Three weeks had passed since the ceremony that stripped away the last of my dignity, and I thought I had reached the bottom of Harrison's cruelty. I was wrong.
The pack meeting was called for noon, an unusual time that should have been my first warning. I entered the conference room to find the entire leadership council already seated – Harrison at the head of the table, Helen at his right hand where I once sat, Beta Marcus avoiding my eyes, and the other ranking members wearing expressions that ranged from uncomfortable to openly hostile.
"Mallory," Harrison's voice was ice-cold as he gestured to the chair at the far end of the table, the seat typically reserved for pack members being disciplined. "Please, sit."
My wolf stirred uneasily as I took the indicated chair, every instinct screaming that this was a trap. Helen sat perfectly poised beside Harrison, her hands folded delicately in her lap, but I caught the glitter of satisfaction in her green eyes.
"We've discovered something troubling," Harrison continued, his Alpha aura pressing against me like a weight. "Financial documents have gone missing from the pack vault. Sensitive information about our territory agreements, our alliance terms, our defensive positions."
My breath caught. "What does that have to do with me?"
Helen leaned forward slightly, her voice trembling with what sounded like genuine distress. "Oh, Mallory, I'm so sorry. I didn't want to be the one to find them, but when I was helping organize your personal belongings – you know, trying to make space for the pack's new filing system – I discovered these in your bedroom drawer."
She produced a manila folder, placing it on the table with shaking hands. The documents inside were clearly pack financial records, stamped with official seals, marked with Harrison's signature. My heart plummeted as I recognized the distinctive blue ink of our territorial agreements.
"Those aren't mine," I said, my voice barely above a whisper. "I've never seen those documents before in my life."
"They were hidden beneath your jewelry box," Helen continued, tears now streaming down her cheeks in a performance worthy of an award. "I thought maybe there was some mistake, some explanation, but then I remembered how you've been asking so many questions about pack finances lately, about our alliance terms with the neighboring territories."
"Because you told me to!" The words burst out of me before I could stop them. "You said Harrison wanted me to familiarize myself with the pack's external relationships!"
Helen's eyes widened in apparent shock. "I... I never said any such thing. Why would I encourage you to access classified information?"
The room fell silent except for the sound of my ragged breathing. I looked around the table, searching for even one face that showed doubt, one person who might question this obvious setup. Beta Marcus stared at his hands, his jaw clenched tight. The others watched me with expressions ranging from disappointment to disgust.
"Harrison," I turned to my mate, the man who had once sworn to protect me, "you know me. You know I would never betray the pack. Please, just investigate this properly. Check the security footage, ask questions, look at the evidence—"
"The evidence is right in front of me," Harrison cut me off, his voice carrying the full force of his Alpha authority. "Documents that should have been secure were found in your possession. Helen has provided a clear account of how they were discovered."
"She planted them!" The accusation tore from my throat, desperate and raw. "Can't you see what she's doing? She's been systematically destroying everything between us, and now she's trying to frame me as a traitor!"
Harrison's eyes flashed with anger, and his Alpha aura slammed into me like a physical blow, driving me back in my chair. "Enough. I will not tolerate you making accusations against Helen when she's the one who brought this betrayal to light."
Helen sobbed quietly into her hands, the picture of wounded innocence. "I just wanted to help organize things for the pack's benefit. I never imagined I would find something like this. It breaks my heart to think that someone I trusted could do such a thing."
"As of this moment," Harrison announced, his voice echoing with finality, "I am contacting every Alpha in the neighboring territories. They will be informed that Mallory Hart is not to be trusted with sensitive information, that she has been found in possession of stolen pack documents, and that any pack offering her sanctuary will be considered complicit in her betrayal."
The words hit me like physical blows. He was cutting off every escape route, ensuring that even if I found the courage to leave, I would have nowhere to go. No pack would take in a Luna branded as a traitor by her own Alpha.
"You're trapping me here," I whispered, the full scope of their plan finally becoming clear. "You're making sure I can never leave, never find sanctuary anywhere else."
Harrison's smile was cold and satisfied. "I'm protecting the other packs from a security risk. What happens to you after that is entirely dependent on your behavior going forward."
Helen lifted her head from her hands, her tears already drying, and for just a moment, I saw the triumphant gleam in her eyes before she composed herself again. She had won another round in her systematic destruction of my life, and we both knew it.
