman," Dane commanded, using my maiden name like a weapon.
I forced my legs to carry me to the center of the platform, every step feeling like walking to my own execution. The pack's eyes followed my movement, some filled with pity, others with disgust, and far too many with cruel satisfaction.
"Let this serve as a reminder," Dane announced, his Alpha tone ensuring every word would be remembered, "that loyalty to this pack must be absolute. Betrayal, in any form, will not be tolerated."
As the pack members continued their whispered commentary and barely concealed laughter, I stood there holding our daughter—his daughter—and felt the last pieces of my world crumble around us both.
The first sign came during the morning meal preparation.
"Luna," Maya, one of the kitchen staff, said without looking up from the vegetables she was chopping. Her tone was flat, devoid of the respect that had once colored every interaction. "We'll need more provisions for tonight's dinner."
I stood in the doorway of the pack kitchen, Finley sleeping in my arms, and felt the shift like a physical blow. Maya had always been one of my strongest supporters, often staying late to help with pack events. Now she barely acknowledged my presence.
"Of course," I managed, my voice steady despite the tremor in my chest. "What do you need?"
"Ask Beta Marcus," she replied curtly, finally meeting my eyes with a look that made my stomach clench. "He's handling provisions now."
The dismissal was clear. I was no longer considered capable of managing even basic Luna duties. As I turned to leave, I caught the whispered conversation between Maya and another kitchen worker.
"Can't believe she's still trying to act like nothing happened."
"Did you see the livestream? Pathetic."
"That baby doesn't even look like the Alpha. Poor thing, having a mother like that."
My arms tightened protectively around Finley, who stirred slightly at my increased tension. Each word felt like a dagger, but I forced myself to walk away with what dignity I could muster.
The pack meeting that evening was worse.
Dane had insisted I attend, claiming it was important for pack unity that I maintain my Luna responsibilities. But as I entered the great hall, the conversations died to pointed whispers. Eyes followed my movement to the Luna's chair beside Dane's throne, and I could feel the weight of their judgment pressing down on me like a suffocating blanket.
"As I was saying," Dane continued his address to the pack, not acknowledging my arrival, "loyalty is the foundation of our strength. Without it, we are nothing."
I tried to focus on his words, but the hostile stares from pack members made concentration impossible. Sarah, who had once been a close friend, now looked at me with undisguised disgust. Tom, the head warrior, shook his head when our eyes met, as if disappointed in my very existence.
When Dane opened the floor for pack concerns, Elder Morrison stood first.
"Alpha," he began, his weathered face grave, "there are questions about the Luna's... recent behavior. Some of us wonder if it's appropriate for her to continue in her position given the circumstances."
My breath caught. This was it—the moment I'd been dreading since the naming ceremony. I started to rise, to defend myself, but Dane's voice cut through the air like a blade.
"The Luna will continue her duties as assigned," he said, his Alpha tone brooking no argument. But there was no warmth in his defense, no protection. It felt more like a punishment than support. "Any concerns about pack leadership should be directed to me."
The message was clear: I was to remain in position to be humiliated, not because I deserved the role, but because Dane willed it. The pack members exchanged glances, some looking almost disappointed that the confrontation had been cut short.
After the meeting, as pack members filed out, I overheard fragments of conversations that made my heart sink further.
"He should just reject her properly and be done with it."
"Lacey would make a much better Luna."
"That child will never be accepted as heir. Not after what she did."
I remained seated until the hall emptied, my hands trembling in my lap. When I finally stood to leave, Dane was waiting by the door, his expression unreadable.
"You will attend all pack functions," he said quietly, his voice devoid of the warmth that had once made my heart race. "You will fulfill your duties. But don't mistake my allowing you to keep the title for forgiveness."
The walk back to my chambers felt endless. Pack members I passed in the corridors either ignored me completely or watched with barely concealed contempt. The respect I'd worked years to build, the relationships I'd cherished, all of it had crumbled in a matter of days.
Lacey's influence was everywhere—in the turned backs, the whispered conversations that stopped when I approached, the way former allies now looked through me as if I were invisible. She'd orchestrated my social destruction with surgical precision, turning my own pack against me while positioning herself as the wronged party who was graciously helping Dane through this difficult time.
As I reached my door, I could hear laughter from Dane's office down the hall. Lacey's voice carried clearly, warm and intimate in a way that made my chest ache with familiar pain.
"You're handling this so well, Dane. The pack needs strong leadership during times like these."
I closed my door softly, shutting out the sound of my mate finding comfort in another woman's arms while I faced the ruins of everything I'd once believed in. Finley stirred in her bassinet, and I picked her up, holding her close as tears I'd been fighting all day finally began to fall.
The pack had made their choice. Now I had to figure out how to survive it.