The hospital doors burst open with a bang that made me jump, nearly dropping the vial of silver antidote I was preparing. My hands steadied instinctively—years of training had taught me to keep calm under pressure, even when chaos erupted around me.
"Where's the head healer?" a female voice demanded, sharp enough to cut through the moans of pain filling our emergency ward.
I turned to see a woman I recognized but didn't know well—Raven Flores, one of our newer pack members. She strode in like she owned the place, her designer clothes immaculate despite what looked like a minor scratch on her forearm.
"Can you believe this?" she was saying to the nurse at reception. "I've been waiting for twenty minutes!"
I glanced at the warrior on the table before me—Delta Liam, one of our best fighters. Silver poisoning had turned his arm an angry purple, the metal working its way through his system. Without immediate treatment, he'd lose the limb. Without proper care, he might lose his life.
"I'm sorry," I said, approaching her with a professional smile. "I'm Shay Campbell, the head healer. What can I do for you?"
Raven's eyes narrowed, taking in my blood-stained scrubs with obvious distaste. "Finally. I need treatment for this." She thrust her arm forward, revealing a scratch that had barely broken skin.
"I understand," I said, keeping my voice even. "But we're currently in an emergency situation. The warrior behind me has severe silver poisoning from a rogue attack. I'll need to treat him first, then—"
"What?" Raven's voice rose dramatically. "You're going to make someone with Alpha bloodline wait while you fuss over some common pack member?"
The room fell silent. Even Liam's labored breathing seemed to pause.
"Medical triage doesn't work that way," I explained gently. "The severity of the injury determines—"
"I don't care about your protocols," Raven hissed, her eyes flashing with rage. "My bloodline deserves priority treatment. Do you know who my ancestors were?"
I felt my wolf stir inside me, bristling at the challenge. If she only knew who my ancestors were...
"Please wait in the reception area," I said firmly. "I'll be with you as soon as possible."
For a moment, I thought she might argue further. Instead, she turned on her heel and stalked out, muttering something about "incompetent healers" under her breath.
I returned to Liam, working quickly to draw out the silver poison before it reached his heart. My hands glowed faintly as I channeled my healing energy, focusing entirely on saving his life.
What I didn't notice was Raven pulling out her phone, her fingers flying across the screen.
---
By evening, I felt it—the strange prickling sensation of dozens of minds thinking about me at once. The pack mind-link hummed with unusual activity.
"Did you hear what happened at the hospital today?" someone whispered as I walked past.
"...refused to treat her..."
"...nearly died because of it..."
"...always been jealous of anyone prettier than her..."
I froze mid-step. These weren't just random thoughts—they were coordinated, deliberate messages spreading through our pack's mental network.
"Shay!" Diana Torres, my closest friend in the pack, rushed up to me. "What's going on? There are all these rumors about you refusing to treat Raven."
"It's not true," I said, my stomach knotting. "She had a minor scratch. I was dealing with a silver poisoning emergency."
"Well, she's telling everyone you refused her because you're incompetent and biased." Diana's eyes flashed with anger. "And she's saying you've been using your position to settle personal scores."
I felt sick. "That's ridiculous."
"Of course it is," Diana agreed. "But Raven's convincing. She's got half the pack believing you deliberately let her suffer."
I closed my eyes, feeling the weight of dozens of judgmental stares pressing down on me through the mind-link. My wolf whimpered inside me, sensing the danger to our position.
---
Three days later, at the monthly pack assembly, I stood beside Colin as we faced the gathered pack members. My mate's hand wasn't holding mine as usual—instead, he stood slightly apart, his face unreadable.
Raven stepped forward, her scratch now completely healed but her expression one of tragic suffering.
"Alpha-to-be," she addressed Colin directly, ignoring me completely. "I wish to formally register my complaint about the unprofessional conduct of your mate."
The pack murmured, eyes darting between us.
"Go ahead," Colin said, his voice neutral.
"I nearly died because your mate refused me treatment," Raven declared. "I understand we're all part of the same pack, but when someone uses their position to endanger others..."
I waited for Colin to defend me. To tell everyone that Raven was exaggerating, that her injury had been minor.
Instead, he nodded solemnly. "All pack members deserve equal consideration regardless of rank," he announced, his gaze sliding to Raven with unmistakable interest. "From now on, we'll ensure more balanced treatment protocols."
The pack applauded. Raven smiled triumphantly.
And I stood there, my mate's public betrayal cutting deeper than any silver blade could reach.
