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THE CONTRACTED LUNA SECRET TRIPLETS
THE CONTRACTED LUNA SECRET TRIPLETS
Author: Bella Cruz

Chapter

Author: Bella Cruz
last update publish date: 2026-03-25 04:54:36

Not the sharp sting of a cut. Deeper than that. The kind of burn that settled into bone and stayed there, quiet and cruel, reminding Ava Sterling with every breath that she was not leaving this stage on her own.

The warehouse smelled like motor oil and sweat and alpha dominance — thick, competing scents that pressed against her from every direction. Industrial lights overhead blasted white heat down onto the platform. Thirty feet below, men in expensive suits sat in folding chairs like they were watching a livestock show.

Because they were.

Ava kept her chin up. She wouldn't give them the pleasure of watching it drop.

Her father stood at the edge of the platform in his pack Alpha sash, the golden threads catching the light. He hadn't looked at her once since they chained her wrists. He was looking at the crowd, at their hands, at the numbered bidding paddles lifting one after another as the auctioneer called out figures that climbed like temperature on a fever chart.

"Sixty million."

"Seventy-five."

"Eighty million for the Evergreen omega."

Her father's jaw tightened with satisfaction.

*Payment for the debt.* That's what he'd called her in the car on the way here. Not *daughter.* Not even *Ava.* Just *payment.* One hundred million dollars that Evergreen Pack owed Blackthorn Empire after the border war, and her body was the currency he'd chosen to settle it.

She pressed her knees together. Kept her breathing slow.

*Don't let them see.*

But then the memory hit — the way it always did when she was most desperate to hold herself together.

Four months ago. Seattle. The inter-pack summit.

She'd felt the heat come on without warning, too fast, too savage. She'd barely made it to the corridor outside the conference hall before it swallowed her whole. A hand had closed around her wrist in the dark — large, sure, pulling her out of the foot traffic and into a hotel suite before she could form a single coherent word.

Ryder Kane.

Alpha of Blackthorn Pack. The War God. The man every pack feared and no one approached without permission.

She'd known it was him and she hadn't cared, because the heat had burned every rational thought to ash and his scent had been the only thing in the world that made sense. He'd pulled her apart and put her back together three times before the sun came up, and she'd fallen asleep curled against his chest believing, in the hazy warmth of the aftermath, that something had shifted between them.

Dawn had been a cold correction.

He'd stood at the window in a white dress shirt, looking out over the city, and said the words without turning to face her.

*"You are nothing to me."*

Seven syllables. Clean as a blade.

She'd dressed and left and never told a single person what had happened — not even when, two weeks later, the tests confirmed what her body already knew.

"Ninety million."

The auctioneer's voice dragged her back.

Ava's wrists screamed against the silver. The man bidding ninety was watching her with flat grey eyes and a smile that didn't reach them. She recognized his pack crest. She looked away.

*Don't react. Don't give them anything.*

"One hundred million."

The voice came from the back of the room.

Low. Quiet. The kind of voice that didn't need volume because the room simply obeyed it.

Every head turned.

Ava's did too.

He stepped out of the shadow between two support columns like he'd been standing there the entire time, watching, waiting for the right moment. Black coat. Hands in his pockets. Crimson eyes that swept the room once and dismissed everyone in it before landing on her.

Ryder Kane.

Her lungs locked.

He didn't look at the auctioneer. He didn't look at the crowd. He looked at *her* — steady, unblinking, something burning behind those red eyes that she couldn't name and didn't dare try to.

Silence spread through the warehouse like a held breath.

"Sold," the auctioneer said, the word barely above a whisper.

Nobody argued. Nobody raised another paddle. A hundred million in alpha authority, and the room folded.

Two of Ryder's men walked the platform and removed her chains. Not gently, but efficiently. Her wrists were raw and red and she pressed them against her coat the moment the silver fell away.

Ryder was waiting at the bottom of the steps. He didn't extend his hand. He simply turned and walked, and his men guided her after him.

