Sleep eluded me that night. I tossed on my thin mattress, the events of the day replaying in my mind like a cruel film. The public humiliation, Amanda's smug smile, Marcus's thunderous Alpha command forcing me to my knees—all of it churned inside me, stoking a fire I'd long suppressed.
'Rebecca.' Grace's voice echoed within me, stronger than I'd heard her in years. 'Rebecca, wake up.'
'I am awake,' I whispered into the darkness of my cramped quarters.
'No,' my wolf insisted, her presence suddenly filling my consciousness with heat. 'You've been sleeping for eight years. We've been sleeping.'
A strange warmth began to spread through my limbs, starting at my core and radiating outward. I sat up, gasping as the sensation intensified. It wasn't painful—it felt like... power. Like something long dormant was stirring to life.
'What's happening?' I asked, my voice trembling as I watched my hands begin to emit a faint, silvery glow.
'Our Luna aura,' Grace replied, her voice fierce with pride. 'It's fighting back. We're fighting back.'
I stared at my glowing skin in wonder and terror. Marcus had told me years ago that suppressing my Luna aura was necessary for pack harmony, that my natural power was too intimidating for the other wolves. I'd believed him, dutifully tamping down that part of myself until it became second nature.
'He lied,' Grace growled. 'He feared us. Our strength. Our rightful place.'
The glow pulsed brighter, and with it came memories—my mother standing tall beside my father, her Luna aura radiating as she helped lead their pack. The respect in the eyes of their packmates. The balance of power, not its suppression.
I needed answers. Real ones.
As dawn broke, I slipped through the quiet pack house, my footsteps silent on the worn floorboards. The elders' wing was on the east side, catching the first light of morning. I paused outside Elder Willow's door, gathering my courage before knocking softly.
'Enter, child,' came her weathered voice.
Elder Willow sat by her window, her silver hair catching the golden light. At ninety-three, she was the oldest wolf in our pack, respected even by Marcus for her wisdom and healing knowledge.
'I hoped you would come,' she said without turning. 'Your aura is flickering like a candle in the wind.'
'You can see it?' I asked, stepping closer.
'Of course.' She finally faced me, her ancient eyes sharp with knowledge. 'I've watched it dim year by year, like a star being slowly extinguished.'
I knelt before her, my voice barely above a whisper. 'What's happening to me?'
Elder Willow placed a gnarled hand on my shoulder, and I felt a gentle probing—her healer's gift assessing my wolf.
'You've been suppressing your true nature for too long,' she said gravely. 'A Luna's aura isn't meant to be contained. It's like... binding a sapling as it grows. Eventually, it either breaks free or becomes permanently stunted.'
Fear clutched at my heart. 'Stunted? You mean Grace could—'
'Die?' Elder Willow finished. 'Not die, but fade until she's a mere shadow of what the Moon Goddess intended. Already, your bond is weakened. I can feel it.'
I thought of Grace's voice, stronger last night than it had been in years. 'But she spoke to me clearly last night. She felt... powerful.'
A smile creased the elder's face. 'Your wolf is fighting for you both. The question is, will you fight with her?'
The truth of her words settled into my bones. I thanked her and slipped out, my mind racing with new purpose.
The pack archives were housed in the basement level, a dusty room few bothered to visit. As an omega assigned to cleaning duties, I had legitimate access—a fact Marcus had likely forgotten. I found what I sought quickly: the Northern Pack negotiation records Amanda had been studying.
Page after page revealed her incompetence. She'd conceded Silverpine's valuable timber corridor without securing hunting rights in return. Supply allocations for our winter alliance were miscalculated by nearly forty percent. These weren't minor oversights—they were catastrophic errors that could leave our pack vulnerable when the snow fell.
I gathered the evidence and marched to Marcus's office, my heart pounding but resolute. I found him alone, reviewing territory maps.
'Alpha,' I said, keeping my voice steady as I placed the documents before him. 'There are serious problems with the Northern Pack proposal.'
Marcus barely glanced at the papers. 'What are you doing with these?'
'Preventing a disaster,' I replied, pointing to the flawed agreements. 'Amanda's concessions will cost us—'
'Enough!' He slammed his fist down, eyes flashing with anger. 'You overstep, omega.'
'I'm trying to help our pack,' I insisted.
His lip curled in a sneer. 'This is nothing but jealousy. Amanda is more than capable.'
'The numbers don't lie, Marcus. Look at them.'
He stood, towering over me. 'Six weeks of kitchen duty for accessing restricted documents. And don't use my name so familiarly in this office.'
'Marcus—'
'You're dismissed,' he cut me off coldly. 'You've always been too emotional for strategic matters. This is precisely why Amanda is better suited for leadership.'
