The forest had gone still. Even the wind seemed to hold its breath.
Kael and Riven stood on opposite ends of the clearing-two predators locked in silence.
Luna could feel it, the pull between them, like gravity fighting itself. The air shimmered faintly, charged with the remnants of something ancient and dangerous.
Her voice broke the silence.
"Tell me the truth. Both of you."
Kael's jaw tensed. Riven's eyes gleamed with dark amusement.
Kael spoke first, his tone sharp. "You shouldn't have come here, Luna."
"Too late," she said, stepping between them. "You both keep talking about curses and bonds-then tell me what really happened."
Riven smirked. "He won't, because it makes him the villain in this story."
Kael's eyes flashed gold. "Don't push me, Riven."
"I think I already did," Riven murmured.
Lightning cracked in the distance. The scent of ozone filled the air.
"Enough!" Luna snapped. "I don't care about your feud. I just want to know who I am."
The mark on her wrist pulsed again-once, twice-then flared bright gold, forcing both men to look at her. The energy hummed in her veins, alive and angry.
Kael's gaze softened. "You were everything, Luna. My Luna. Until he-"
Riven cut him off. "Until she chose me first."
The words landed like a strike.
Kael's breath hitched. "That's not how it happened."
"Then tell her," Riven taunted.
Kael's eyes met hers. "You were part of my pack. We trained together, fought side by side. You were strong, reckless, alive. I loved that about you." He hesitated. "But he wanted you too."
"I didn't want her," Riven said, his voice low. "I needed her. You both did. That's why the Moon chose her to bear the dual mark."
"The what?" Luna asked.
Riven's expression softened just a fraction. "The mark of two Alphas. A balance the Moon rarely allows."
"She couldn't survive it," Kael said bitterly. "The bond tore her apart."
Luna's chest ached. "So you fought over me?"
"Not for you," Riven said. "For what you represented. Power. Unity. The chance to merge two packs that had been at war for generations."
Kael's voice turned cold. "And she paid the price for our ambition."
Her knees weakened. "I died?"
Kael caught her before she fell. "Almost. You stopped breathing under that moon. When the bond broke, your memories went with it."
Riven's eyes flickered with something almost like regret. "I tried to save you. He thought I cursed you."
"You didn't deny it," Kael growled.
"Would you have listened if I did?"
Luna looked between them-two men bound by blood and guilt, both telling fragments of a shattered truth.
"So which one of you is lying?" she whispered.
Kael's hand cupped her cheek. "I would never hurt you."
Riven's voice came from behind her, soft but certain. "He already did."
Thunder split the sky. The mark on her wrist burned brighter, as if responding to both voices, both hearts.
Her head spun. She tore herself free and stumbled back. "I need to think."
Kael reached for her. "Luna-"
But she was already running, the forest swallowing her whole.
Behind her, she heard Riven's low voice. "She'll remember everything soon. And when she does..."
He glanced at his brother.
"...let's see which of us she chooses."
Rain began to fall again-soft at first, then relentless.
Luna didn't stop running until her legs gave out. She collapsed beside an old stone ruin at the forest's edge, chest heaving, clothes soaked through.
She pressed her back against the wall and closed her eyes. Breathe. Just breathe.
But her pulse wouldn't slow. The mark on her wrist glowed faintly through the rain, pulsing like a heartbeat that wasn't hers.
Then-like glass breaking inside her mind-the memories began to return.
Flashes.
A full moon over the same forest.
Kael, bare-chested, kneeling before her. "If we complete the bond, our packs will never fight again."
Riven standing behind him, jaw tight. "This isn't what she wants."
"I can choose for myself," she'd said.
Kael had looked at her then, eyes full of fire. "Choose me."
But when she looked at Riven, she saw something different. Not power-peace. "We could stop this war," he'd whispered. "If we stand together, not as mates, but as equals."
And that's when the Moon had appeared-its light so bright it burned.
Two Alphas. One Luna.
A bond forged in unity, then broken by jealousy.
The pain returned with it-the moment everything went wrong. Kael, blinded by rage, had attacked his brother. Luna had tried to stop him. The Moon had punished them all.
Her body had failed first.
