Chapter 3

The morning sun filtered through the curtains as I picked at my breakfast, nausea rolling through me in waves. Three days had passed since I'd overheard Caden's plans to "dispose" of me after the baby was born. Three days of pretending everything was normal while my world collapsed around me.

"Elizabeth." Nina's voice cut through the dining hall like a blade. "Caden asked me to help organize your old room since you won't be needing it anymore."

I looked up to see her gliding toward our table, a folder tucked under her arm. Her golden hair caught the light, making her appear almost angelic—a cruel joke considering the darkness beneath.

"My room?" I kept my voice steady despite the tremor in my hands. "I still use it for storage."

"Not anymore." She smiled, all teeth and no warmth. "I found something interesting while organizing."

Caden emerged from his office, drawn by Nina's voice. "What is it?"

Nina placed the folder on the table with theatrical precision. "Communication logs between Elizabeth and the Rogue packs along the northern border."

The room fell silent. I stared at the papers—documents I'd never seen before, bearing my signature and the Moonstone Pack seal.

"These are forged," I whispered, but my protest sounded weak even to my own ears.

Caden's eyes darkened as he flipped through the pages. "Explain yourself, Elizabeth."

"I can't explain something I didn't do." My voice cracked. "Nina planted those."

"Am I supposed to believe that?" Caden's laugh was cold. "The woman who's been nothing but trouble since she arrived?"

---

"Bring her," Caden ordered as we prepared to leave. "Let her see what happens to traitors."

I stood frozen as Beta Marcus approached with a black hood. "Alpha, is this necessary?"

"Do you question me?" Caden's voice dropped dangerously low.

Marcus backed away immediately. The hood came down over my head, plunging me into darkness as they led me outside.

The journey was a blur of movement and voices until we stopped. The hood was yanked off, and I blinked in the harsh daylight.

The Moonstone Pack grounds sprawled before us—or what remained of them. Dilapidated buildings, a few dozen wolves milling about with hollow eyes. My childhood home reduced to poverty and despair.

"Grandmother!" I cried out when I spotted her standing at the gate, her frail body somehow still regal despite everything.

"Elizabeth." Her voice carried despite her age. "You shouldn't have brought her, Alpha Bishop."

"Search the premises," Caden ordered his warriors. "Find evidence of their conspiracy."

As warriors stormed the small compound, my grandmother stood her ground. Even as Caden approached, his Alpha aura pulsing with power, she didn't waver.

"Kneel," he commanded, his Alpha Voice washing over us like a physical force.

I dropped to my knees instantly, my wolf whimpering in submission. But my grandmother remained standing, her eyes locked with Caden's.

"I will not kneel to a tyrant," she declared, her voice steady despite the pressure of his command.

Caden's eyes flashed red. "KNEEL!"

The force of his Alpha Voice hit her like a physical blow. She staggered but remained upright, protecting the younger wolves behind her.

"You will submit to your Alpha!" Caden roared.

My grandmother's face contorted in pain as she fought against his command. Then, with horrifying suddenness, she collapsed.

"Grandmother!" I screamed, crawling toward her fallen form.

Her eyes found mine as I reached her side. "Elizabeth," she whispered, her voice fading. "Remember who you are."

A flood of images rushed into my mind—coordinates, documents, proof of Caden's illegal dealings with Rogues hidden in a cave beyond the northern cliffs.

Her hand squeezed mine once before going limp.

---

I sat motionless on my bed that night, grief numbing me to everything around me. The door opened silently, and Ashton slipped inside, disabling the cameras with practiced efficiency.

"Elizabeth." His voice was barely audible. "You need to listen to me."

I didn't look up. "They're all gone now."

"Not all." He knelt before me, forcing me to meet his eyes. "You're still here. And so is our child."

"Our child." The words felt hollow after everything that had happened.

"You have to die," he said bluntly. "To survive."

I blinked, processing his words. "What?"

"If you stay, Caden will kill you once the baby is born. Nina won't allow you to live either." His hands gripped mine. "But if Elizabeth Morrison dies in a Rogue attack, you can escape."

"How?" My voice was a whisper.

"The northern border cliffs." His eyes held mine. "The currents are too strong to recover a body. We'll stage an attack, make it look real."

I stared at him, seeing the determination in his eyes. "And then?"

"Then we run. Far from here." His thumb brushed over my knuckles. "I know what Caden did to you—to us. Let me make it right."

For the first time in days, I felt something other than despair—a flicker of determination, of fight.

"For the baby," I said finally.

Ashton nodded, his eyes flashing gold in the dim light. "For our future."

As our hands remained clasped between us, I felt the first stirrings of something I thought had died with my grandmother—hope.

