LOGIN
MOONLIGHT REBORN
Chapter One
Nova POV
I knew I was dying.
Not slowly. Not dramatically. Just — factually. The way you know a fruit has gone bad before you touch it. My body had been broadcasting it for weeks, in the language of failing organs and numbers on charts that the doctors stopped showing me directly.
Twenty-two days in this bed.
The room smelled like bleach and recycled air. The monitor beside me kept its bored, mechanical rhythm. Beep. Beep. Beep. The sound of a machine that hadn't given up yet, even if everything else had.
Caden had visited once.
I kept returning to that number like pressing a bruise. Once. In twenty-two days. His excuse was always the pack — council meetings, territory disputes, a hundred responsibilities that only he could handle. I had swallowed every one of those excuses because that was the pattern I'd built my life around. Caden spoke, I believed. It had been that simple for six years.
But I was running out of days, and I wanted to hear his voice.
That was all I wanted. I wasn't even asking him to come. Just — his voice. Something to hold onto.
I picked up my phone. My fingers had thinned so much the edges of the case felt sharp. The screen took two tries to recognize my touch.
I called him.
Four rings.
Then a woman answered.
My hand stopped moving against the pillow.
I knew that voice immediately. Soft and deliberate, the kind of voice that performs warmth without feeling it. Sable. The Beta's daughter. She'd existed in the background of my life for years — at pack dinners, at ceremonies, always positioned slightly too close to Caden, always laughing at exactly the right moment. I had told myself it was nothing. I had worked very hard at telling myself that.
"Hello?" she said again.
She knew it was me. I could hear it in the half-second pause before the word.
I opened my mouth to ask for Caden.
I never got there.
Because then I heard him.
His voice came through the speaker loose and unhurried — the voice of a man with nowhere to be, nothing pressing, completely at ease. And what he said landed in the center of my chest like a fist.
"Sable." Low. Satisfied. The way he said her name wasn't how you say someone's name. It was how you say a word you've been saying for years in private, a word that belongs to you. "You were so good, baby."
I didn't move.
"God, I'm tired." A long exhale. The sound of sheets shifting. "Tired of Korella. She needs to just die already. We got everything we needed from her anyway."
Silence.
Then Sable laughed. Not a cruel laugh — which somehow made it worse. Just a comfortable laugh. The laugh of someone sharing a private joke with a person they've been comfortable with for a very long time.
Caden laughed too.
That was the sound that did it. Not the words — though the words had already carved through me with surgical precision. It was the laugh. Easy, warm, intimate. The laugh of two people lying in the dark with nothing to hide from each other.
I was the thing they had nothing to hide from.
My name in his mouth — Nova thethe name he'd given me, the name I'd answered to for six years — had just been used the way you'd reference an inconvenient piece of furniture you were done with.
She should just die already.
I ended the call.
My phone buzzed.
A message from Sable's number. No words. Just a video file, seven minutes long, the thumbnail a single blurred frame that told me exactly what it was before I pressed play.
I pressed play.
The footage was clear. Well-lit. Shot from an angle that suggested it hadn't been accidental.
Caden's voice. Sable's face. His hands in her hair.
The location — I recognized it in the first three seconds. The grey headboard. The dark curtain with the silver trim. The small lamp on the left side of the nightstand.
Our bedroom.
The monitor beside me detonated into noise.
I felt my chest close like a door being slammed — not grief, or not only grief — but the total structural collapse of six years of decisions. Every sacrifice arranged itself in front of me in a single instant: the sleepless nights in the lab, the burns on my hands from failed trials, the meals I'd eaten alone, the invitations I'd declined because Caden didn't like me socializing with people he hadn't approved. Every piece of my life that I had quietly, willingly handed over.
For him.
For this.
Nurses came through the door at a run. Hands on my shoulders. An oxygen mask pressing hard against my face. Someone shouting my name — Korella, stay with us, Korella — and the specific, terrible sound of a crash cart being wheeled fast across linoleum.
I heard all of it from a very long distance.
I let go.
Dying isn't what you expect.
There's no peace to it. No warmth, no dissolving. It's just — erasure. And then you're on the ceiling, looking down at your own body, and the strangest part isn't the distance. It's how small you look. How ordinary. How easily the room keeps functioning without you in it.
The resuscitation took eleven minutes.
I watched every second.
I watched the doctor pull off his gloves with two sharp snaps and check the clock — 11:47 — and I watched his face do the small, private recalibration that faces do when they're shifting from emergency to aftermath. I watched the nurses slow down. I watched the energy leave the room like air leaving a punctured tire.
Someone called Caden.