As the door closed behind me, something inside me hardened into resolve. The last thread of hope I'd clung to—that somewhere beneath his cruelty, Marcus still valued me—snapped cleanly.
Grace stirred within me, her presence warm and growing stronger. 'We don't need his validation anymore,' she whispered. 'We know our worth.'
For the first time in eight years, I fully agreed with my wolf.
I returned to my quarters with my head held higher than it had been in years. The conversation with Elder Willow and my confrontation with Marcus had awakened something in me—a spark of the woman I used to be, the Luna I was meant to become.
'We're done being invisible,' Grace whispered inside me, her presence stronger with each passing hour.
I pushed open my door and froze. Crude red letters were smeared across the weathered wood:
OMEGA BLOOD ISN'T FIT FOR AN ALPHA
My fingers traced the still-wet paint, noting the distinctive flourish on the final letter—Amanda's signature touch, the same one I'd seen on pack documents she'd signed. She hadn't even bothered to disguise her handwriting.
'She wants us to know it was her,' Grace growled. 'She's getting bolder.'
I grabbed a rag from my small washbasin and began scrubbing at the letters, but the red paint—or was it blood?—had already begun to set into the porous wood. The message would remain visible for days, a constant reminder of my place in the pack hierarchy.
As I scrubbed, tears of frustration threatened to spill, but I blinked them back. I refused to give Amanda the satisfaction, even if she wasn't here to witness my reaction.
'My blood saved his life,' I whispered, the memory of that day still vivid—Marcus, pale and dying from the rogue attack, my wrist slashed open as I fed him my rare healing blood, drop by precious drop. 'My blood is the only reason she has an Alpha to fawn over.'
A soft knock interrupted my thoughts. I tensed, fearing Amanda had returned to witness the fruits of her cruelty, but the scent that drifted through the crack was familiar and welcome.
'Liam,' I breathed, opening the door just enough to see the young Delta warrior's concerned face.
'I saw what she did,' he said quietly, glancing down the hallway to ensure we weren't observed. 'Can I come in?'
I hesitated—an unmated male in an unmated female's quarters would spark gossip, even if that female was the pack's lowest omega—but nodded and stepped aside.
Liam entered quickly, his tall frame making my small room seem even more cramped. He was one of the few pack members who still treated me with respect, remembering the days when I'd stood proudly at Marcus's side.
'This has gone too far,' he said, gesturing to the defaced door. 'The whole pack is talking about what happened at the feast yesterday. And now this...'
'It doesn't matter,' I said, though we both knew it was a lie.
Liam's eyes flashed with anger. 'It does matter. You're his mate, Rebecca. His true mate. What he's doing—what he's allowing Amanda to do—it goes against everything sacred to our kind.'
I sank onto my bed, suddenly exhausted. 'What can I do? He's the Alpha.'
Liam knelt before me, his voice dropping to a whisper. 'You can leave.'
The words hung in the air between us, dangerous and liberating.
'Leave?' I repeated, the concept both terrifying and exhilarating.
He nodded, reaching into his jacket to pull out folded papers. 'Maps,' he explained, spreading them on the bed beside me. 'Patrol schedules. Safe routes through the territory borders.'
I stared at him in shock. 'You've been planning this?'
'Someone needs to look out for you,' he said simply. 'When the time comes—if the time comes—I can create a distraction. Give you a head start before they realize you're gone.'
My fingers trembled as I touched the maps, tracing the escape routes he'd marked in red ink. 'I'd be a rogue,' I whispered.
'Better a rogue than a prisoner,' Liam replied, his eyes serious. 'Think about it.'
Before I could respond, the pack mind-link flared to life, and Amanda's voice filled my head.
'Attention all pack members! I invite you to join me in the main hall for a special ceremony this evening.'
Images flooded through the link—Amanda standing in the ceremonial circle, draped in a familiar silver-embroidered cloak. My mother's cloak. The one she'd worn as Luna of our birth pack, the one she'd given me before I left to join Marcus. The cloak I'd carefully preserved for my own marking ceremony.
'How did she get that?' I gasped aloud, my heart racing with fresh betrayal.
Through the link, Amanda's eyes found mine specifically, her mental voice dripping with mock sympathy.
'Oh, Rebecca, is that pathetic cloak envy I'm sensing? Don't worry, darling. Some of us were born to wear the Luna's mantle... and some were born to clean it.'
Laughter rippled through the pack mind-link as Amanda twirled, showcasing my mother's precious heirloom like a trophy.
I slammed my mental shields down, cutting off the connection, but not before catching Marcus's proud approval radiating through the link.
'We're leaving,' I said to Liam, my decision crystallizing in that moment. 'Tonight.'