The morning sun filtered through the trees as I made my way to the forest glade for Damon's monthly check-in. My steps were deliberately slow, my shoulders hunched—the perfect picture of a broken Luna. Inside, Lyra's warmth pulsed steadily, our secret giving me strength even as I crafted my mask of weakness.
I spotted Damon before he saw me. He stood tall among the pack elders, his powerful frame commanding attention. Maeve, the venerable head elder, nodded respectfully as he spoke. The sight of him—the man who had held me as I cried over the loss of my wolf while sharing his bed with the very woman who caused that loss—made bile rise in my throat.
"Breathe," Lyra whispered within me. "Remember the plan."
I forced my features into a practiced expression of fragile hope tinged with resignation as I approached the group.
"Ah, Luna Celeste," Maeve greeted me, her ancient eyes kind but evaluating. "You've joined us. How fortuitous."
Damon turned, and I caught the momentary flash of annoyance that crossed his face before his mask of concern slipped into place. "Celeste, you should have waited at the cabin. I would have come to you after the meeting."
His voice carried the gentle condescension he'd perfected over the past year—the tone one might use with a beloved but burdensome child.
"I needed the air," I replied, making my voice tremble just enough. "The walls... they close in sometimes."
"As you can see," Damon addressed the elders, placing a possessive hand on my shoulder that once would have comforted me but now made my skin crawl, "my mate's condition remains unchanged. The healers report no progress in reconnecting with her wolf."
Maeve's gaze lingered on me. "And how do you feel, Luna? Any... sensations of your wolf?"
For a heartbeat, I wondered if the wise old wolf could somehow sense Lyra's presence. I lowered my eyes, letting my lip quiver. "Sometimes I think I feel something, but... it's just echoes. Memories." I looked up at Damon, infusing my voice with desperation. "I'm beginning to think she's truly gone forever."
The relief in his eyes was unmistakable—a flash so quick anyone else might have missed it. But I was looking for it now. Counting on it.
"We must continue to have faith in the Moon Goddess," he said, squeezing my shoulder. "But it has been a year..."
The implication hung in the air. A year was long enough to hope. Long enough to wait. Long enough to justify moving on.
"The pack needs a functioning Luna," one of the younger elders said, not unkindly.
"Yes," I whispered, playing my part perfectly. "The pack deserves better than what I can offer now."
Damon's hand tightened on my shoulder—not in comfort, but in warning. He didn't want me bringing up rejection. Not yet. Not until he had secured his promotion to Regional Alpha. He needed my territory, my bloodline's standing, until then.
"We should get you back to rest," he said firmly. "Elders, if you'll excuse us."
As he guided me away, I caught Maeve watching us with narrowed eyes. Something told me the old wolf suspected more than she let on.
Back at my cabin, I waited until Damon left before summoning Elara, the senior healer. Her loyalty to my bloodline ran deeper than any allegiance to the current Alpha.
"The treatments are working," I told her once we were alone, letting Lyra's presence shine briefly in my eyes. "But no one can know. Not yet."
Elara's weathered face broke into a smile of pure joy before settling into determined lines. "What do you need of me, true Luna?"
"Continue sending reports of my wolfless state. Let them believe I remain broken."
She nodded, understanding in her eyes. "And the Alpha's... companion?"
"Seraphina Vale," I said, the name bitter on my tongue. "The rogue who led the attack that separated me from Lyra."
"The pack whispers," Elara admitted. "Many are uncomfortable with her presence, but none dare speak against the Alpha."
That night, after Elara left, I slipped into the pack mind-link—a connection I had avoided for a year, ostensibly because it was too painful without my wolf. In truth, I had feared what I might discover.
The voices of the pack flowed around me, unaware of my presence. I filtered through them until I found what I sought.
"Poor Luna," a Beta's voice echoed. "A year without her wolf..."
"The Alpha needs a strong mate," came a Gamma's reply. "Seraphina may be unconventional, but she's fierce. Good for the pack."
"Good for his bed, you mean," another snickered. "Have you seen how she parades around the pack house like she already wears the Luna's crown?"
I withdrew from the link, my hands clenched into fists. The betrayal ran deeper than I had imagined. It wasn't just Damon and my son. The entire pack had accepted this usurper in my place.
"They will regret their disloyalty," Lyra growled within me. "All of them."
I stared out the window at the moon, feeling its power flow through me, strengthening the bond with my returned wolf. "Yes," I whispered. "They will learn what happens when they betray their true Luna."
But first, I needed to understand exactly how far this betrayal reached—and who might still be worthy of salvation when my vengeance was complete.
The forest embraced me as I slipped through the shadows, following Damon's scent through the morning mist. Lyra's presence warmed my chest, our shared secret giving me strength while I maintained my façade of weakness. Three days had passed since I'd discovered the truth, and each hour had only sharpened my resolve.