As the meeting disbanded, I remained frozen in my chair, watching Harrison's hand rest protectively on Helen's shoulder as he guided her from the room. The folder of documents – the evidence of my supposed betrayal – lay abandoned on the table like a smoking gun.
I was trapped now, branded as untrustworthy, cut off from any hope of escape. And somewhere in the pack house, Helen was probably already planning her next move in this deadly game where I seemed destined to lose everything.
The sound of their bodies moving together reached me through the slightly ajar bedroom door – the bedroom that had once been ours. My hand froze on the doorknob as Harrison's deep groans mixed with Helen's breathless moans, the rhythm unmistakable, primal, devastating.
I should have walked away. Should have retreated to the small guest room I'd been relegated to weeks ago. But something rooted me to the spot, some masochistic need to witness the final destruction of everything I'd believed sacred.
Through the crack in the door, I could see them on the bed we'd shared for eight years. Harrison's powerful form moved over Helen's smaller frame, his hands tangled in her auburn hair, his mouth claiming hers with a passion I hadn't seen from him in months. She arched beneath him, her nails raking down his back, marking him in ways I no longer could.
The mate bond twisted in my chest like a knife, each of Harrison's movements with another woman sending shockwaves of pain through my very soul. This wasn't just adultery – this was a violation of the most sacred connection werewolves could share.
I pushed the door open wider, no longer caring about stealth. "Harrison."
They broke apart instantly, Harrison's head snapping toward me with more annoyance than shame. Helen made a show of pulling the sheet up to cover herself, but not before I caught the triumphant gleam in her eyes.
"Mallory," Harrison's voice was cold, matter-of-fact, as if I'd caught him reviewing pack finances rather than betraying our mate bond. "You should have knocked."
"In my own bedroom?" The words came out sharper than I intended, eight years of suppressed anger finally finding voice. "With my own mate?"
Harrison climbed off the bed with deliberate slowness, not bothering to cover himself as he faced me. His body, once a source of comfort and desire, now felt like a weapon pointed at my heart.
"This is no longer your bedroom," he said, his Alpha aura beginning to press against me. "And I am fulfilling my duty to ensure strong bloodlines for the pack's future. Helen carries traits that will benefit our offspring."
"Our offspring?" I laughed, the sound hollow and broken. "What about the mate bond? What about the sacred vows we made before the Moon Goddess?"
"The mate bond is a tool, Mallory. A means to an end." Harrison's eyes were flat, emotionless. "I need strong heirs, and Helen can provide them. You've had eight years to conceive, and what do we have to show for it?"
The words hit me like physical blows. Every miscarriage, every month of disappointment, every tear I'd shed in private – he was using it all as justification for this betrayal.
Helen sat up in bed, the sheet clutched to her chest, her voice trembling with false sympathy. "Oh, Mallory, I'm so sorry you had to see this. But Harrison and I... we couldn't fight the connection any longer. The pack needs strong leadership for the future."
"Get out," Harrison commanded, his Alpha tone slamming into me with enough force to make my knees buckle. "This doesn't concern you anymore."
I stumbled backward, my wolf whimpering under the assault of his dominance, but some part of me – some stubborn core of the Luna I'd once been – refused to submit completely.
"This concerns me more than anyone," I managed, my voice shaking but determined. "I'm still your marked mate, Harrison. Still your Luna."
"For now," he replied, and those two words carried more threat than any Alpha tone ever could.
* * *
The full moon gathering three days later felt like walking into my own execution. The entire pack had assembled in the great hall, their excited chatter filling the space with anticipation. I stood at the back, relegated to the shadows while Harrison and Helen took their places on the raised platform.
Helen glowed under the moonlight streaming through the windows, her hand resting protectively over her still-flat stomach. She wore a flowing blue dress that caught the light beautifully, while I remained in the simple gray tunic that had become my uniform of humiliation.
"My pack family," Harrison's voice boomed across the hall, commanding instant silence. "Tonight, under the blessing of the full moon, I have joyous news to share."
He placed his hand over Helen's, the gesture so tender it made my chest ache with remembered pain. "Helen carries my heir. The future of our pack grows within her."
The hall erupted in cheers and congratulations. Pack members surged forward to offer their blessings, their faces bright with genuine happiness. No one looked at me. No one acknowledged that their Luna stood forgotten in the shadows while another woman claimed her place.
