After that night, I became David’s so-called “mystery Luna.”
Everyone in the Blazetooth Pack knew their Alpha had a Luna—
but no one knew it was me.
And of course, no one knew about our pup either.
David never allowed us to be seen together in public.
I stared at the bond-breaking papers in my hand.
Five years of silence. Five years of pretending to be invisible.
It was time to end this.
At the Pack Hall, the clerk gave me a sympathetic look.
“Vivian, once you renounce your pack ties, you can’t come back for five years. Are you sure?”
I forced a smile, though my voice trembled.
“I’m sure. I’ll take my pup north to be with his father. We’ve been apart long enough.”
He nodded gently. “You’ve been through enough raising him alone.”
As he stamped the form, I overheard two female wolves whisper behind the counter.
“I thought she didn’t have a mate… So the pup wasn’t illegitimate after all?”
The words hit like claws to my chest.
I froze, then lowered my gaze and sighed.
For years, everyone assumed I was just a single mother, abandoned and unwanted.
They weren’t entirely wrong.
When I turned to leave, I collided with someone—
and my papers went scattering across the floor.
Before I could bend down, a familiar voice echoed.
Laughter.
Warm, deep laughter I hadn’t heard in years.
I looked up—and my breath caught.
David Hayes stood there with Sophia Sinclair.
Their hands brushed as they walked in, smiling like no one else existed.
For a brief second, his gaze flickered toward me—cold, sharp, fleeting.
“David…” The name slipped out before I could stop it.
He froze. Then his jaw tightened, and he looked away.
Of course he did.
He was the Alpha. I was the secret he wished had never existed.
“So that’s the Alpha’s Luna…”
“No wonder he hid her—she’s gorgeous.”
“Still, Sophia suits him better…”
The whispers behind me sliced through the air.
I bit my lip until I tasted blood, forcing back the tears.
I bent to gather my papers, refusing to look up again.
He could laugh with Sophia all he wanted.
Once I was gone, he could mark her and make her the Luna he always wanted.
He didn’t even ask why I was there.
His eyes never once left Sophia.
It didn’t matter.
In three days, I’d be gone from this world.
Whether he loved me or not no longer mattered.
Outside the hall, my phone buzzed.
“Mom,” Joseph’s voice chirped. “You said you’d be at the hall. I just got out early—I’m nearby!”
“Alright, sweetheart. Wait for me.”
I turned the corner—and froze.
Joseph stood in the courtyard, his little backpack slipping from one shoulder,
eyes fixed ahead.
Following his gaze, I saw them.
David and Sophia, laughing together as he fed her ice cream from his hand.
They looked… perfect.
A picture the pack would adore.
Joseph’s eyes filled with tears.
Then David looked up and saw him.
For one fragile moment, Joseph’s face lit up—
but David’s expression hardened instantly.
He turned away.
Wrapped his arm around Sophia and walked off.
Joseph’s tiny shoulders stiffened. His ball rolled to the ground,
and he just stood there, shaking, tears spilling silently down his cheeks.
I rushed to him, gathering him into my arms.
“Sweetheart…”
He looked up at me, voice trembling but steady.
“Mom, tomorrow’s my sports day. Can David come?”
I froze. My throat closed up.
He smiled faintly, as if he already knew the answer.
“It’s okay, Mom. I was just asking. He’s never had time for us anyway.”
His words cut deeper than any blade.
I held him tighter, burying my face in his hair.
And for the first time, I realized—
my son had already stopped expecting love from his father.
Joseph tried to act fine, but I saw his little shoulders trembling as he walked faster, his hand secretly wiping away tears.
He was only five… and yet he had to learn what rejection felt like from his own father.
Just as my chest tightened, my phone rang.
It was David.
I answered instantly, barely breathing.
He spoke only two words. “I’ll be there.”
Then the line went dead.
I froze for a second, then shouted after Joseph, my heart bursting with relief.
“Joseph! Dad says he’s coming to your sports day tomorrow!”
He turned, his eyes widening in disbelief before his whole face lit up.
“Really? Dad’s coming? I knew it! I knew Dad wouldn’t break his promise this time!”
The rest of the day, he wouldn’t stop talking.
He held my hand the entire way home, telling me about his games, his friends, his award.
“Mom, if Dad sees me win tomorrow, do you think he’ll like me more? Maybe he’ll tell everyone I’m his pup!”
My chest ached as I smiled and hugged him.
“He will, baby. You’re his only pup.”
He grinned so brightly it hurt to look at him.
And for a fleeting second, I wanted to believe it too.
The next morning, Joseph was up before sunrise.
He dressed neatly, hair brushed, and waited by the window.
Every few minutes, he’d peek outside.
Cars came and went.
But not David’s.
Minutes became hours.
The sports day was about to begin.
Then my phone buzzed.
It wasn’t a message from David—but a post from Sophia Sinclair.
She’d uploaded a photo of David sitting beside a little boy at a piano, smiling as he guided the boy’s hands over the keys.
Her caption read:
“What’s it like to have an Alpha for a dad?”
My hand went numb around the phone.
When I turned, Joseph was still staring out the window.
Our eyes met through the glass.
He already knew.
He turned slowly, his voice quiet but far too mature for his age.
“Mom… Dad’s not coming, is he?”
I forced a smile, walked over, and hugged him tight.