He didn't come.
The second call, whoever was on Caden's end said he'd been informed and would make arrangements. The nurse who took the call stood at the window for a moment after hanging up, looking at nothing. Then she wrote something on her clipboard and moved on.
I don't know what held me here. Rage, maybe. Or something older than rage — the specific refusal of a person who has been told, repeatedly, by everyone and everything around them, that they don't matter. Maybe the part of me that was done being told that.
My soul — and I'm using that word because I have no better one — drifted.
I found myself over Silver Moon Pack, watching from above, unable to turn away.
Three days.
In three days, Caden stood before the full Werewolf Council with a silver-poison antidote in his hands. My antidote. Built from three years of my labor — my research notes, my failed compounds, my hands torn up from a hundred iterations, my eyes wrecked from reading under bad light at two in the morning.
He presented it like it had always been his.
The Council approved him without hesitation. Alpha of Silver Moon, effective immediately.
The ceremony was the kind of thing I used to imagine for us. Lights in the oak trees. A bonfire that smelled like pine and woodsmoke. The whole pack gathered in the clearing, faces lit gold by the fire.
Caden marked Sable in the middle of all of it.
He bit the curve of her neck deliberately, publicly, while the pack roared — and she tilted her head back with her eyes closed like a woman stepping into sunlight she'd been waiting for her entire life.
Then the boy came running.
Rylan. Five years old. The dark hair, the gap-toothed smile. He crossed the clearing in his small formal jacket and crashed into Sable's legs, and she lifted him without even looking, the way you lift a child you've been lifting since the very beginning.
"Mama," he said into her shoulder.
She held him like he was hers.
Because he was.
He had always been.
I had held that child through fevers. Read to him every night. Taught him to identify every herb in my garden by smell. Kept every drawing he'd ever made in a folder in my desk drawer. I had loved him with the specific, consuming love of a woman who had nothing else that was entirely hers — and the entire time, the entire architecture of that love had been constructed on a lie Caden had built and maintained and laughed about in bed with the woman he actually wanted.
Surrogate. That was the word that finally surfaced, cold and exact. I had been a surrogate. For his heir. For his respectability. For a medical breakthrough he couldn't produce on his own. For the appearance of a stable, functional Alpha while he kept his real life tucked quietly out of sight.
I felt the rage move through whatever I was now — not hot, but cold. Clarifying. The specific cold of a person who has finally, completely, stopped being confused.
He used everything.
He will not keep any of it.
I was still burning with that promise when something below caught my attention.
A convoy pulled up to the hospital. Vehicles I didn't recognize — black, unmarked, military in their precision. The men who stepped out were soldiers. Organized, silent, moving with the economy of people who have done this before. Their uniforms bore a crest I'd never seen: a silver crescent on black ground.
They went inside.
They came back out carrying my body.
Not dragging. Not the casual handling of something disposed of. They carried me carefully. Like there was still something worth protecting. Like whatever I was, wherever I'd come from, it mattered to someone I didn't yet know.
Who are you?
I strained toward them, trying to see the crest more clearly, trying to read something in their faces —
The darkness took me before I could.
End of Chapter One
Chapter Twenty-Three — ManhuntNova's POVDominic insisted on leading the search himself, despite ribs that Ansel had explicitly told him needed another week before any real exertion, and I'd learned by now that arguing with him about his own recovery was a battle I lost every time."I can direct a perimeter sweep from a chair if I have to," he said, already pulling on his jacket in the med wing that morning, wincing only slightly when the movement pulled at his shoulder. "But I'm not sitting in a bed while whoever's inside these walls decides what to do next."We split the search into concentric rings — Reid running the tight interior perimeter, checking every access point Voss's escape route might have used, while Dominic took a mixed team of Ashwood and Moonlight warriors out along the wider territory boundary, working on the theory that whoever had extracted Voss wouldn't keep him anywhere close to the facility they'd just breached.I stayed at the command post most of the day, co
Chapter Twenty-Two — The Two BetasNova's POVFerris ordered Sable's testimony sealed for further Council investigation the moment the chamber settled, which meant, in practice, that I spent the next six hours in a smaller, windowless room with two Council interrogators, Reid, and Sable herself, pulling apart eighteen months of contact one message at a time.She cooperated fully. I believed, watching her across that table, that whatever fear had kept her silent for months had finally been outweighed by a different fear entirely — the fear of going down alone for a scheme she'd never fully controlled."The first message came a little over a year ago," she said, hands folded tight in her lap, restraints removed now that she'd become a cooperating witness rather than merely an accused one. "Anonymous account, no name, just a proposition. Financial support, discreet, in exchange for information about Silver Moon's internal operations. It felt harmless at first. Schedules. Staff assignment
