Chapter 2

The morning after Aidan's coming-of-age ceremony, I woke to an empty bed. Noah had not returned to our quarters all night. My fingers traced the cool sheets beside me, a hollow ache spreading through my chest. I'd barely slept, replaying Aidan's rejection over and over in my mind.

A sharp knock at the door pulled me from my thoughts. Before I could respond, Noah entered, his expression unreadable.

"Stella," he said, his voice carrying that formal tone he'd been using with increasing frequency. "We need to discuss your living arrangements."

I sat up, pulling the blanket around me like armor. "What do you mean?"

"Sapphire needs proper accommodations as my Beta assistant." Noah's eyes didn't meet mine. "The Alpha quarters are the most suitable."

The implication hung in the air between us. I stared at him, unable to process his words.

"You want me to move out?" My voice sounded small even to my own ears.

"It's temporary," he said, though we both knew it wasn't. "The Luna suite in the east wing is available."

The Luna suite. Smaller, less prestigious, tucked away from the center of pack activity. A symbolic demotion.

"I understand," I said quietly, though I didn't. Not really.

Noah nodded, relief evident in his shoulders. He hadn't expected resistance. "You have today to pack your essentials."

As he turned to leave, I caught a glimpse of movement in the doorway. Sapphire stood there, her green eyes watching me with cold satisfaction.

"I'll help you pack, Luna," she said, the title sounding like mockery on her lips.

---

Hours later, I carefully wrapped my mother's crystal vase in tissue paper. My hands trembled slightly as I placed it in the box labeled "Luna Suite."

"Those are lovely," Sapphire commented from the doorway where she'd been supervising my packing. "Though perhaps a bit too delicate for your new quarters."

I didn't respond, focusing instead on folding my clothes into another box. Each item I packed felt like another piece of my life being erased.

"Alpha Noah mentioned you might need help with the heavier items," she continued, examining her manicured nails. "Though I imagine you'll manage. You've always been... resourceful."

The way she said it made it sound like an insult.

---

The pack meeting that afternoon was the first I'd attended since becoming Luna where I wasn't seated beside Noah. Instead, I sat three chairs away, with Sapphire in the place that had been mine for years.

Noah addressed various pack matters—territory disputes, hunting rotations, construction projects. I listened carefully, preparing to offer my input as Luna when appropriate.

When discussion turned to the upcoming full moon celebration, I cleared my throat softly.

"As Luna," I began, "I suggest we incorporate the traditional blessing of the harvest into this year's—"

"Actually," Aidan interrupted, rising from his seat near Sapphire, "my mother has already planned something special."

The room fell silent. Every eye turned to me, then to Aidan, then to Sapphire.

"Your mother?" I echoed, my voice barely above a whisper.

Aidan's chin lifted defiantly. "Yes. My real mother." He gestured toward Sapphire, who smiled proudly. "Not some... old hag who was just keeping my place warm."

Gasps rippled through the room. Elder Marcus half-rose from his seat, his face flushed with anger.

"Noah," I turned to my mate, expecting him to defend me, to remind Aidan of the respect due to his Luna.

But Noah only cleared his throat uncomfortably. "Aidan," he said mildly, "that was inappropriate."

No more. No defense of me. No reminder of my position or dignity.

---

Over the following days, Sapphire systematically began undermining my remaining Luna duties. When I instructed the younger pack members on proper ceremony protocol, she would appear moments later to "clarify" my instructions.

"The Luna is too emotional about these matters," she told them with a sympathetic smile. "We need practical solutions, not traditional ones."

When I organized the pack's winter supply inventory, Noah called me to his office.

"Sapphire thinks we should approach this differently," he said, not looking at me. "Her method is more efficient."

Each time, I nodded and stepped aside. Each time, my wolf whimpered inside me, sensing the slow erosion of our position.

One evening, I overheard Sapphire speaking to Noah in his office.

"The pack respects strength, not sentiment," she was saying. "Stella's heart is too soft for important decisions."

"And you think you're better suited?" Noah asked, his tone curious rather than challenging.

"I know I am," she replied confidently.

When Noah didn't disagree, something inside me—something that had been cracking since Aidan's ceremony—finally shattered completely.

