Marcus's arm supported my trembling body as we left the meeting hall, his grip firm yet gentle against my weakening frame. The pack's whispers followed us like persistent shadows, their curious eyes burning into my back. Each step felt like walking through quicksand, my legs threatening to give way beneath me.
"You need to tell him the truth, Aria," Marcus whispered urgently through our mind-link, his mental voice tinged with desperation. "Gabriel needs to know what you sacrificed for him."
I shook my head weakly, wincing as pain shot through my temples. "No. Never."
The narrow corridor to my assigned Omega quarters seemed endless. The room they'd given me was little more than a storage closet with a cot—a far cry from the Luna suite I once dreamed of sharing with Gabriel.
"Look at what he's doing to you," Marcus continued, his mental voice breaking as he helped me sit on the thin mattress. "This cruelty... if he knew what his mother forced you to do, what you gave up to save his life—"
"And destroy him with guilt?" I countered, my actual voice barely audible. "Let him believe I betrayed him. It's easier than knowing his own mother manipulated me, that she—" A violent cough interrupted me, the metallic taste of blood filling my mouth.
Marcus knelt before me, his eyes reflecting the dim light from the single bulb overhead. "You're dying, Aria. The ritual took too much from you."
Luna, my wolf, whimpered weakly within me. Once vibrant and strong, she now felt like a fading echo. *We're fading faster now that we're near him again.*
"Swear to me," I gripped Marcus's hand with what little strength remained in mine. "Swear on your Beta oath that you'll never tell Gabriel. Promise me!"
His jaw clenched, conflict evident in every line of his face. "Aria—"
"Promise me!" I demanded, surprising even myself with the force behind my words.
"I swear," he finally whispered, the words seeming to physically pain him. "On my Beta oath, I will keep your secret."
The room spun suddenly, darkness creeping at the edges of my vision. I heard Marcus call my name as consciousness slipped away from me like water through cupped hands.
---
Three nights later, I stood against the wall of the grand dining hall, my hands clutching a crystal decanter of wine. Gabriel had arranged a formal dinner with the neighboring Silver Creek and Moonstone packs—a strategic alliance meeting that doubled as an opportunity to showcase his chosen mate.
Victoria sat beside him in a stunning white ceremonial gown, her dark hair cascading over her shoulders in the exact style I once wore mine. The resemblance was uncanny and deliberate—a cruel reminder of what I once was, what I could have been.
"Omega," Gabriel's cold voice cut through the dinner conversation. "Serve wine to our honored guests."
I moved forward on unsteady legs, feeling the weight of curious stares from the visiting Alphas. They knew who I was—or rather, who I had been. Gabriel's rejected mate, now reduced to serving staff.
My hands trembled violently as I approached the head table. Luna was particularly weak tonight, her presence flickering like a candle in strong wind. *Careful, Aria. We don't have the strength for this.*
I began pouring, fighting to keep the heavy crystal decanter steady. When I reached Victoria, her lips curled into a smug smile. She shifted suddenly, her elbow brushing against my arm just as I tilted the decanter.
Dark red wine splashed across the pristine white of her ceremonial gown, drawing gasps from around the table. The room fell silent.
"You clumsy, worthless Omega!" Victoria hissed, standing abruptly.
Gabriel rose slowly, his eyes burning gold with fury. "Kneel," he commanded, his Alpha tone washing over me like a physical force.
My knees hit the floor hard, the decanter slipping from my grasp and shattering beside me.
"Bare your neck," he continued, each word laced with power that my weakened body couldn't resist.
I tilted my head, exposing the vulnerable curve of my throat where his mate mark should have been. The ultimate gesture of submission. The ultimate humiliation.
A collective gasp rippled through the room. I felt something warm trickling from my nose, tasting copper on my lips. Blood. My body was failing faster than I'd anticipated.
Through blurred vision, I saw something flicker in Gabriel's eyes—confusion, perhaps even concern—before his mask of cold indifference returned.
---
"The ritual is consuming her faster than I expected," Elder Elara murmured, her weathered hands pressing gently against my forehead in her healing chamber. "The life force transfer was never meant to be permanent. It's remarkable she's survived this long."