As the meeting dispersed, I caught Raven's whisper to her friend: "Soon he'll see who really deserves to be Luna."
The first blow came at the morning staff meeting.
"I'm restructuring some of our pack duties," Colin announced, his eyes deliberately avoiding mine as he addressed the gathered hospital staff. "Raven will be overseeing our outreach program to neighboring packs."
I nearly dropped my clipboard. The outreach program had been my initiative—a way to share our medical knowledge with smaller packs that couldn't afford full-time healers.
"Meanwhile," Colin continued, "Shay will be managing supplies and equipment maintenance."
Maintenance. As in cleaning and inventory.
Raven's smile was razor-sharp. "I'm so honored to take on this important responsibility, Alpha-to-be."
Colin nodded, the corner of his mouth lifting slightly. "Your organizational skills are exactly what we need."
I felt my wolf bristle inside me. Three years as head healer, and now I was being reduced to a janitor?
"Colin," I said quietly after the meeting. "Can we talk about this?"
"There's nothing to discuss." His voice was cool, distant. "The pack needs fresh leadership in key positions."
"And Raven has medical training?" I couldn't keep the edge from my voice.
"She has natural leadership qualities." His eyes finally met mine, challenging. "Unlike some people who have been... complacent."
---
The weekly pack run should have been my sanctuary. Despite everything, running with my wolf always cleared my head.
But tonight, as we gathered at the edge of the forest, I felt a chill that had nothing to do with the evening air.
"Alpha formation!" Marcus called out.
I moved forward automatically, taking my place beside Colin as we had done countless times before. My wolf stretched eagerly, ready to run with her mate.
"Shay." Colin's voice stopped me cold. "You'll be running with the omegas tonight."
The pack fell silent. Even the trees seemed to hold their breath.
"Colin?" I whispered, certain I'd misheard.
"Raven will be joining the Alpha formation." He gestured her forward with a smile that twisted like a knife in my chest.
Raven stepped into my place, her triumphant smirk barely contained. "Thank you for the honor, Alpha-to-be."
I stood frozen as the pack began to shift around me. The omegas—our lowest-ranking members—gathered at the rear of the formation, their eyes averted in embarrassment for me.
"Run with the omegas," Diana hissed urgently, grabbing my arm. "Don't make a scene."
So I ran, my wolf howling in confusion and pain, trailing behind the main pack with the kitchen staff and elderly members who couldn't keep up. Through the mind-link, I felt the pack's collective shock and pity.
---
"Your wolfsbane is contaminated."
I stared at the ruined mixture in my mortar, my hands trembling. "That's impossible. I harvested it myself."
"Check the rest," Elena Vasquez, our former head healer and Killian's mother, advised gently.
She was right. Every jar of healing herb in my cabinet had been tampered with—salt mixed into the dried leaves, vinegar added to the tinctures.
"This wasn't an accident," I murmured.
Elena's eyes narrowed. "No. It wasn't."
Three patients that day received treatments that should have worked. Instead, their conditions worsened. By evening, whispers filled the hospital corridors.
"Maybe she's lost her touch."
"Or never had it to begin with."
And then the mind-link exploded with Raven's latest creation:
"Poor Alpha-to-be Colin. Three years mated and still no pups. The Moon Goddess must have made a mistake."
"Maybe she's barren. Or maybe she's not really his mate at all."
"Everyone knows true mates conceive easily. Look at Alpha Marcus and his Luna—five pups in four years."
My wolf curled into herself, whimpering. We had tried so hard to conceive. The disappointment each month had been devastating enough without Raven turning it into pack gossip.
---
"Jake Morrison needs treatment in room three," Killian said quietly, appearing at my side as I scrubbed equipment in the back room—another of my new "duties."
"I'll be right there," I replied, drying my hands.
But when I entered room three, Jake was already sitting up, his arm cradled against his chest.
"Where's the other healer?" he demanded.
"Other healer?" I repeated.
"Killian." Jake's lip curled. "I asked for him specifically. Don't trust a barren healer to fix what she can't even fix in herself."
The words hit like physical blows. My hands shook as I reached for my supplies.
"I said I want Killian," Jake repeated, louder this time. "Get him in here if you want me to cooperate with treatment."
Behind me, I heard the soft sound of Killian entering the room. His presence was quiet but somehow filled the space.
"I'll take over from here," he said gently.
I turned to leave, my vision blurring with unshed tears.
"Shay," Killian called softly as I reached the door.
