Chapter 2

The morning after the Moon Festival, I walked through the main corridor of the Silvermoon Pack house with my eyes fixed on the polished stone floor. Every step felt like walking through quicksand, my body weighed down by the events of last night. Blake's emergency pack meeting had been worse than I could have imagined. To protect Aria, he had—

I couldn't even complete the thought without feeling physically ill.

"There she is," a harsh whisper cut through the silence, followed by poorly concealed snickers.

I kept my head down, clutching my folder of Luna duties closer to my chest like a shield. The Delta warriors lounging against the wall made no effort to lower their voices as I passed.

"Did you see the video? Who knew our almost-Luna was such a performer," one of them said, his voice dripping with mockery.

Another replied, "Alpha Blake must have gotten bored if he's passing around the footage."

Lyra growled within me. *Let me out. Let me tear their throats.*

*No,* I responded silently. *That's exactly what they want. A reaction.*

But my wolf was right about one thing—they were enjoying this. The entire pack had seen the video Blake had shared through the mind-link network. The most intimate moments between us, moments I had believed were sacred, broadcast to everyone as "proof" that the photos of him and Aria were manipulated. His defense: he would never betray his mate.

The irony was suffocating.

"Hey, Sophia!" called a female Delta, her voice falsely sweet. "My brother from the Redclaw Pack wants your contact info. Says he's interested in a... private showing."

Laughter erupted behind me. I quickened my pace, blood rushing to my face. Six years of serving this pack, of preparing to be their Luna, reduced to this—a walking joke, an object of ridicule.

I pushed through the side exit, desperate for fresh air. The training grounds stretched before me, mercifully empty at this hour. I leaned against the stone wall, trying to steady my breathing.

"Your scent is different today," came a rough voice from my left.

I spun around to find a wolf I didn't recognize leaning against a tree. His clothes were worn, his hair unkempt—a rogue. His eyes gleamed with predatory interest as he pushed off the tree and took a step toward me.

"Sweeter," he continued, inhaling deeply. "Like fear mixed with... shame. It's intoxicating."

My heart hammered against my ribs. Since Blake's video, rogues had been appearing near our territory borders, drawn by the story of an Alpha who had publicly degraded his own mate.

"This is pack land," I said, trying to keep my voice steady. "You're trespassing."

He laughed, a harsh sound that made my skin crawl. "Am I? Word is, you're fair game now. Alpha Blake made that pretty clear."

He moved closer, backing me against the wall. "We've all seen what you can do," he whispered, his breath hot against my neck. "I just want my turn."

Lyra snarled, pushing against my consciousness. *Fight!*

I was about to shift when a commanding voice cut through the air.

"Step away from her. Now."

Ethan, Blake's Beta, stood at the edge of the training grounds, his posture rigid with authority.

The rogue hesitated, sizing up the Beta before backing away with his hands raised in mock surrender.

"No harm intended," he said with a smirk. "Just paying my respects to our famous almost-Luna."

Ethan's eyes flashed dangerously. "Get off our land before I make you regret it."

With one last leering glance at me, the rogue slipped away into the forest.

Ethan approached, his expression unreadable. "Are you hurt?"

"No," I replied, my voice hollow. "Thank you."

He nodded stiffly. "You shouldn't be out alone. There have been more rogues near the borders since..."

Since Blake shared our most intimate moments with the entire werewolf community.

"I need to get home," I said, stepping away from him.

Back in my family's den, I collapsed onto my bed, reaching for my comm-scent box—a device that allowed werewolves to send scent-messages across distances. It was glowing, indicating new messages.

I hesitated before opening it. The box erupted with a cacophony of unfamiliar scents, each carrying a message more vulgar than the last. Werewolves from neighboring packs, rogues from distant territories—all leaving their mark, their intentions crystal clear in the primal language of scent.

One message stood out—not by its content, but by its sender. Blake's cedar scent, wrapped around three simple words: "We need to talk."

I slammed the box shut, my hands trembling. Lyra's voice was ice in my mind.

*He hasn't seen anything yet. This is just the beginning of what he's going to lose.*

Chapter 3

I stood outside Blake's study, my hand frozen mid-knock. The polished mahogany door seemed to mock me with its grandeur—a symbol of the power that now threatened to crush me. After yesterday's encounter with the rogue and the flood of vulgar messages, I had no choice but to confront Blake directly.