Marcus paced the small room, his fists clenched at his sides. "There must be something we can do. Some way to reverse it."
"I'm bound by sacred oath," Elara replied, her ancient eyes filled with sorrow as she mixed herbs in a small stone bowl. "I can ease her pain, but I cannot undo what was done. The Moon Goddess's magic doesn't work that way."
"How long?" I whispered, already knowing the answer.
Elara's hands stilled. "Months, at most. Your return to the pack territory—to him—has accelerated the process."
Marcus slammed his fist against the wall. "This is madness! Gabriel tortures the very woman who saved his life, and we stand by watching her die for a secret we're sworn to keep."
"It was my choice," I reminded him weakly. "My sacrifice."
"A sacrifice he spits on daily," Marcus growled.
As Elder Elara pressed a bitter-tasting tincture to my lips, I closed my eyes, feeling Luna curl tighter within me, both of us conserving what little strength remained.
*We're running out of time,* she whispered in my mind. *And he still doesn't know why we left.*
Victoria's heels clicked sharply against the marble floor as she approached me in the corridor, her lips curled in that familiar smirk that made my stomach tighten. Three days had passed since my collapse at the dinner, and each hour seemed to drain more of my remaining strength.
"Omega," she called, the title a deliberate insult on her tongue. "Alpha Gabriel's chambers need preparation for our pre-mating rite tonight." She leaned closer, her floral perfume—a manufactured imitation of what my natural scent once was—suffocating me. "Every corner must be perfect. I'll inspect it myself."
I kept my eyes lowered, the way an Omega should. "Yes, Luna Victoria."
"I'm not Luna yet," she corrected, her voice honeyed with false sweetness. "But soon. Very soon."
Luna whimpered within me. *His chambers. Our chambers. They should have been ours.*
I silenced her with gentle reassurance. We had no right to those thoughts anymore.
Gabriel's private quarters were painfully familiar yet achingly different. The furniture remained the same—the massive oak bed, the bookshelves lining the walls—but Victoria's possessions had begun to invade the space. Her silk robes draped across a chair, her perfumes lined his bathroom counter.
My hands trembled as I dusted the bookshelves, each movement sending waves of exhaustion through my failing body. Behind a row of leather-bound volumes, my fingers brushed against something hidden. Curiosity—a dangerous indulgence—made me pull it forward.
A stack of letters tied with a faded blue ribbon. My letters. The ones I'd written to Gabriel during those first blissful weeks after discovering our mate bond. I'd thought he would have burned them.
Unwisely, I lifted them to my nose, inhaling deeply. His scent still clung to the paper, mingled with the faint trace of what my own scent had been—wild roses after rain, vibrant and alive. So different from the withered, dusty aroma that followed me now.
"Snooping, Omega?"
I startled, the letters slipping from my grasp and scattering across the floor. Victoria stood in the doorway, her eyes narrowed with suspicion and triumph.
"I was just cleaning," I whispered, dropping to my knees to gather the fallen papers.
She crossed the room and deliberately stepped on one of the letters, the heel of her shoe puncturing the delicate paper. "These should have been destroyed long ago. Just like your place in his life."
I said nothing, focusing on retrieving the letters with as much dignity as my position allowed.
Victoria moved to the closet, pulling out Gabriel's ceremonial Alpha cloak—the one he would wear for their mating ceremony. The rich, dark fabric gleamed in the afternoon light, embroidered with silver thread that formed the Silvermoon Pack's ancient symbols. I had once dreamed of standing beside him as he wore it, my hand in his as we accepted the pack's blessing.
"I'm carrying his pup," Victoria announced suddenly, her hand moving to rest on her still-flat stomach. "We confirmed it yesterday."
The world tilted beneath me. Luna howled in anguish, the sound echoing only in my mind but so powerful it nearly made me double over.
"Once I bear his heir," she continued, watching my reaction with cold satisfaction, "there will be no reason for him to keep you here. You'll fade from memory, just as you're already fading in body." She ran her fingers along the cloak. "It's almost poetic, isn't it? You chose to leave him, and now you get to watch as I take everything that should have been yours."
