Chapter 2

The pack council chamber had never felt so cold. I sat in the defendant's chair—a cruel irony, considering I was the Luna of this very pack. The semicircle of council members avoided my gaze, their faces carved from stone. Wells stood at the center, his Beta authority radiating through the room like a toxic cloud.

"The evidence is clear," he announced, his voice carrying that smooth persuasion that had fooled so many. "Luna Esperanza has become a destabilizing force within our pack. Her recent behavior threatens the very unity we've worked so hard to build."

Councilor Martin, who had once praised my healing work, now studied his hands. "The incidents speak for themselves. Questioning Alpha decisions, territorial disputes, creating division among pack members."

"What incidents?" I demanded, my wolf Luna snarling within me. "Defending my legal inheritance isn't creating division—it's standing up for sacred mate bond laws."

The former Luna rose from her seat at the council's edge, her silver hair gleaming under the harsh lights. "This outburst only proves our point, dear. A Luna should maintain composure, not attack pack leadership with wild accusations."

My hands clenched in my lap. "Wild accusations? I have documentation—"

"Forged documents won't save you now," Xiomara's voice cut through the chamber like a blade. She stood near the back, her red nails catching the light as she gestured dramatically. "Everyone knows you've been unstable since your pregnancy began. The hormones, the paranoia, the inappropriate advances..."

The words hit me like physical blows. "Inappropriate advances?"

"We've all seen how you look at Wells," she continued, her voice dripping false concern. "The way you follow him around, question his authority. It's unseemly for a mated she-wolf, especially one carrying another's pup."

Gasps echoed through the chamber. I shot to my feet, my chair scraping against stone. "How dare you—"

"Enough!" Wells' Alpha-toned command slammed into me, forcing my wolf to submit despite every instinct screaming against it. "This behavior only confirms what we've suspected. You're a danger to pack stability, to pregnant she-wolves, to our pups."

The chamber erupted in whispers. Through the pack's mind-link network, I felt the poison spreading—Xiomara's carefully crafted lies bleeding through mental connections like venom through veins. *She's lost her mind... pregnancy madness... threat to our children...*

"By unanimous council decision," Wells announced, his cold smile never wavering, "Luna Esperanza Dixon is hereby cast out as a rogue troublemaker who threatens pack harmony. She has forty-eight hours to vacate pack territory."

The world tilted. Cast out. Rogue. The words meant exile, meant losing everything—my home, my status, my protection.

"You can't do this," I whispered, my hand moving instinctively to my belly. "I'm carrying the heir to this pack."

"Are you?" The former Luna's question hung in the air like a curse. "Given your... unstable behavior, perhaps a healer should examine you. Ensure the pup's legitimacy."

Rage exploded through me, hot and primal. "You're questioning my child's paternity?"

"We're questioning everything about you," Wells replied smoothly. "A rogue has no claim to pack lineage."

The council members filed out one by one, their footsteps echoing like funeral drums. Only Marcus Rivera lingered, his weathered face creased with conflict. When the others had gone, he approached slowly.

"Esperanza," he whispered, glancing nervously at the door. "I wanted to speak for you, but..."

"But what?" Hope flickered in my chest.

His shoulders sagged. "Wells came to my home last night. Said anyone who supports you would be labeled a traitor to pack unity. My daughter just had her first pup, and my son's mate is pregnant. I can't risk exile for my family."

The hope died, replaced by cold understanding. "He threatened you."

"Not just me. Every family with something to lose. He's been making rounds for weeks, ensuring loyalty through fear." Marcus's voice broke slightly. "I'm sorry, Luna. I'm so sorry."

He left me alone in the chamber, surrounded by the ghosts of justice that would never come.

I walked through the pack house one final time, feeling the weight of hostile stares and whispered accusations. In the corridors where I'd once been greeted with respect, pack members now pressed against walls to avoid me, their fear palpable.

At the legal archives, I found exactly what I'd expected—empty filing cabinets where my inheritance documents should have been. Wells had been thorough, erasing my family's history as if we'd never existed.

The pack territory that had been my birthright was lost. My mate had betrayed me. My own pack had cast me out based on lies.

But as I stood in that ransacked archive room, my hand protective over my unborn child, something crystallized within me. They thought they'd broken me, reduced me to nothing.

They had no idea what they'd just unleashed.

Chapter 3

The drive to Moonstone Pack territory felt like crossing into another world. Each mile away from Silver Creek lifted a weight from my chest, though Luna remained restless within me. *We need allies,* she whispered, her voice carrying the desperation I refused to acknowledge aloud.

Elena Winters' healing center stood in stark contrast to the chaos I'd left behind—organized, peaceful, radiating the calm authority of someone who'd never had her life stripped away by lies. When she opened the door, her silver-streaked hair caught the afternoon light, and her knowing eyes immediately assessed my condition.

"Esperanza." Her voice held the warmth I'd forgotten existed. "You look like hell."