“Don’t worry, sweetheart. Mom’s here. I’ll go with you.”
He nodded wordlessly, slipping his small hand into mine.
We walked to the school in silence, each step heavy with everything unspoken.
No one mentioned David again.
Maybe that was for the best.
But in my heart, something had already broken beyond repair.
Just as we reached the school gate, Joseph froze.
His eyes lit up. “Dad!”
I followed his gaze.
David stood by the entrance, tall and perfect as ever, looking like the Alpha everyone admired.
“Dad!” Joseph ran toward him, laughter spilling out as he wrapped his arms around David’s waist.
But instead of hugging him back, David stiffened.
He peeled Joseph’s hands off and asked coldly,
“What are you doing here?”
Joseph blinked, confused. “Dad… you promised—”
David’s voice was like a whip.
“Who’s your dad?”
The light in Joseph’s eyes shattered. He stepped back and whispered, “Sorry, sir. I must’ve mistaken you for someone else.”
I bit down on my trembling lip, watching my son’s small hands curl into fists.
Before I could move, another little boy ran up and shoved Joseph.
“Hey! He’s my dad! Back off!”
Joseph turned pale. “You’re lying! He’s my… my uncle.”
The boy pointed at Joseph smugly. “He’s not your uncle! He’s my dad! I’m going to be his heir one day!”
David stepped forward protectively, placing a hand on the boy’s shoulder.
“Lucas is just a child,” he said, tone soft and indulgent—the kind of tone he’d never used with Joseph.
“He doesn’t mean what he says. Don’t make a scene.”
I looked at the two of them—David and the boy from Sophia’s photo—and suddenly it all made sense.
The way David smiled at Lucas, the tenderness in his eyes… it was everything Joseph had ever longed for.
And I finally understood.
David never hated me.
He simply loved someone else—so completely that there was no space left for us.
“Vivian, is that you?”
I turned. Catherine Lavine, the werewolf hospital doctor, hurried over with a worried look.
“You’ve been—”
I cut her off before she could finish. “I’m fine.”
No one could know. Especially not David.
If he found out I was dying, he’d think I was faking it just to gain his pity—and that would make him hate me even more.
I forced a small smile. “I’m just here to watch Joseph’s sports day.”
Catherine’s gaze softened. “Is your mate not here again?”
The question sliced through me like a blade.
I tightened my grip on Joseph’s hand. “He’s been away for years. Too busy to care about us.”
Out of the corner of my eye, I saw David turn—his face flickering with surprise.
For once, there was guilt in his eyes.
He didn’t expect me to defend him.
He thought I’d use the truth to humiliate him in front of everyone, but instead, I spared him.
Maybe for the first time, he saw the damage he’d done.
Joseph squeezed my hand gently. “It’s okay, Mom. Even if Dad isn’t here, your love is enough.”
His voice was small, too calm for a boy his age.
David looked at him with faint approval, mistaking his quiet sadness for maturity.
He didn’t realize that a five-year-old had finally stopped hoping.
When Joseph’s name was announced as the first-place winner, everyone clapped.
The teacher smiled. “Joseph, come up to the stage! Your father will present your medal.”
The smile froze on my face.
Every eye in the crowd turned, searching for the Alpha—the father who had never once claimed his pup.
I looked toward the stands.
David was sitting right there, beside Sophia, helping her fix Lucas’s collar.
The perfect family in the perfect light.
Joseph’s small fingers dug into mine. “Mom… can I skip the award?”
My throat ached. I nodded. “Of course, baby.”
When the ceremony ended, we slipped out quietly.
But near the gates, David was there—pacing, cigarette in one hand, a melting ice cream in the other.
He looked almost nervous.
When he saw us, he smiled awkwardly. “You’d better eat this before it melts.”
He patted Joseph’s head, like that single gesture could erase everything.
Joseph hesitated, then took it politely. The corners of his lips twitched up, but his eyes stayed empty.
David turned to me. “Vivian… Lucas wants to join the junior hunting competition, but he needs a qualifying score. Joseph already won first place—he’s not entering the next round, right? Maybe we can let Lucas take his spot.”
For a heartbeat, everything went silent.
Then the ice cream slipped from Joseph’s hand and hit the ground, splattering between his shoes.
He stared at David, his voice soft but steady.
“If Lucas wants it, he can have it. I won’t need it.”
The way he said it—so quiet, so final—made my chest burn.
But David didn’t seem to hear the breaking sound inside his own pup.
Before he could respond, his phone rang. Sophia.
“David, Lucas has a fever—come quickly.”
He didn’t even look at us. “Stay here. I’ll handle it.”
Then he turned and walked away.
As his car started, Joseph called out, voice trembling,
“Goodbye, Dad!”
David froze. His hand hovered on the steering wheel.
For a moment, I thought he’d come back.
But then he drove off, leaving us in the dust.
That night, Joseph didn’t cry.
He just sat quietly while I packed.
“Mom,” he said softly, “can we go somewhere where nobody calls me ‘Alpha’s mistake’?”
My heart shattered.
“Yes, baby. Somewhere far away.”
We left before dawn. No goodbyes. No messages.
Just silence.
But on the plane, I sent David one final text:
This is the end. From now on, you’ll never see us again.
By the time the sun rose over Blazetooth Pack, Joseph and I were already miles away.
And for the first time in five years, the bond between us and the Alpha began to die.gan to die.