Chapter 4

The wind whipped against my face as our convoy raced along the narrow mountain road. Two days had passed since we'd planned my escape, and now it was happening—a carefully orchestrated "transfer" to a secure facility that would end with Elizabeth Morrison's death.

"Are you ready?" Ashton's voice was low, his hand steady on my arm.

I nodded, clutching the small bag containing essentials—herbs to mask my scent, a change of clothes, and what little money I'd managed to hide away. My other hand rested protectively over my stomach.

"They're coming," Ashton murmured, his eyes fixed on the rearview mirror.

On cue, motorcycles roared from the trees, mercenaries Ashton had hired closing in from all sides. The driver swerved wildly as bullets pinged against the armored vehicle.

"It's time," Ashton said, pulling me toward the emergency exit. "Remember, stay down when we reach the cliff edge."

The world exploded into chaos—gunfire, shouting, tires screeching. Ashton shielded me as we tumbled from the vehicle, his body absorbing impacts I couldn't see. Blood—real blood—spattered across my face as one of Caden's guards went down.

"Elizabeth!" Ashton shouted, dragging me toward the cliff edge. Below, rapids churned white against jagged rocks.

I pulled out the vial of blood we'd prepared—not mine, but close enough to fool initial tests. With trembling fingers, I sliced my arm, adding fresh blood to the pool forming on the rocks.

"My locket," I gasped, tearing at the chain around my neck. The small silver pendant containing my parents' photos—the only thing I had left of them—felt heavy in my palm.

"Elizabeth, we don't have time—" Ashton began.

"Please," I whispered, pressing the locket into his hand. "If I don't make it..."

His eyes flashed gold briefly before he tucked the locket away. "You will make it. Trust me."

I stepped to the edge, the roar of the river below drowning out the gunfire. One deep breath, then I jumped.

---

"Alpha Bishop," Ashton's voice echoed through the pack house, steady despite the news he carried. "I regret to inform you that Luna Elizabeth has died in the attack."

I imagined Caden's face—not grief, but calculation as he processed my "death."

"The rogues ambushed us at the cliff pass," Ashton continued, his tone hollow with manufactured sorrow. "We recovered her blood, but the current... her body is gone."

"Destroyed," Caden would say, perhaps with a hint of relief. "The Luna is dead. Long live the Alpha."

---

The cabin smelled of pine and healing herbs when I awoke, miles from Blood River territory in the Neutral Lands. My body ached from the impact with the water, but I was alive.

Ashton sat by the window, his broad shoulders silhouetted against the evening light. When he turned, something had changed—his eyes glowed silver, then flashed gold.

"Elizabeth," he said softly, approaching the bed. "Your scent... it's different here."

I inhaled deeply, catching the first traces of my true scent—wildflowers and rain, not the masked aroma I'd lived with for years.

"What happened to you?" I whispered, watching as power seemed to radiate from him.

"I'm not just a Gamma," he said, kneeling beside the bed. "I'm Ashton Pierce, Alpha heir of the Silver Claw Pack, exiled as a child when our territory was destroyed."

The truth hit me like a physical blow. "An Alpha... all this time?"

"My wolf was suppressed, dormant until..." His eyes met mine. "Until I met you."

---

Weeks passed in our hidden sanctuary. Ashton never pushed, never demanded—instead, he taught me to embrace the Omega power I'd spent years suppressing.

"Feel it," he urged as we sat by the lake, the afternoon sun warming our skin. "Your wolf isn't weak. She's powerful."

I closed my eyes, letting the sensations wash over me—the connection to the earth, to the water, to life itself.

"My grandmother's documents," I said suddenly, remembering the hidden cache she'd shown me before her death. "You retrieved them?"

Ashton nodded, producing a waterproof pouch from his jacket. "Caden's dealings with human traffickers, rogue armies... everything we need to destroy him."

Night after night, we pored over the evidence, piecing together Caden's web of corruption. With each revelation, our resolve strengthened—and so did something else.

"Elizabeth," Ashton whispered one evening as we sat side by side on the cabin porch. "There's something I need to tell you."

I turned to face him, and the words died on his lips as our eyes locked. The mate bond between us pulsed with undeniable intensity.

"I feel it too," I admitted softly.

His hand cupped my cheek, thumb brushing across my lips. "May I?"

I nodded, and his mouth claimed mine in a kiss that ignited every nerve ending. The bond flared between us, confirming what we both already knew.

True mates. Not chosen, not forced—destined by the Moon Goddess herself.

As we broke apart, breathless, I saw my future in his glowing eyes—not as a substitute or a placeholder, but as an equal, a partner, a true Luna at last.

