The pack dining hall hummed with conversation as servers placed steaming plates before the elders. I sat at my usual place, three seats away from Lachlan—close enough to appear as part of the leadership, far enough to emphasize my true position. Tonight, I'd deliberately left my neck bare. No glass replica. No pretense.
"Where's your necklace?" Lachlan's voice cut through the chatter, sharp and commanding.
I looked up slowly, meeting his gaze across the table. "I thought it might be too... ostentatious for a simple pack dinner."
His jaw tightened. "You're the Luna. You should wear the Luna Necklace at all formal gatherings."
The elders paused their conversations, forks suspended midair. Former Luna Allen's eyes narrowed with interest.
"Of course," I replied, my voice steady. "Which one would you prefer I wear?"
The table fell silent.
"What are you talking about?" Lachlan's brow furrowed, confusion briefly replacing his usual arrogance.
I set down my water glass with deliberate care. "Which one? The glass toy you gave me, or the artifact warming Florence's chest?"
Lachlan's face flushed dark red. "You're being ridiculous. There's only one Luna Necklace."
"Is there?" I tilted my head slightly. "Then perhaps you should ask Florence why she's wearing the real one while I've been given a replica."
Former Luna Allen's eyes gleamed with malicious delight as she glanced between us.
"You're delusional," Lachlan hissed, recovering quickly. "This is exactly why you're—"
"Why I'm what?" I interrupted softly. "Unfit to be Luna? Unable to shift? A burden to the pack?"
The elders exchanged uncomfortable glances.
"Hanna," Lachlan's voice dropped to a dangerous whisper, "you're embarrassing yourself. Jealousy doesn't suit you."
Jealousy. As if my pain was nothing more than petty envy.
"I'm not jealous, Lachlan," I replied, rising from my seat. "I'm awake."
---
The moonlight streamed through my bedroom window as I sat at my desk, a single lamp casting shadows across the page. My hand moved steadily, pen scratching against paper.
*To Alpha Lachlan Allen and the Blackwood Pack Council,*
*I hereby tender my resignation from all administrative duties effective immediately...*
Not a breakup letter. Not a declaration of hurt or betrayal. A business memo. Cold. Professional. Final.
I continued writing, detailing the transition of my responsibilities, the files I'd prepared, the contacts who would need to be notified. Five years of work, reduced to bullet points and procedural notes.
When I finished, I read it over once. No emotion seeped through. No tears stained the paper. Just words on a page—the final act of a woman who had loved too much and been valued too little.
I moved to my closet next, pulling out a single duffel bag. What does a Luna pack when leaving her life behind? Surprisingly little.
Clothes. A few books. The small box of photographs from before I came to Blackwood—proof of a life that existed without Lachlan.
Everything he'd ever given me fit into a small pile on the bed: a silver bracelet for our first anniversary (which he'd forgotten until Florence reminded him), a perfume he'd bought because Florence said it would "mask my natural scent," and a necklace—the glass replica that had fooled me for years.
I left them there. Worthless trinkets from a worthless relationship.
As I zipped the bag closed, I realized something had changed inside me. The pain was still there, but it had crystallized into something harder. Something colder.
I no longer loved Lachlan Allen.
---
"Attention, pack members." Lachlan's voice boomed through the great hall the next morning. "I'm calling for a mandatory gathering tomorrow evening."
I stood at the back of the crowd, my resignation letter still unsigned in my pocket. I'd planned to deliver it privately, but now...
"A Mate Ceremony will be performed to strengthen our pack bonds," he continued, his eyes deliberately avoiding mine. "All members must attend."
Murmurs rippled through the gathered wolves. Mate Ceremonies were rare—usually performed only when a new Alpha pair was established.
"This ceremony will honor tradition," Lachlan said, his voice carrying a note of satisfaction that made my skin crawl. "And address... certain irregularities in our pack structure."
Florence stood beside him, her hand possessively resting on his arm. The real Luna Necklace gleamed at her throat.
"Hanna." Former Luna Allen materialized at my side, her voice dripping with false concern. "I do hope you understand what's happening here."
I met her gaze steadily. "Perfectly."
"Good." Her smile was venomous. "Lachlan has decided it's time to formalize Florence's position. You'll be recognized as Pack Omega—a generous compromise considering your... limitations."
Pack Omega. From Luna to the lowest rank overnight.
"He can't do that," I said quietly.
"He's Alpha," she replied with a shrug. "He can do whatever he wants."
As the crowd dispersed, I felt something stir deep within me—not the wolf I'd spent years trying to awaken, but something else entirely. Something that had nothing to do with mate bonds or pack hierarchy.