She didn't know. She couldn't know that I was dying because I had chosen to stay with him in the only way I could—by giving him my life force through a ritual that had saved him from his mother's curse.
"Finish your duties," she ordered, turning toward the door. "And Aria?" She rarely used my actual name. "Don't touch his things again. They're not yours anymore. They never will be."
After she left, I stood alone in his chambers, surrounded by the remnants of what should have been my life. On the shelf above his desk sat a small wooden box I recognized—the one where he kept the ring he'd planned to give me at our mating ceremony. My fingers itched to open it, to see if it was still there, but I resisted.
Some wounds were too deep to reopen.
---
The territorial patrol wasn't meant to include me. As an Omega, I was relegated to household duties, not pack protection. But Elder Elara had insisted I needed fresh air, and Marcus had arranged for me to join the outer perimeter check—the easiest route, far from where Gabriel would be leading the main patrol.
The winter forest was beautiful, snow dusting the pines like powdered sugar. For a brief moment, walking among the trees, I felt almost like my old self again. Luna stirred within me, drawing strength from the natural surroundings.
*Remember how we used to run these paths?* she whispered in my mind. *How the wind felt in our fur?*
"We'll run again someday," I lied, knowing we both recognized the falsehood.
I had fallen behind the others, my pace slowed by weakness, when the scent hit me—unfamiliar wolves, their musk tinged with aggression. Rogues, crossing into Silvermoon territory.
My body reacted before my mind could catch up. Luna surged forward, desperate to protect what had once been our home. The shift began violently—my bones cracking, my skin burning as pale, thinning fur erupted across my body.
"No!" I gasped, fighting against the transformation. "We're too weak!"
But it was too late. The partial shift tore through me like fire, my human form and wolf battling for control. I collapsed into the snow, my body contorting unnaturally, caught between forms. Pain blinded me as my consciousness flickered like a dying flame.
Through the haze of agony, I sensed rather than saw his approach. Gabriel's powerful aura washed over me seconds before his scent—pine, earth, and raw power.
"Aria?" His voice, for once stripped of its cold command, sounded almost like it had years ago when he'd called my name in tenderness.
I couldn't respond. My partially shifted body convulsed in the snow, blood staining the white crystals crimson beneath me. Luna was fading, retreating deep within to preserve what little strength remained.
I felt strong arms lift me, cradling my broken form against a warm chest. Through half-lidded eyes, I saw Gabriel's face above mine, his expression unreadable except for a flicker of something that might have been concern.
"Hold on," he ordered, but this time without his Alpha command. "Just... hold on."
Darkness claimed me as he carried me back toward the pack house, my blood leaving a trail of scarlet drops in the pristine snow behind us.
---
The waning moon cast long shadows through the windows of Victoria's dressing room. My hands shook as I helped her into the white ceremonial gown—the same design I had once sketched for my own mating ceremony, in another lifetime.
"Careful with the lace," Victoria snapped as my trembling fingers fumbled with the delicate fastenings. "This gown cost more than your worthless life."
The irony of her words almost made me laugh. She had no idea how little value remained in my existence—how each day drained more of my life force into the void.
The white fabric shimmered in the moonlight, pearls and silver thread catching the pale glow. It was beautiful—exactly as I had imagined it would be when I wore it to become Gabriel's Luna.
Luna thrashed within me, recognizing the dress from our shared dreams. *Our dress. Our ceremony. Our mate.*
The room spun suddenly, the white fabric blurring before my eyes. My legs gave way, and I sank to the floor, gasping for breath that wouldn't come. The familiar copper taste of blood filled my mouth as my wolf's anguish tore through what remained of my strength.
"Pathetic," Victoria said, looking down at me with contempt as I knelt at her feet, drowning in the white sea of fabric that should have been mine. "You can't even manage this simple task without falling apart."
She didn't understand. None of them did. I wasn't just losing my place or my status.
I was losing my life, one heartbeat at a time, for a love that now looked at me with nothing but hatred.