The silence in our bedroom that evening felt different—heavier, more deliberate. I sat on the edge of our bed, still wearing the training clothes from this morning's humiliation, waiting for Grayson to acknowledge what had happened. He moved around the room with calculated precision, hanging up his jacket, checking his phone, doing everything except looking at me.
"Grayson," I started softly, "about this morning—"
"There's nothing to discuss." His voice was flat, emotionless. He didn't even turn around.
I tried again, reaching out through our mind-link, seeking the familiar warmth of his thoughts, the constant hum of connection that had become as natural as breathing since our mating. *Grayson, please. Let me explain.*
Nothing.
Not silence—that would have been something. This was absence, a complete void where our bond should have been. My wolf whimpered in confusion, scratching at the mental barriers that had suddenly appeared between us.
"Did you just—" I stood up, panic rising in my throat. "Did you block our mind-link?"
Grayson finally turned, his gray eyes cold and distant. "I did what was necessary."
The casual cruelty of it hit me like a physical blow. In all the werewolf lore I'd ever heard, severing a mate's mind-link was considered one of the most devastating punishments possible. It was emotional amputation, cutting away a piece of your soul.
"Necessary?" My voice cracked. "Grayson, the mind-link is sacred. It's part of our mate bond. You can't just—"
"I can do whatever I want." His Alpha aura flared, pressing against me like a weight. "I'm the Alpha of this pack, and you're my Luna. That means you follow my rules."
I staggered backward, the force of his dominance making my knees weak. This wasn't the protective Alpha energy I'd fallen in love with—this was raw power wielded like a weapon.
"But why?" I whispered, wrapping my arms around myself as if I could hold the pieces of our bond together. "What did I do wrong?"
His laugh was sharp, bitter. "You really don't know?"
I shook my head, tears burning behind my eyes. The absence of our mental connection felt like losing a limb, leaving me fumbling in darkness where there used to be light.
"You embarrassed me today," he said, each word precise and cutting. "My Luna, flirting with other males, accepting their praise like some attention-starved omega."
"I wasn't flirting!" The accusation stung because it was so unfair. "I was doing my job, sharing knowledge that could help other packs—"
"Your job is to support me. Your job is to be the Luna this pack needs, not to parade around seeking validation from other Alphas."
The room spun slightly as his words sank in. "Seeking validation? Grayson, Marcus was interested in my rehabilitation techniques because they work. Because I'm good at what I do."
"What you do," he repeated, stepping closer, "is whatever I say you do. From now on, you'll check in with me every two hours through the pack-link. You'll report who you're with, what you're discussing, where you're going."
I blinked, certain I'd misheard. "You want me to... report to you? Like a child?"
"Like my mate who clearly can't be trusted to remember her place."
The words hit me like slaps. I reached for our bond again, desperate for any trace of the man who'd claimed to love me, who'd promised to cherish and protect me. But there was nothing—just that terrible, echoing emptiness where his presence used to be.
"Grayson, please," I begged, hating how small my voice sounded. "Don't do this. The mind-link... it's part of who we are together. Without it, I feel like I'm drowning."
Something flickered in his eyes—was it regret? Satisfaction? I couldn't tell anymore without our connection to guide me.
"Then maybe you'll think twice before giving other males reason to believe they have access to what's mine."
He moved toward the bathroom, dismissing me as if I were a servant who'd overstayed her welcome. At the doorway, he paused without turning around.
"The monitoring starts tomorrow. Two-hour check-ins, every day. Don't make me come looking for you, Carly. You won't like what happens if I have to hunt down my own mate."
The bathroom door closed with a soft click that sounded as final as a coffin lid. I sank onto the bed, my hands shaking as I pressed them against my chest, trying to fill the hollow space where our bond used to live.
For the first time since our mating, I was truly alone.
The alliance meeting with the Silverfang Pack had been scheduled for weeks, and I'd spent days preparing my presentation on expanding rogue rehabilitation programs. The conference room in our pack house buzzed with the energy of inter-pack diplomacy, wolves from both packs seated around the polished oak table that had witnessed countless territorial negotiations.
Alpha Marcus Silverfang sat across from me, his weathered face attentive as I outlined the psychological framework that made our rehabilitation success rate so high. Unlike the cold distance I'd grown accustomed to in recent weeks, this felt like breathing again—professional respect, intellectual engagement, the validation that my work mattered beyond the confines of Luna duties.
"The key breakthrough came when we realized that rogues aren't just physically isolated," I explained, gesturing to the charts spread between us. "They're emotionally severed from pack bonds. Traditional integration methods focus on hierarchy and submission, but that just reinforces their trauma."
Marcus leaned forward, his dark eyes sharp with interest. "Our success rate has been maybe thirty percent. We've been treating it as a discipline problem rather than a healing process."