It felt remarkably like freedom.
The amphitheater glowed with torchlight as pack members filled the stone benches. I stood on the dais beside Lachlan, my heart hammering against my ribs. The ceremonial robes felt heavy on my shoulders—a costume for a role I'd played for too long.
"Tonight," Lachlan's voice boomed across the gathered crowd, "we celebrate strength."
His presence beside me was suffocating—the scent of pine and smoke now tainted with Florence's floral perfume. She stood in the front row, the real Luna Necklace gleaming at her throat.
"Blackwood Pack has always valued power above all else," he continued, his eyes sweeping across the assembly. "Our bloodlines, our warriors, our territory—all depend on strength."
I felt the weight of every gaze. Some pitying, others curious. None supportive.
"Our pack structure requires clarity," Lachlan said, his voice hardening. "For too long, we've operated with... ambiguity."
My fingers curled into fists at my sides. Five years of work, of sacrifice, reduced to "ambiguity."
"Hanna Spencer has served this pack loyally," he acknowledged, though the words sounded hollow. "But the position of Luna requires more than mere administrative skills."
The crowd shifted uncomfortably. Even his most ardent supporters seemed uneasy now.
"Thus, for the good of Blackwood Pack," Lachlan's voice rose, "I am announcing a change in our leadership structure."
He turned to me, his expression a mask of false benevolence. "Hanna will step down as Luna, and Florence Holmes will assume the role of Acting Luna."
The words hit me like physical blows. Not even the dignity of a proper title—just "Acting Luna" while I was demoted to... what? Omega? The lowest rank?
"Hanna," Lachlan's voice softened to a patronizing murmur, "you may show your gratitude for this mercy by bowing to Florence now."
Mercy. As if sparing me complete humiliation was generosity.
I felt the pressure of his Alpha tone, the weight of pack expectation. Every instinct screamed at me to obey, to preserve what little dignity I had left.
But something else burned brighter—the cold fire of clarity I'd found in that library, when Elena's offer had shown me another path.
I stepped forward.
Instead of bowing, I straightened my spine and lifted my chin. The amphitheater had a peculiar acoustic property I'd discovered during my first year here—a spot where the stone amplified sound. I positioned myself precisely on it.
"I will not bow," I said, my voice steady and clear.
Lachlan's smile faltered. "Hanna, don't make this difficult."
"I've made everything easy for you," I replied, my voice growing stronger. "For five years, I've been your shadow, your secretary, your convenient excuse."
The pack murmured in shock. No one had ever heard me speak this way before.
"But I am done being convenient." I took a deep breath, feeling something stir deep within me. "I, Hanna Spencer, reject you, Alpha Lachlan Allen of the Blackwood Pack."
The formal words of rejection echoed across the amphitheater. Gasps rippled through the crowd.
Lachlan froze, his face draining of color. "What have you done?"
The mate bond between us snapped with an almost audible crack. Pain exploded in my chest—a white-hot agony that stole my breath.
But instead of falling to my knees as I'd expected, I felt something else rising within me.
Heat. Power. Rage.
"It can't be," Florence whispered, her eyes wide with horror.
The pain intensified, spreading through my limbs like wildfire. My vision blurred, then cleared with preternatural sharpness.
"Hanna?" Someone called my name—Marcus, perhaps—but the sound seemed distant, underwater.
My bones began to crack and reshape. I screamed—a sound that transformed midway into something else entirely.
Silver light erupted from my skin, blinding and brilliant. The ceremonial robes tore as my body contorted and expanded.
"What is she?" Former Luna Allen shrieked.
I felt my face elongate, my teeth sharpen into fangs. Fur—silver-white and gleaming—rippled across my skin.
The transformation was agony and ecstasy combined. Every cell in my body realigned, awakening to its true nature.
When the light faded, I stood on two legs—no, not quite human anymore. Larger, stronger, my senses sharper than I'd ever imagined possible.
A Lycan. Not just any wolf, but a rare silver-blooded Lycan with violet eyes.
The power radiating from me knocked the front row of warriors backward. Florence sprawled at my feet, her expression a mixture of terror and disbelief.
"Impossible," Lachlan whispered, staggering back. "You're a—"
I snarled, the sound reverberating through the amphitheater.
"Late Bloomer?" I growled, my voice deeper than before. "Try Lycan Heir."
The pack members scrambled away as I took a step forward, my silver fur gleaming in the torchlight. Five years of suppression had ended in a single moment of glorious liberation.
And Lachlan Allen was about to learn exactly what he had thrown away.