Lyra stirred restlessly within me. *Be strong. Don't let him see your fear.*

I drew a deep breath and knocked.

"Enter," came his cold command.

Blake sat behind his massive desk, papers scattered before him, not bothering to look up as I entered. Sunlight streamed through the floor-to-ceiling windows, illuminating dust particles that danced in the air—oblivious to the tension that made it hard for me to breathe.

"You wanted to talk," I said, hating how small my voice sounded.

He finally looked up, his expression unreadable. No trace remained of the man who had once held me tenderly, whispering promises against my skin—promises captured in that video he'd shared with everyone.

"Close the door," he ordered.

I did as instructed, then stood before him, hands clasped to hide their trembling.

"Blake, please," I began, my voice cracking. "You have to do something. Since that video, I can't walk anywhere without being harassed. Rogues are approaching me on pack lands. The messages I'm receiving—"

"That's not my concern," he cut me off, his tone glacial.

The words hit me like a physical blow. "Not your concern? I'm your mate!"

"An unmarked mate," he corrected, standing slowly. "And right now, I have actual problems to deal with."

I stared at him, disbelief warring with the hurt blooming in my chest. "Actual problems? Blake, a rogue nearly attacked me yesterday!"

"Perhaps you should be more careful about where you wander," he replied dismissively, circling his desk to tower over me.

Lyra growled, a sound that almost escaped my throat. "This is because of what you did. You exposed us—"

"I did what was necessary," he snapped, his Alpha aura flaring suddenly, pressing down on me like a physical weight. "And I don't need to explain myself to you."

My knees weakened under the pressure of his power. This was the first time he had ever used his Alpha influence against me—his mate, the one person who should have been his equal, his partner.

"Stop," I whispered, fighting to remain standing.

His eyes flashed gold, his voice dropping to a dangerous register. "You will not question me again. This discussion is over."

The command slammed into me, my wolf whimpering as we both struggled against his dominance. I backed away, tears burning behind my eyes as I fumbled for the door handle.

"Blake," I tried one last time, "please..."

"Get out," he said, turning his back on me.

I fled, the door closing behind me with a quiet click that somehow hurt more than if he had slammed it.

---

Hours later, the pack house erupted in commotion. Through my bedroom window, I watched as Blake stormed across the courtyard, Aria hurrying behind him, her face pale with fear. Something had happened.

My comm-scent box buzzed. Despite my better judgment, I opened it, expecting another vulgar message. Instead, I caught the scent of panic—Blake's panic—wrapped around a command: *Alpha tower. Now.*

I hesitated, Lyra bristling within me. *Don't go.*

But ignoring an Alpha's direct command was nearly impossible, especially when delivered through the pack bond. The pull was already tugging at my limbs, urging me toward the tower that rose at the center of pack territory.

By the time I arrived, night had fallen. The tower's stone walls seemed to absorb the moonlight, creating a fortress of shadows. I climbed the spiral staircase, each step heavier than the last.

Blake waited at the top, his powerful frame silhouetted against the window. Aria stood beside him, her eyes red-rimmed but calculating.

"You summoned me," I said, remaining near the doorway.

"We have a situation," Blake replied, his voice strangely calm—the calm before a storm. "Kael, Aria's former pack leader, has contacted us."

I said nothing, waiting. Whatever this was, it couldn't be good.

"He has more... material," Blake continued. "Photos that would destroy everything I've built. Everything WE'VE built."

"What does that have to do with me?" I asked, though a sick feeling was already forming in my stomach.

Blake's eyes met mine, and I saw something there that made my blood run cold—not remorse, not shame, but calculation.

"He wants Aria," Blake said. "But I've found a solution."

His Alpha voice crashed into my mind like a tidal wave, his next words reverberating through my skull with terrifying clarity.

"You will take Aria's place tonight."

The world tilted beneath my feet as I understood what he was asking—what he was commanding. My mate, the man chosen for me by the Moon Goddess herself, was ordering me to sacrifice myself to protect the woman he truly wanted.

Lyra howled within me, a sound of pure anguish that never reached my lips as Blake's Alpha command crushed my resistance into dust.

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