I almost laughed, but it came out as a broken sound. "That's one way to put it."

She led me to her private office, where the scent of healing herbs couldn't quite mask my own anxiety. "Tell me what happened. All of it."

So I did. Every betrayal, every lie, every moment of watching my world crumble. Elena listened without interruption, her healer's training evident in how she absorbed each detail.

"The territory transfer," she said finally, leaning back in her chair. "That's a clear violation of mate bond law. Sacred law, actually."

"I know. But they destroyed all my documentation."

Elena's smile was sharp as a blade. "Lucky for you, inheritance transfers require copies filed with neighboring packs for boundary verification. I have your grandmother's original documents in my archives."

Hope bloomed in my chest for the first time in days. "You do?"

"Every deed, every boundary marker, every legal proof of your family's claim to that territory." She stood and moved to a filing cabinet. "Wells Dixon might be cunning, but he's not as thorough as he thinks."

As she pulled out a thick folder, my hands shook. Inside were photocopies of documents I thought were lost forever—my grandmother's will, the territorial grants, boundary agreements dating back generations. Proof that the land was mine by blood and law.

"This changes everything," I whispered.

"It's a start," Elena agreed. "But you'll need more than paperwork to fight what's coming."

She was right. Wells and Xiomara wouldn't stop at theft—they'd destroy my reputation entirely to protect their crime.

I didn't have to wait long to see how right Elena was.

The pack meeting was called for sunset, and even from my temporary refuge at Elena's center, I could feel the mental buzz of excitement through the mind-link network. Xiomara had been busy spreading her poison, and tonight was her grand performance.

Against Elena's advice, I drove back to Silver Creek territory. I needed to hear what they were saying, needed to understand the full scope of their attack.

The meeting hall buzzed with an energy I'd never felt before—malicious anticipation mixed with righteous anger. Pack members who'd once greeted me with respect now whispered behind their hands, their eyes following my every movement with suspicion.

Xiomara stood at the center of the gathering, her red dress catching the firelight like fresh blood. She'd positioned herself perfectly—not quite at the Alpha's podium, but elevated enough to command attention.

"Fellow pack members," she began, her voice carrying that false sweetness that made my wolf snarl. "We gather tonight because our pack faces a threat from within."

Murmurs rippled through the crowd. I pressed myself against the back wall, my hand instinctively protective over my belly.

"Our former Luna," she continued, the title dripping with disdain, "has been using her healing center to harbor dangerous rogues. Wolves with no loyalty, no honor, who threaten our children and our way of life."

Gasps echoed through the hall. Sarah Mitchell, a young mother I'd helped through a difficult birth, stood up. "I saw strange wolves near the healing center last week. They didn't smell like pack."

My heart sank. Those had been injured rogues I'd treated—wolves cast out from other packs for minor infractions, seeking only healing before moving on. But in Xiomara's narrative, they became dangerous threats.

"And that's not all," Xiomara's voice rose dramatically. "Her pregnancy has made her paranoid, violent. She attacked me just last week when I questioned her about these rogues."

The lie hit me like a physical blow. I'd never touched Xiomara, had barely spoken to her before this nightmare began.

More pack members stood, sharing stories that grew more elaborate with each telling. How I'd threatened children. How I'd screamed at elderly pack members. How I'd tried to seduce young males with promises of healing.

Each fabricated story built upon the last, creating a mountain of lies that buried the truth so deep it might never see light again.

Then the former Luna rose from her seat of honor, and the hall fell silent. Her silver hair gleamed like a crown, and when she spoke, her voice carried the weight of decades as pack matriarch.

"My dear pack family," she began, her tone heavy with sorrow. "It pains me to speak these words, but we must face the truth about bloodlines and worthiness."

The words hit me like ice water. She was going to attack my heritage, my very right to exist in this pack.

"Some bloodlines carry weakness," she continued, her gaze finding mine across the crowded hall. "Instability that manifests in times of stress. Perhaps the Moon Goddess herself is showing her displeasure through these... increasingly erratic behaviors."

The hall erupted in whispers. To question the Moon Goddess's blessing was to question everything—my mate bond, my pregnancy, my very place in the pack's hierarchy.

"My grandmother served this pack faithfully for sixty years," I called out, my voice cutting through the noise. "Her bloodline built half the territory you're sitting on."

The former Luna's smile was cold as winter. "And yet here we are, watching her granddaughter threaten everything she built. Perhaps the Moon Goddess tests us, shows us that blood alone doesn't guarantee worthiness."

The crowd's energy shifted, becoming something darker, hungrier. I could feel their judgment pressing against me like a physical weight, their minds already made up by weeks of careful manipulation.

As I looked around the hall at faces I'd once trusted, I realized this wasn't just about territory or power. This was about erasing me completely—my history, my contributions, my very right to exist.

But as their hatred washed over me, something else crystallized in my chest. They wanted to destroy me? Let them try. They had no idea what they'd awakened.

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