Chapter 3

The pack dining hall glowed with candlelight as servants arranged the final touches for tonight's welcome dinner. I stood near the entrance, adjusting my simple blue dress—one of the few nice things I'd managed to take from the Alpha quarters before moving to my diminished accommodations in the east wing.

"You look pale, Luna," Elder Marcus murmured, appearing at my side. "Are you feeling well?"

"I'm fine," I lied, forcing a smile. "Just tired."

His weathered face creased with concern. "This situation isn't right, Stella. Many of us see it."

Before I could respond, Noah entered the hall with Sapphire at his side. She wore a deep emerald dress that highlighted her green eyes, her dark hair cascading over her shoulders. My breath caught as I noticed she wasn't wearing my mother's moonstone necklace—yet.

"Please, be seated," Noah announced, his Alpha voice carrying across the room. "Tonight we welcome Sapphire Hunt officially as my Beta assistant."

I took my place at the table, three seats away from Noah—a physical manifestation of our growing distance. Sapphire sat in my rightful place, her hand occasionally brushing against Noah's arm.

The meal progressed with forced pleasantries and awkward silences. I pushed food around my plate, my appetite gone. When Noah stood and tapped his glass for attention, my heart sank further.

"I have an announcement," he said, his eyes finding Sapphire. "To honor our newest pack member and her service to Moonstone Pack, I want to present her with a gift."

He reached into his pocket and withdrew a familiar glinting stone. My mother's moonstone necklace.

"Noah," I whispered, rising from my seat. "That's mine."

The room fell silent. Every eye turned to me, then to Noah, then to the necklace dangling from his fingers.

"It belongs to the Luna position," Noah said coldly. "And Sapphire will be taking on many Luna duties."

"But it was my mother's," I protested, my voice breaking. "You know what it means to me."

Sapphire's lips curved into a smile that didn't reach her eyes. "I'd be honored to wear such a precious heirloom, Alpha."

Noah walked around the table and placed the necklace around her throat. "It suits you."

I watched, frozen in horror, as Sapphire's fingers caressed the stone—the same stone that had rested against my skin since my mother's death.

"Thank you, Alpha," she purred, her eyes locked with mine in challenge.

Then it happened. As she turned to show the necklace to those seated nearby, the chain caught on her dress. There was a sharp snap—and the moonstone pendant fell to the floor, the chain breaking.

A collective gasp filled the room.

"Oh!" Sapphire exclaimed, bending to retrieve it. "How clumsy of me."

But as she picked it up, the moonstone itself fractured along invisible lines, splitting into three pieces in her palm.

Something inside me shattered along with it.

"The bond is broken," Elder Marcus murmured, loud enough for those nearby to hear.

Noah's face darkened. "Enough!"

Elder Marcus rose to his feet. "Alpha, this disrespect cannot continue. Luna Stella has served this pack faithfully for years. She found Aidan, raised him as her own—"

"Silence!" Noah's Alpha command reverberated through the room, forcing Elder Marcus back into his seat.

"Anyone who questions my decisions regarding pack hierarchy will face punishment," Noah continued, his eyes scanning the room. "Is that understood?"

I looked around desperately, searching for allies, but found only averted gazes. Even those who had been kind to me now stared at their plates or into their glasses.

"Sapphire is to be respected as my Beta assistant and Aidan's mother," Noah declared. "And Stella will continue her duties where assigned."

The rest of the dinner passed in a blur of humiliation and pain.

---

Later that night, I sat alone in my new quarters, staring at the broken pieces of my mother's necklace that Elder Marcus had secretly retrieved for me. The moonstone's fracture lines caught the lamplight, throwing broken rainbows across my palms.

A wave of dizziness washed over me suddenly. I closed my eyes, waiting for it to pass.

When it didn't, I took a deep breath and placed my palm against my abdomen.

"No," I whispered. "It can't be."

But my wolf knew. She'd known for days, perhaps weeks.

I was pregnant.

A child. Noah's child. Our child.

My hands trembled as I wrapped the broken necklace pieces in silk and tucked them away. This changed everything. This was my chance—perhaps my only chance—to remind Noah of what we once had.

I would tell him tomorrow, I decided. In private, where Sapphire couldn't interfere. Where I could see his eyes when I told him he would be a father.

This baby might be what we needed to heal the fractures between us—both in our mate bond and in my mother's precious stone.

What I didn't know then was how desperately I would need that healing in the days to come.

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