They took her to a private room off the main floor — bare concrete walls, a single light, a metal table no one was sitting at. The door closed behind them. His men stayed outside.

For a moment neither of them spoke.

Then he moved.

One step. Two. Close enough that his alpha scent hit her like a wall — cedar and iron and something dark beneath it, something that made her body betray her instantly. Her thighs pressed together. Heat crawled up her throat.

*Stop. Stop it.*

His hand wrapped around her jaw, not squeezing, just holding — tilting her face up toward his as if she were something he'd purchased and was now examining in the light.

Her pulse was a drum.

His eyes moved across her face slowly, and whatever he found there made something shift in his expression. Not softness. Nothing that simple. More like recognition. Like a man who'd been looking for something and was irritated to have finally found it.

He leaned down, lips brushing the shell of her ear, warm breath against skin that had no business responding.

"Four months ago," he said, voice gravel-low, private, meant only for her, "I left you dripping."

Her breath fractured.

"Tonight," he murmured, "I'm collecting every drop."

The door opened before she could speak.

His men stepped in, coat held out, ready to move.

Ryder released her jaw and straightened like nothing had happened.

"Let's go," he said.

And Ava Sterling, omega of the Evergreen Pack, daughter sold like cattle, walked out of that warehouse carrying a secret that would either save her—

Or destroy them both.

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  • THE CONTRACTED LUNA SECRET TRIPLETS    Book 2 chapter 15

    The cairn was exactly what Sera had described.A pile of stones that looked like the forest had arranged them accidentally over a long period of time. Three large flat stones forming a rough triangle, smaller ones filling the gaps, the kind of structure that read as natural until you looked at it directly and noticed that nothing natural was that precise.The lamp was set against the base of the largest stone.It was a small clay lamp — old design, the kind that burned oil rather than anything modern. The flame was steady despite the wind coming through the trees. It had been burning for a while. The oil was fresh.Sera crouched beside it.She looked at it for a moment — the way you look at something that belongs to someone who isn't there."She filled it tonight," Sera said. "She knew.""Can you open it?" Ryder said.Sera stood. She looked at the top stone of the cairn — the largest one, flat, the size of a table top. She pressed both palms to it.Nothing happened.She pressed harder

  • THE CONTRACTED LUNA SECRET TRIPLETS    Book2 chapter 14

    They left at ten.Small group. Ryder's decision, but Ava had reached the same number independently: five. Ryder, Ava, Sera, and two wolves Ryder trusted with the specific trust of a man who had spent twenty years learning which people were worth the word. General Frost — young, precise, the best tactical mind he had left after Marcus. And Petra, whose instincts in the nursery had been right twice now.Auryn stayed. Ryder had tried to negotiate this. Auryn had declined to negotiate, said that the babies needed the bloodline suppression field maintained from inside the ward, and that she could extend it outward as cover for the team from the mansion until they were far enough out to be beyond the Architect's local detection range. She'd explained the technical basis for this in detail that Sorin confirmed was accurate, and then she'd gone to sit with Caius and that had been the end of the discussion."She's very comfortable saying no to you," Ava said, in the car."Yes," Ryder said. "I'

  • THE CONTRACTED LUNA SECRET TRIPLETS    Book2 chapter 13

    Sorin said it plainly, because that was his way."There are two possible outcomes when the vow is spoken," he said. "And they are not equally bad."It was early morning. The war room. Ryder, Ava, Sorin, Dara. Sera at the far end of the table with a mug of tea she hadn't touched, listening with the careful attention of someone mapping a terrain she'd just walked into. Auryn was on the floor with Caius, who had been brought down by Petra and installed on a padded mat with the patient resignation of a baby who had been moved a lot recently and had opinions.Stellan was in his carrier on the table.Sorin had learned, by this point, that ignoring Stellan's presence was not something the room allowed you to do. He acknowledged him with a nod. Stellan regarded him. They had reached an understanding."Outcome one," Sorin said. "The vow is spoken correctly. The golden bloodline is permanently sealed. No shadow claim, no compact manipulation, no future cycle can touch the heirs or their descend

