The scent of jasmine and vanilla filled the Luna's quarters as I pushed open the heavy oak door. My fingers trembled slightly against the polished wood, my heart racing with anticipation. Tonight was supposed to be the beginning of everything—my mate ceremony with Bennett, where I would officially become Luna of the Moonstone Pack.
I had spent hours preparing for this moment. The silver gown I wore shimmered in the candlelight, specially designed to complement the ceremonial markings that would soon adorn my skin. Five years of devotion, of loving Bennett from afar and then by his side, had led to this night.
"I just need to check if everything is ready," I whispered to myself, stepping into the room that would soon be mine to share with my mate.
The scent hit me first—something primal and intimate that made my wolf stir uneasily within me. It wasn't just Bennett's familiar pine and smoke scent that filled the air.
"Alpha?" I called softly, my voice echoing in the spacious chamber.
No answer came, but I heard a soft laugh from beyond the silk curtains that draped the ceremonial bed. A woman's laugh.
My steps faltered as I moved closer, my wolf suddenly alert and growling low in my mind. *Something's wrong*, she warned.
I pulled back the curtain and froze.
Bennett—my Bennett, the Alpha of the Moonstone Pack, my marked mate—had Robin pressed against the wall beside our ceremonial bed. His lips were on her neck, hands tangled in her hair as she arched against him. Her eyes met mine over his shoulder, and instead of shock or shame, I saw triumph flash across her face.
"Lily," Bennett said, pulling away from Robin but making no move to step apart from her. His voice held none of the passion I'd just witnessed, only surprise and something that looked disturbingly like guilt.
"What is this?" My voice came out steadier than I felt, though my wolf was howling in agony inside me.
Robin's lips curved into a smile that never reached her eyes. "Oh, Lily. I was just telling Bennett how beautiful everything looks for the ceremony."
I stared at them both, the room spinning slightly around me. "The ceremony that's supposed to be mine? With my mate?"
Bennett at least had the decency to look uncomfortable. He ran a hand through his dark hair, his Alpha aura pulsing uncertainly around him. "Lily, I need to explain something."
"Explain what? That you're betraying me on the night of our mate ceremony?" My voice cracked, betraying the pain I was desperately trying to contain.
"It's not like that," Bennett said, stepping toward me. "It's complicated. Robin is—"
"My true mate," Robin finished for him, sliding her arm possessively through his. "We discovered it after you were already marked, but the Moon Goddess made her choice clear."
I felt the floor drop from beneath me. "What?"
"The marking was a mistake," Bennett said, his Alpha tone gentler than I'd ever heard it. "I didn't know then what I know now. Robin is my true mate, Lily. The Goddess showed me."
Robin's eyes gleamed with false sympathy. "Oh, Lily, I know this is hard. But surely you understand that Bennett and I are meant to be together. You should step aside gracefully. It's what's best for the pack."
The room seemed to close in around me as footsteps thundered down the hallway. The door burst open, revealing my parents—Marcus and Elena Stephens, both pack elders and Betas.
"What's happening here?" my father demanded, his Beta aura flaring as he took in the scene.
Before I could speak, Robin stepped forward, tears suddenly streaming down her face in a perfect display of distress. "Lily is upset about the ceremony. She won't accept that Bennett and I are true mates."
My mother's eyes narrowed at me. "*Lily, what are you doing?* Her voice echoed in my mind through our pack bond. "*Stop this nonsense immediately.*"
My father's face hardened as he looked between us. "Is this true, Lily? Are you disrupting pack harmony over this?"
"Bennett was with Robin," I said, my voice barely above a whisper. "In our ceremonial chamber."
"And? They are true mates," my father said coldly. "You were marked, not mated. There's a difference."
I stared at him in disbelief, then at my mother, who wouldn't meet my eyes. "You knew?"
"We suspected," my mother admitted through our mind-link. "*You must accept this, Lily. For the pack's sake.*"
My father stepped forward, his Beta aura pressing down on me like a physical weight. "Enough of this. You will accept the situation and cause no further disruption. That is an order from your Beta."
The pain of his command hit me like a physical blow, forcing me to my knees as tears streamed down my face. In that moment, I realized I had lost not just my mate, but my entire family to Robin's schemes.