Her last memory was Kael holding her lifeless form and Riven's voice breaking as he begged the Moon to bring her back.
Then-nothing.
Luna gasped, gripping her chest as tears mixed with rain.
That's what happened.
She'd loved them both, but not the same way.
Kael had been her fire.
Riven, her calm.
Together, they'd broken something sacred.
The wind shifted. She felt him before she saw him.
"Luna."
Kael stood a few feet away, drenched, his expression unreadable. "I felt the bond stir. You remember."
She nodded slowly. "All of it."
He took a hesitant step forward. "Then you know why I did what I did."
Her voice trembled. "You killed the bond."
"I had to." His eyes burned with pain. "The Moon chose you for both of us, but I couldn't share you. I wasn't built for that. I tried to break the connection before it destroyed you."
"And it did," she whispered. "I died, Kael."
His voice broke. "And I've been dying every day since."
The confession hit her like a wave. He looked wrecked-haunted by his own choices, by the love that had consumed them all.
"I can't undo the past," he said. "But I can protect you now. From Riven. From the Moon. From anything that wants to claim you again."
Luna stepped closer, so close she could feel his breath. "And if I don't want protection?"
His eyes darkened. "Then tell me what you want."
She hesitated. Her pulse stuttered. Every instinct screamed don't, but her heart whispered stay.
Her fingers brushed his chest, right over his heart. "I want the truth. No more lies."
Kael's hands came up slowly, one resting on her waist, the other tangling in her wet hair. "Then I'll give you everything-" he whispered, "-even if it destroys me."
The world narrowed to that moment. The rain, the scent of him, the heat that shouldn't exist between two people bound by so much pain.
But before their lips met, the air shifted again-cold, sharp, wrong.
A voice echoed through the clearing.
"Too late for confessions, brother."
Riven stepped out of the shadows, eyes glowing gold. "The Moon's chosen her again. But this time... she won't survive both of us."
The forest was silver under the full moon. Every leaf seemed to shimmer; every breath hung in the air like a promise.
Luna stood where the trees opened into a circle of light-the same place her life had once ended and begun again.
Kael came first, his footsteps steady, his gaze fixed on her. Riven followed from the shadows, quieter but no less certain.
Neither spoke; the air between them thrummed with everything left unsaid.
Luna's voice broke the silence.
"This isn't the Moon's choice anymore. It's mine."
Kael's chest rose sharply. "Then tell us, Luna. End this."
She looked from one brother to the other. For years they had carried her ghost between them-blame, guilt, and love twisted together. Now she saw them clearly: Kael's strength tempered by sorrow, Riven's calm masking old wounds.
"You both loved me in different ways," she said softly. "But love can't live inside rivalry. It only survives where there's peace."
The mark on her wrist began to glow, warm and bright. She lifted her hand; golden light spread outward, weaving between the three of them like threads of moonlight. The forest held its breath.
Riven stepped forward. "You're breaking the bond."
"I'm setting it free," she whispered.
The light split into two streams-one touching Kael's heart, one brushing Riven's. The glow softened, then faded, leaving only a faint scar on her skin.
When it was over, Kael took a step closer. "You chose freedom."
Luna shook her head, smiling through tears. "I chose truth. And I choose you, Kael-not because destiny demands it, but because my heart is calm when you're near."
For a long moment he just looked at her, as if memorizing the way her eyes caught the moonlight. Then he pulled her into his arms, holding her with a care that said he finally understood what it meant to let go of control.
Behind them, Riven exhaled. "Then I'll do my part. The packs will have peace-this time without blood."
Luna turned to him. "Thank you."
He gave a faint smile. "Thank you for remembering us... and forgiving us."
Then he vanished into the trees, swallowed by silver mist.
Kael and Luna stood together until the first hint of dawn brushed the horizon. The forest no longer felt like a battlefield; it felt like the beginning of something quieter, kinder.
He brushed his thumb over the scar on her wrist. "Does it still hurt?"
She shook her head. "No. It's just a reminder."
"Of what?"
"That even the Moon forgives."
As the sun broke through the clouds, Kael laced his fingers with hers. For the first time in a long while, the bond between them felt like choice, not fate.
The world around them woke to light-and the story that had once been written in pain found its way, at last, to peace.