I paused, not trusting myself to speak.
"Your hands," he said quietly. "They're still the most skilled in this hospital."
I fled before he could see me break.
I paced our quarters, my hands trembling as I gathered my courage. The moonlight streaming through our bedroom window seemed to mock the darkness growing between Colin and me. My wolf whimpered inside, sensing what I already knew—our mate bond was fracturing before my eyes.
The door opened, and Colin walked in, his Alpha aura filling the space between us. Once, that presence had made me feel safe. Now it felt like a storm cloud gathering overhead.
"We need to talk," I said, my voice barely above a whisper.
Colin sighed, loosening his tie. "About?"
"About Raven. About the rumors she's spreading." I stepped closer, desperate to see something—anything—of the mate I'd fallen in love with. "She's systematically undermining everything I've built here. And you're letting her."
His eyes met mine, cold and distant. "Perhaps she understands pack dynamics better than you do."
The words hit like a physical blow. "What?"
"You've always had this... naivety about pack politics." He moved past me to pour himself a drink. "Raven sees the bigger picture."
"I'm your mate," I said, hating the pleading in my voice. "The Moon Goddess chose us for each other. Or have you forgotten?"
Colin's laugh was hollow. "The Moon Goddess gives us opportunities, Shay. It's up to us to make the most of them."
"And what opportunity does Raven give you that I don't?" My voice cracked.
He turned slowly, studying me with calculating eyes. "She understands her place. She doesn't act above her station."
"Her station?" I echoed, disbelief washing over me. "And what station is that?"
"Yours would do well to learn from hers." His voice hardened. "This pack needs strength, not... whatever it is you think you're providing."
In that moment, I saw it clearly—my mate was choosing another woman over our sacred bond. My wolf howled in agony inside me.
---
The border patrol meeting room buzzed with tension as I took my seat among the other healers. Colin stood at the front, Raven hovering at his right side where I should have been.
"As we prepare for the full moon celebrations," Colin announced, "I'm implementing some changes to our patrol structure."
I straightened, expecting the usual rotation announcements.
"Raven will be joining us as special advisor on inter-pack relations," he continued, his voice ringing with authority. "Her insights will be invaluable as we navigate the coming negotiations."
Murmurs rippled through the room. Special advisor? The position didn't even exist.
"As for other changes," Colin's eyes slid to me, "Shay will be focusing exclusively on basic healing duties. Her administrative responsibilities will be redistributed."
The floor seemed to drop out from under me. Three years of building our medical protocols, training junior healers, coordinating with neighboring packs—gone with a single sentence.
"Alpha-to-be," Beta Marcus Reed spoke up, his voice carefully neutral. "May I ask why such drastic changes are necessary?"
The room fell silent. Marcus had always been loyal to Colin, but he was also fair.
"Effective leadership requires difficult choices," Colin snapped, his Alpha tone making several pack members flinch. "Raven brings fresh perspectives that this pack needs."
Raven's smirk was razor-sharp as she caught my eye across the room. Her fingers brushed Colin's arm possessively.
"Of course," Marcus nodded, though his eyes remained troubled. "I only meant that—"
"The decision is made," Colin cut him off. "Meeting dismissed."
---
"Did you hear what happened at the border meeting?"
"Alpha-to-be Colin practically demoted his own mate!"
"Maybe the Moon Goddess made a mistake with their pairing..."
The mind-link exploded with vicious gossip as I made my way back to the hospital. Each thought felt like a dagger twisting in my chest.
"I heard she can't even conceive pups..."
"Raven says true mates don't have problems like that..."
"Maybe she's not really his mate at all..."
I stumbled, nearly dropping my medical bag. The pain was becoming unbearable—not just the humiliation, but the physical agony of our mate bond weakening.
A low growl rumbled through the mind-link, so sudden and fierce it silenced the gossiping thoughts.
*Back away from her.*
The voice was unmistakable—Killian. But the protective fury behind it made no sense. Killian rarely spoke in the mind-link, and never with such raw emotion.
Another growl followed, more intense than the first. *She is not yours to judge.*
The pack members fell silent, confused by the young healer's unexpected defense.
I turned to find Killian standing at the edge of the forest, his patrol route mysteriously altered to bring him closer to where I stood. His eyes met mine, filled with an intensity that made my breath catch.
"Killian?" I whispered aloud, not understanding why his wolf was suddenly so agitated—or why it felt like he was projecting protective energy directly at me through the mind-link.