Chapter Twenty-One — Caden in ChainsNova's POVSable ran the same night Caden was taken.She made it as far as Silver Moon's northern border before a routine checkpoint flagged her vehicle — Rylan asleep in the back seat, a single suitcase in the trunk, a story about visiting a sick relative that fell apart the moment the guard asked which relative and she couldn't produce a name fast enough. They held her overnight and transferred her to the Council waystation by morning, and by the time I arrived for the formal hearing, both she and Caden sat at the respondent's table in restraints that neither of them had worn the last time I'd seen them in this chamber.Caden looked smaller than I remembered. Not physically — the same broad shoulders, the same carefully maintained composure he'd clearly tried to reassemble overnight — but smaller in the way a person gets when every prop that used to hold them upright has been taken away one at a time. No pack authority left. No political rehabili
Chapter Twenty — Formal BetrothalNova's POVReid was the one who suggested it, three days after the toxicology results, standing in the war room we'd effectively converted the old senior staff hall into."We need a show of strength," he said. "Harlan's still walking free because we don't have enough yet to move on him formally, and every day he's free is a day he's rebuilding whatever story protects him. Blood Fang is watching, actively, and every crisis this pack absorbs without visibly cracking is a message to whoever's behind Harlan that this bloodline isn't as vulnerable as they're hoping.""You want a wedding," I said, "in the middle of a poisoning investigation.""I want a betrothal ceremony," Reid corrected. "Public. Formal. Ashwood and Moonlight standing together, witnessed by both packs' full Councils, announced with enough ceremony that nobody watching can mistake it for anything other than two houses of power consolidating rather than fracturing." He looked at me steadily.
Chapter Nineteen — The Symptom MatchNova's POVI hit my father's room at a dead run and stopped hard in the doorway, because for one terrible half-second the scene in front of me was exactly the scene I'd left behind in a different hospital, in a different life — the monitor's alarm cutting through the air in that specific rhythm that means now, not soon, Ansel's hands moving fast and precise, a nurse calling numbers in a voice pitched too controlled to be anything but terrified underneath it.I made myself look past the panic to the details, because panic had never once saved anyone and details had saved me exactly when it mattered.His skin had gone the wrong color — not the grey pallor of simple exhaustion, but a specific yellow-tinged pale I recognized instantly, viscerally, because I'd watched it happen to my own hands in a mirror a year and a lifetime ago. His breathing had the faint, sweetish undertone that silver-poison compounds left in a dying body's exhale, the smell I'd c
Chapter Eighteen — What the Wolf RemembersNova's POVThey got us back to Moonlight's medical wing within the hour, Dominic unconscious the entire drive, his breathing shallow but steady enough that Ansel's second kept nodding, small and clipped, every time I asked. I didn't let go of his hand once. Not through the transfer to the gurney, not through the corridor, not until Ansel himself met us at the door and told me, gently but with the particular firmness of a man who'd learned exactly how to handle me over the past two weeks, that he needed the room.I didn't leave. I scrubbed in instead."This isn't your specialty," Ansel said, not quite an argument, more an observation, as I pulled gloves on beside him."Compound trauma is exactly my specialty," I said. "I've spent three years treating wounds that don't heal the way they should. Let me help, or waste time arguing with me while he bleeds."He let me help.The wound was worse than it had looked on the roadside — the shoulder joint
MOONLIGHT REBORNChapter Five — The FatherNova's POVThe Moonlight facility was three hours north.Reid drove. Two warriors in the vehicle behind us, two ahead. No conversation for the first hour, which I appreciated. I used the time to think through what I knew and what I didn't, which was a habi
MOONLIGHT REBORNChapter FourNova's POVJulie's wolf hit the ground running before her clothes finished tearing.She was fast. I'll give her that. Red Moon bred fighters the way some packs bred politicians — early, hard, with an emphasis on aggression over technique. Her wolf was large for a femal
MOONLIGHT REBORNChapter ThreeNova's POVI sat on the edge of my bed with the door locked and Reid's photo open on my phone.The little girl on a man's shoulders. My face. His laugh.Alpha Conrad of Moonlight. My father. A man who had spent twenty years looking for a daughter he lost in a rogue at
MOONLIGHT REBORNChapter TwoLight hit my eyes like a slap.I sucked in a breath so hard my ribs hurt from it. Real air. Real lungs. Real pain — and pain meant alive, pain meant body, pain meant something had happened that I didn't fully understand yet.I lay still and let my senses come back onlin