  • THE CONTRACTED LUNA SECRET TRIPLETS    Book2 chapter 12

    Sorin found it at three in the morning.He was in the archive — he'd been in the archive for most of the night, running the resonance scan the way Ryder had asked, looking for the mirror gift's reverse signature in the physical space. He found traces: east corridor, nursery approach, the archive room itself, and one room that surprised him enough that he called Ryder's comm immediately.The compact chamber.Ryder found Sorin crouching over the chamber floor in the specific posture of a man who had found something he needed other people to see before he decided how to feel about it."He was here before us," Ryder said."Yes." Sorin stood. He was holding something — a sealed document, compact wax pressed with a stamp Ryder didn't recognize. "He left this on the ledger table. I missed it when we were here earlier because it was under the ledger itself. He'd slid it beneath.""He wanted us to find it after," Ryder said."After we read the ledger. After we found the counterpart entry." Sor

  • THE CONTRACTED LUNA SECRET TRIPLETS    Book2 chapter 11

    Sera had never been in a room this size before.She stood in the guest suite on the residential level and looked at it the way someone looks at a space they don't know how to inhabit — too much of it, the ceiling too high, the furniture too comfortable, the distance between herself and the nearest wall too generous. She'd been sleeping in small rooms her whole life. Small rooms were easy to defend."You don't have to stay in here," Ava said from the doorway. "You can sleep wherever you feel comfortable."Sera looked at the window."Which floor is this?""Forty-eighth."She looked out at the city below. The lights spread to the horizon. For a moment she was still in the way only people who have lived outside cities are still — properly still, no habitual noise or movement, just the particular quiet of someone who was assessing rather than reacting."It's good," she said. "High is good.""We can move you higher if—""No." She turned. "This is fine." She looked at Ava. "You don't have to

  • THE CONTRACTED LUNA SECRET TRIPLETS    Book2 chapter 10

    They moved fast.Ryder got the security rotation shifted in under four minutes — Petra and two wolves he trusted on the babies, Dara in the nursery physically, the ward renewed and the panic room accessible if needed. He did it without announcing why and the wolves who knew him well enough read the tone and didn't ask.The drive north took twenty minutes. Two vehicles: Ryder and Ava in the lead, Auryn between them because that had been made clear by Auryn, who had simply gotten in and buckled herself with the competence of a child who had been doing things for herself longer than she should have needed to. Two security wolves in the vehicle behind.Nobody spoke much on the drive. The forest road narrowed and the city lights fell away behind them and the dark thickened between the trees until the headlights were the only warmth visible.Auryn had her eyes closed.Not sleeping. Listening. Her head was tilted slightly, the attitude of someone tracking something through a sense that didn'

  • THE CONTRACTED LUNA SECRET TRIPLETS    Book2 chapter 9

    "She died," Ava said.The words came out flat. Not an accusation — just a fact placed on the table between them, something she needed to say out loud before she could look at what was behind it."I was nine," she said. "She died. I went to her funeral. I watched my father stand at the grave and I s

  • THE CONTRACTED LUNA SECRET TRIPLETS    Book2 chapter 8

    Dara's room was empty.Not the empty of someone who had stepped out. The empty of someone who had made a decision and acted on it — the chair pushed back carefully, the lamp on the desk still warm, a folded page on the seat with Ryder's name on the outside.He opened it.*I am not missing. I went t

  • THE CONTRACTED LUNA SECRET TRIPLETS    Book2 chapter 7

    Sorin spread four pages across the nursery floor because there was no other surface big enough and Auryn was already sitting there anyway."Move your leg," he said to her.She moved her leg. He laid the final page down and crouched over the spread like a man solving a puzzle he'd been working on fo

  • THE CONTRACTED LUNA SECRET TRIPLETS    Book2 chapter 6

    The nursery door was intact.Ryder had it open before Ava reached the corridor, and the first thing she heard was Caius — his particular sound, the low, warm crackle that he made in his sleep like a fire settling, the sound that meant safe, undisturbed, ordinary. She crossed to his crib and put her

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