"He's heading toward your ancestral territory," Lyra observed as we tracked Damon's path through the eastern woods.
"My territory," I corrected silently, bitterness coating the words. "Not our territory. Mine. Passed down through my bloodline long before I ever met him."
I kept a careful distance, my movements silent as I'd learned during my year of solitude. Without the pack's awareness of my recovered abilities, I could move undetected—a ghost observing the living who believed me half-dead.
Damon's powerful frame came into view ahead, standing tall amid a construction site that hadn't existed when I last visited my lands. Workers moved about, carrying materials, while a massive foundation stretched across what had once been a beautiful meadow where I'd played as a child.
"What is he building?" Lyra growled, our shared anger pulsing between us.
I crept closer, ducking behind stacks of lumber as Damon conversed with the site manager. Their voices carried clearly to my enhanced hearing.
"The new wing needs to be completed before the Regional Alpha ceremony," Damon was saying, his tone brooking no argument. "Seraphina wants to host the after-celebration here."
"Here. On my land," I whispered, fingers digging into the rough bark of a fallen log.
The site manager nodded, flipping through a ledger. "We're on schedule, Alpha. The additional funding helped speed things along."
Damon smiled, a self-satisfied expression I once found charming but now saw as smug. "Good. The pack treasury can cover any additional expenses."
I waited until they moved toward the foundation before slipping from my hiding place. The manager had left the ledger on a makeshift table, and I moved swiftly to examine it. Page after page detailed expenses, materials, and—most damning of all—the source of funds: "Luna Territory Investment Account."
My personal account. The one containing profits from investments made with my inheritance, separate from pack funds.
I pulled out my phone and quickly photographed the pages, my hands steady despite the rage building inside me. Not only was Damon housing my attacker in our home, but he was using my own money to build her a palace on my ancestral lands.
"This is theft," Lyra snarled. "Legal theft, but theft nonetheless."
"And theft," I replied silently, "is something even an Alpha can be held accountable for by the pack council."
I slipped away before I could be discovered, my mind racing with possibilities. By the time I reached the edge of the construction site, I spotted what I had suspected—a cluster of small cabins nestled in the trees beyond the main construction. Unfamiliar wolves moved between them, their scents marking them as rogues. Seraphina's followers, given sanctuary on my land without my knowledge or consent.
Back in my recovery cabin, I examined the photographs I'd taken, building my case methodically. When the afternoon sun began its descent, I sent a message to Maeve requesting a private audience. The old wolf had always respected my lineage, even if she deferred to Damon's Alpha status.
She arrived as twilight fell, her ancient eyes sharp with curiosity.
"This is unexpected, Luna Celeste," she said, settling into the chair across from me. "You rarely seek company these days."
I kept my posture slightly hunched, my voice soft—the broken Luna everyone expected. "I've been... reflecting, Elder Maeve. About my role, diminished as it is."
She nodded, sympathy in her gaze. "Even without your wolf, you remain our Luna by bond."
"Yes," I agreed, "and as Luna, certain rights remain mine regardless of my... condition." I hesitated, as if gathering courage. "My ancestral territory, for instance."
Interest flickered in Maeve's eyes. "What about your territory?"
"I believe it may have been... occupied without proper authorization." I kept my tone uncertain, vulnerable. "I wondered if the council might... inspect? As is their right when territory disputes arise?"
Maeve's gaze sharpened. "You speak of a dispute. With whom?"
"I'm not certain," I lied delicately. "But there are... structures being built. Wolves I don't recognize living there."
"Rogues," Maeve said flatly, not a question but a statement.
I lowered my eyes, the perfect picture of helplessness. "I wouldn't know. I just... I may have lost my wolf, but those lands are still mine by birthright. The pack laws are clear."
Maeve stood abruptly. "I will convene the elders tonight. We will inspect at dawn."
As she left, I allowed myself a small, cold smile. The first piece had been moved.
The elders' inspection was swift and decisive. Standing back, I watched as Maeve confronted the rogues, her ancient authority making even these hardened outsiders lower their eyes.
"These lands belong to Luna Celeste by birthright," she declared, her voice carrying across the clearing. "No occupation may occur without her express permission, regardless of her... current state."
The eviction order came immediately. By midday, the Gammas had arrived, their presence leaving no room for argument as they escorted Seraphina's followers from my territory.
I stood at the edge of the trees, watching as the last of them departed. From the distance came a scream of pure rage—Seraphina, no doubt being informed of what had transpired.
"The first blow," Lyra murmured within me.
"A small one," I replied silently. "But enough to create the first crack in their perfect little world."
As I turned to leave, I caught sight of Damon racing toward the construction site, his face twisted with fury. Our eyes met briefly across the distance, and for the first time in a year, I didn't look away first.
Let him wonder what strength remained in his broken Luna. Let him begin to fear what else she might remember about pack law.