And somewhere deep inside me, something began to break—not just my heart, but the sacred bond that had tied me to this pack for my entire life.
The morning light filtered through the small window of the pack healer's cottage, casting long shadows across the wooden floor. I sat on the edge of a worn leather chair, my hands trembling slightly as I waited for Mara, our elderly healer, to return with her assessment. The scent of dried herbs and healing salves hung heavy in the air, doing little to calm my frayed nerves.
"Lily," Mara's weathered voice called from the back room. "Come here, child."
I followed her voice to a small examination room, where she gestured for me to lie down on a narrow cot. Her eyes, still sharp despite her advanced age, studied my face carefully.
"When was your last cycle?" she asked, her tone gentle but clinical.
I thought for a moment, counting back the weeks. "I... I'm not sure. Things have been so chaotic since..."
Since I found my mate with my sister. Since my world collapsed.
Mara nodded, understanding in her eyes as she placed her gnarled hands on my abdomen. Her healing energy flowed through me, warm and probing. After a moment, her expression shifted from professional detachment to something softer.
"Lily," she said quietly, "you're carrying a pup. About six weeks along."
The words hit me like a physical blow. A pup. Bennett's pup. The heir to the Moonstone Pack.
"Are you certain?" I whispered, my hand instinctively moving to my still-flat stomach.
Mara nodded. "The energy is strong. It's an Alpha pup."
An Alpha pup. The future leader of our pack. A child that should have been born to the Luna—to me.
My wolf stirred within me, protective and fierce. *Our pup*, she growled. *Ours*.
I left the healer's cottage in a daze, my mind racing with implications. By pack law, carrying the Alpha's heir should secure my position. It should make me untouchable.
But I knew better. Robin would find a way to twist this, too.
---
"Lily! *Lily, answer me!*"
My mother's voice crashed through my mind-link, sharp and insistent. I had barely made it back to my small room in the pack house when her presence invaded my thoughts.
"*You're being selfish,*" Elena continued, her mental voice dripping with disapproval. "*Do you have any idea what you're doing to this family? To the pack?*"
I pressed my palms against my temples, trying to block her out, but as a pack elder, her mental reach was too strong.
"*You must accept this situation,*" she pressed. "*For everyone's sake. Robin is Bennett's true mate. You were just... marked. There's a difference.*"
"And what about my pup?" I countered aloud, though I knew she could hear my thoughts just as clearly.
Silence, then: "*A pup changes nothing. You can still be part of the pack. Perhaps as a secondary mate.*"
The suggestion made my stomach turn. A secondary mate—a glorified mistress, expected to raise my child in the shadow of Robin's Luna status.
"*Think about what you're throwing away,*" my mother continued. "*Your family, your home, your pack—all because of your pride.*"
Her words pounded against my consciousness like a drumbeat. Shame. Family duty. Pack loyalty.
"*You're bringing shame to the Stephens name,*" she hissed.
I curled into myself, one hand protectively covering my abdomen. "Stop," I whispered. "Please stop."
But Elena wasn't finished. Her mental assault continued for what felt like hours, a relentless barrage of guilt and manipulation.
---
I was still reeling from my mother's attack when a knock came at my door. Bennett's familiar scent—pine and smoke—seeped through the cracks before he even entered.
"Lily," he said, closing the door behind him. His Alpha aura filled the small space, making it hard to breathe. "We need to talk."
"I have nothing to say to you," I replied, keeping my distance.
He ran a hand through his dark hair—a gesture I once found endearing. Now it just seemed calculated.
"I know this is difficult," he began, his voice taking on that persuasive tone he used when addressing the pack. "But I think I've found a solution that works for everyone."
I raised an eyebrow, waiting.
"You're my marked mate," he said. "That bond is real, even if Robin is my true mate. We could make this work. You could stay as my marked mate, and Robin would be Luna."
The audacity of his proposal left me momentarily speechless.
"And my child?" I finally asked, my voice dangerously quiet.
Bennett's eyes widened slightly—news of my pregnancy had spread quickly, it seemed. "Your pup would be raised as heir, of course. Robin and I would ensure—"
"No," I cut him off, straightening my spine and meeting his gaze directly. "No, Bennett."
His expression hardened. "Lily, be reasonable. This is the best outcome for everyone."