Harrison's Alpha aura expanded, washing over the assembled pack, and I felt the familiar pressure to submit, to bow to his authority. But this time, it felt different – heavier, more demanding.
"Both Helen and Mallory will submit to my protection," he announced, his voice carrying the weight of absolute command. "They will both recognize their place in ensuring our pack's future."
The Alpha tone hit me like a tsunami, driving me to my knees along with every other pack member. But while they submitted willingly, celebrating their Alpha's announcement, I knelt in humiliation, forced to acknowledge the woman who was stealing my life.
Helen remained standing beside Harrison, his hand protective on her back, his eyes soft with affection as he looked down at her. The contrast was deliberate, cruel – she was his cherished chosen mate, while I was just another pack member forced to submit to his will.
As the celebration continued around me, I remained on my knees in the shadows, watching my mate shower another woman with the love and protection that should have been mine.
* * *
Serving Helen had become my daily penance, a constant reminder of how far I'd fallen. The silver tray trembled in my hands as I climbed the stairs to her room, the delicate china soup bowl threatening to spill with each step.
My hands hadn't stopped shaking since the gathering. Sleep had become elusive, haunted by images of Harrison's tender touches and Helen's triumphant smile. Even my wolf had retreated deep inside me, too wounded to offer comfort.
"Come in," Helen's voice called sweetly when I knocked on her door.
She was reclining on the chaise lounge, one hand resting on her stomach in a gesture that had become her signature pose. The afternoon sun streamed through the windows, highlighting her auburn hair like a halo.
"Your lunch, Helen," I said, setting the tray on the small table beside her.
She smiled up at me, all innocence and gratitude. "You're so kind to take care of me like this, Mallory. I know it must be difficult, given the circumstances."
The soup bowl rattled against the saucer as I lifted it, my trembling hands betraying the emotions I tried to keep buried. Helen's eyes tracked the movement, and something shifted in her expression – a calculation, an opportunity recognized.
"Are you alright?" she asked, her voice dripping with false concern. "You seem... unsteady."
"I'm fine," I lied, trying to steady the bowl as I moved it toward her.
But my hands betrayed me. The trembling intensified, and the soup sloshed over the rim, a few drops landing on Helen's pristine blue dress.
"Oh!" she gasped, looking down at the small stains with wide eyes. "Mallory, you—"
"I'm so sorry," I rushed to apologize, setting the bowl down quickly and reaching for a napkin. "Let me clean that up."
But Helen was already moving, rising from the chaise with deliberate slowness. Her eyes met mine for just a moment, and in them, I saw cold calculation rather than accident or fear.
Then she threw herself backward.
The sound of her body hitting the stairs was sickening – a series of thuds and crashes that seemed to echo through the entire pack house. I stood frozen in the doorway, napkin still in hand, as Helen's screams filled the air.
"Help! Someone help me! She pushed me!"
Footsteps thundered through the house as pack members rushed toward the commotion. I stumbled to the top of the stairs, looking down at Helen's crumpled form three steps down, her dress torn, her hair disheveled, her hand protectively cradling her stomach.
"The baby," she sobbed, her voice carrying perfectly to every corner of the house. "My baby!"
Harrison appeared at the bottom of the stairs, his face a mask of fury and panic as he took in the scene – Helen injured and crying, me standing at the top with guilt written across my features.
"What happened?" His Alpha tone cracked like a whip, demanding answers.
"She pushed me," Helen whispered, tears streaming down her face as Harrison gathered her into his arms. "I was just trying to be kind, to thank her for bringing lunch, and she... she pushed me down the stairs."
"No," I breathed, the word barely audible. "No, I didn't—"
"SILENCE!" Harrison's Alpha command slammed into me with the force of a physical blow, driving me to my knees at the top of the stairs. "How dare you harm my pregnant mate! How dare you endanger my heir!"
The accusation hung in the air like poison, and I saw the faces of my pack members – people I'd served and protected for eight years – looking at me with horror and disgust. They believed her. They all believed her.
Helen clung to Harrison's chest, her sobs echoing through the house as he carried her toward the pack medical wing. Over his shoulder, she caught my eye for just a moment, and her tears stopped long enough for her to mouth two words that chilled me to the bone:
"Checkmate."