Chapter 5

Caden's teeth grazed Nina's neck, poised to mark her as his Luna. I watched from the shadows of his mind—a lingering connection I couldn't fully sever—as his body tensed. Then, violently, he recoiled.

"No!" he snarled, stumbling backward. "Something's wrong."

Nina's eyes flashed with humiliation. "What is it, darling?"

Caden's hands trembled as he wiped his mouth. "My wolf... he's rejecting you."

"You're being ridiculous," Nina hissed, reaching for him. "We've waited years for this moment."

But Caden's wolf was howling—a sound of rage and loss that echoed through our fractured bond. I felt it like a physical ache in my chest, hundreds of miles away in our northern sanctuary.

"She's not dead," Caden whispered, his eyes widening with realization. "Elizabeth... I can still feel her."

---

The witch's fingers traced intricate patterns in the salt circle. Black candles flickered around us, casting grotesque shadows across Caden's face.

"Her essence remains," the witch confirmed, her voice raspy with power. "The bond is stretched, not severed."

Caden paced the ritual room like a caged animal. "Find her."

The witch's eyes rolled back, showing only whites. "North... mountains... water..."

"Where in the north?" Caden demanded.

"Blood River territory," she murmured. "She carries your heir."

A lie—my child was Ashton's. But Caden didn't know that. His face contorted with possessive fury.

"Beta Marcus!" he barked.

Marcus appeared instantly. "Alpha?"

"Assemble the Death Squad," Caden ordered. "We have a traitor to hunt."

---

The forest blurred past as we raced through the trees. Ashton's hand gripped mine, pulling me forward.

"They're coming," he growled. "Caden's trackers."

I pressed my free hand to my swollen belly. "How did he find us?"

"The bond," Ashton said grimly. "It's weaker but still there."

We'd been careful—herbs to mask my scent, constant movement to avoid tracking. But Caden's obsession had found us anyway.

---

The abandoned lumber mill loomed before us, its windows dark and broken. Elder Samuel Grey from the Lycan Council was supposed to meet us here, to receive Caden's evidence.

"Something's wrong," I whispered, tugging Ashton's arm. "The area's too quiet."

Ashton's eyes flashed gold. "Ambush."

Too late. Figures emerged from the shadows—Caden's Death Squad, their expressions merciless.

"Run!" Ashton shoved me behind him.

I stumbled backward, then froze as a familiar scent hit me—vanilla and rosemary. Nina stepped from the darkness.

"Hello, Elizabeth," she purred. "Surprised to see me?"

Ashton roared, his partial shift rippling through him. "Get away from her!"

"Nina," I said calmly, "you don't want to do this."

"Oh, but I do." Her smile was venomous. "Caden may want you back, but I just want you dead."

The first attacker lunged at Ashton. He caught the wolf mid-leap, using his momentum to slam him into another attacker. I dodged a third, my pregnancy slowing me but not stopping me.

"Here!" I shouted, drawing two attackers toward me before spinning and kicking one in the knee. "Come get me!"

Ashton caught my strategy instantly. He feinted left, then right, drawing fire before charging toward me. Together, we fought our way to the edge of the clearing.

---

"Elizabeth!" Ashton called from the ridge above. "This way!"

I scrambled up the rocky slope, my lungs burning. Below us, the Death Squad regrouped.

"We need to split up," I gasped. "They're tracking my scent."

Ashton shook his head violently. "No. We stay together."

A whistle pierced the air—three short bursts, our prearranged signal. Elder Samuel?

Ashton hesitated, then nodded. "Follow me."

We ran through the forest until ruins appeared before us—crumbling stone buildings overgrown with vines.

"Silver Claw territory," Ashton explained, leading me through a hidden passage.

Inside a cavernous hall, dozens of eyes watched us warily. Ashton stepped forward.

"I am Ashton Pierce, Alpha heir of Silver Claw," he announced. "This is Elizabeth Morrison, Luna of our future."

A murmur rippled through the gathered wolves—survivors of the pack massacre years ago.

"We have Caden's evidence," I added, my voice stronger than I expected. "But he's hunting us."

An older she-wolf stepped forward. "Why should we help you?"

I straightened my spine, one hand on my belly. "Because justice isn't just for the powerful. Because your Alpha has returned. And because together, we can reclaim what was stolen from us all."

The silence that followed was deafening. Then, one by one, the survivors knelt.

"Silver Claw stands with you," the old she-wolf declared.

Ashton's hand found mine, our fingers intertwining. For the first time since fleeing Blood River, I felt something other than fear—hope, and the first stirrings of power.

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