"Exactly." The excitement in my voice felt foreign after months of careful modulation around Grayson. "When we approach it as psychological rehabilitation first, teaching them to trust pack bonds gradually, the integration becomes natural rather than forced."
"This collaborative approach you're suggesting—joint training sessions between our packs' rehabilitation teams—it could revolutionize how we handle rogue integration across the region." Marcus pulled out his phone, making notes. "Would you be willing to lead a pilot program? My Beta could coordinate with your team to establish protocols."
The offer hung in the air like a lifeline. Real work, meaningful contribution, the chance to expand a program I'd built from nothing into something that could help rogues across multiple territories. For a moment, I felt like myself again—not just Grayson's Luna, but Carly Thompson, the woman who'd dedicated years to understanding and healing the broken bonds that created rogues in the first place.
"I'd be honored to—"
The temperature in the room dropped so suddenly that my breath caught. I felt Grayson's presence before I saw him, that familiar Alpha aura rolling through the doorway like a storm front, but this time it carried a dangerous edge that made my wolf cower.
Every conversation in the room died as he entered, his gray eyes fixed on me with an intensity that made my stomach clench. The other wolves automatically straightened, recognizing their Alpha's mood even if they didn't understand its source.
"Marcus," Grayson's voice was controlled, too controlled, as he moved with predatory grace toward our end of the table. "I hope my Luna hasn't been monopolizing too much of your time."
The words sounded polite, but the Alpha energy radiating from him told a different story. Marcus, experienced enough to read pack dynamics, shifted slightly in his chair as Grayson positioned himself directly between us, his broad shoulders blocking my view of the Silverfang Alpha.
"Not at all," Marcus replied carefully, his tone growing more formal. "Luna Carly's expertise in rogue rehabilitation is remarkable. We were discussing potential collaboration—"
"Were you?" Grayson's Alpha aura flared, pressing against the room like a physical weight. The papers on the table fluttered slightly, and I watched Marcus's confident posture waver as the territorial display hit him full force.
I tried to salvage the situation, my voice coming out smaller than intended. "Grayson, the Silverfang Pack has expressed interest in our rehabilitation methods. This could benefit rogues across the entire region."
His head turned toward me with mechanical precision, and the look in his eyes made my blood freeze. "I'm sure they have."
The silence stretched like a wire about to snap. Marcus cleared his throat, gathering his papers with movements that were just a little too quick, a little too careful. "Perhaps we should continue this discussion at another time. Thank you for your insights, Luna Carly."
As the Silverfang delegation filed out with uncomfortable murmurs and averted gazes, I remained frozen in my chair, watching months of careful relationship-building crumble under the weight of Grayson's jealous paranoia.
When the last wolf left and the conference room door clicked shut, Grayson's Alpha mask finally slipped, revealing the cold fury beneath.
"My office. Now."
The walk down the hallway felt like a death march, each step echoing in the sudden emptiness of the pack house. By the time his office door closed behind us with a soft, final click, my hands were shaking.
"What the hell was that?" His voice was low, dangerous, the kind of tone that made even his Beta think twice about arguing.
I lifted my chin, trying to find some scrap of the confidence I'd felt just minutes ago. "That was me doing my job. Building relationships that benefit our pack."
"Your job," he repeated, moving closer until his Alpha presence pressed against me like a physical force, "is to support me. Not to flirt with other Alphas like some desperate omega seeking attention."
The accusation hit me like a slap. "Flirting? Grayson, we were discussing rehabilitation protocols. Professional collaboration that could—"
"Professional?" His laugh was sharp, bitter. "You think I didn't see the way you lit up when he praised your work? The way you leaned toward him, hanging on his every word?"
"I was engaged in the conversation because it matters to me!" The words burst out before I could stop them. "This work, these programs—they're important. They save lives."
"What's important," his Alpha tone cut through my protest like a blade, "is that you remember your place. You're the Luna of this pack, not some independent consultant shopping her services to the highest bidder."
The dismissal of everything I'd worked for, everything I'd achieved, felt like being flayed alive. "My place? Grayson, I built that program from nothing. I've helped integrate dozens of rogues who other packs had written off as hopeless."
"And now you're so proud of your little project that you're willing to embarrass me in front of another Alpha." He stepped closer, his voice dropping to a whisper that somehow felt more threatening than shouting. "If you continue to make me look like a fool who can't control his own mate, I'll shut down your rehabilitation work entirely. You'll spend your days planning pack social events and arranging flowers, like a proper Luna should."
The threat landed like a physical blow, stealing the breath from my lungs. Everything I was, everything I'd built, reduced to a bargaining chip in his need for absolute control.
"You wouldn't," I whispered, but even as I said it, I could see in his eyes that he absolutely would.
"Try me, Carly. Keep testing the boundaries of what I'll tolerate, and find out exactly how far I'm willing to go to remind you who you belong to."