"For everyone except me," I replied, my voice steady despite the storm raging inside me. "I will not be your second choice. I will not raise my child in the shadow of your betrayal."
For the first time since I'd known him, Bennett Hart looked truly afraid.
The ancient leather-bound tome felt heavy in my hands as I carefully turned its brittle pages. Dust particles danced in the dim light filtering through the small basement window of the pack library—a place few ventured, especially not to the restricted section where I now stood.
"Rejection of Sacred Bonds: Rituals and Consequences," read the faded title of the text I'd finally located after hours of searching.
My fingers trembled slightly as I read the warning inscribed on the first page: "The rejection of a mate bond is not to be undertaken lightly. The pain is said to exceed that of any mortal suffering. Many who attempt it do not survive."
I swallowed hard but continued reading, my resolve hardening with each word. The ritual was ancient, rarely performed, and for good reason. To reject a mate bond was to tear apart what the Moon Goddess herself had joined. The consequences were severe—physical agony, emotional devastation, and a permanent scar on one's wolf spirit.
But I had made my decision.
*We deserve better than this*, my wolf growled within me. *We deserve freedom*.
"I know," I whispered, stroking my still-flat abdomen. "For both of us."
The ritual required specific ingredients and timing—moonstone dust, wolfsbane, my blood mixed with Bennett's, and most importantly, the full moon. Three days from now.
I carefully copied the instructions onto a piece of parchment, tucking it into my pocket. As I replaced the book on its shelf, I noticed Mara, our elderly healer, watching me from the shadows.
"Lily," she said softly, her weathered face creased with concern. "What you're considering is dangerous. The pain could harm your pup."
I straightened my spine, meeting her gaze. "I understand the risks, Mara. But staying would harm us both in different ways."
She sighed, her eyes filled with a sadness that spoke of experience. "I can't stop you. But know this—the rejection will change you forever. Your wolf will never be the same."
"I'm counting on it," I replied, my voice steadier than I felt.
---
"I'm telling you, she's completely unhinged," Robin's voice carried across the pack house common room as I entered. She was surrounded by a small group of female pack members, her face a perfect mask of concern. "The jealousy has driven her to madness."
I froze, just out of sight, listening.
"Poor thing," one of the women murmured. "To be so close to becoming Luna and then..."
"It's not just that," Robin continued, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper that nevertheless carried to my ears. "She's claiming to be pregnant with Bennett's heir."
A shocked silence fell over the group.
"That's impossible," someone finally said. "If she was pregnant, the Alpha would have announced it."
Robin's laugh was brittle. "Exactly my point. She's making it up to try to hold onto Bennett. The rejection of a mate bond is painful enough without adding delusions."
I felt my blood boil but forced myself to remain hidden. Robin was clever—she knew exactly how to plant seeds of doubt about my mental state and my pregnancy.
"Such a shame," another voice added. "I always thought she'd make a good Luna."
"She would have," Robin agreed, her tone falsely sympathetic. "But the Moon Goddess has made her choice clear. Bennett and I are true mates."
---
By evening, the whispers had spread throughout the pack like wildfire. I felt eyes following me everywhere I went, some sympathetic, others suspicious.
Thomas Reed, one of Bennett's most loyal warriors, approached me as I walked through the gardens.
"Lily," he said quietly, glancing around to ensure we weren't overheard. "Is it true? About the pup?"
I met his gaze steadily. "Yes."
He nodded, his expression solemn. "I've served this pack for fifteen years. I've seen many things, but what's happening now..."
He didn't finish his sentence, but he didn't need to. The pack was dividing before our eyes.
Later, as I passed the training grounds, I overheard two young Delta wolves arguing.
"The Alpha should never have marked her if Robin was his true mate," one said.
"But Lily has always been loyal to the pack," the other countered. "And now she's carrying the heir..."
Their voices dropped as they noticed me, but the damage was done. The pack that had once been united was now fractured, with loyalty and sympathy split between Bennett and Robin's "true mate" narrative and my own quiet dignity.
As night fell, I stood at my window, watching the moon rise over the forest beyond the pack territory. In three days, under its full light, I would either find freedom or face an agony beyond imagining.
But as I placed my hand over my abdomen, feeling the tiny spark of life within me, I knew there was no other choice.
"Whatever happens," I whispered to my unborn child, "we face it together."