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Chapter three: SHADOW OF DOUBT

Author: Elle writes
last update publish date: 2026-05-04 20:59:12

The whispers started early, as they always did, but there was something different about them that morning, something that carried a kind of restless excitement through the pack house.

“The ceremony is in a week and I also heard multiple packs are coming.”

“Alpha Magnus wants it to be the biggest gathering in years.”

Aria walked through the halls quietly, her steps soft against the polished floors as the voices drifted around her without pause, weaving through the air as though she wasn’t standing right there among them.

“A proper Luna deserves that much and her daughter too.”

Aria didn’t stop walking, and she didn’t react, because she had learned long ago that reacting only gave people more reason to continue.

Even so, something about that day felt different in a way she couldn’t fully explain. 

It wasn’t that people were being harsher than usual, but there was a weight in the atmosphere that made everything feel slower and harder to ignore, as though something unseen was quietly building around her.

Breakfast had already begun by the time she reached the dining hall.

The long table was filled with wolves speaking over one another, their voices blending into easy conversation as chairs shifted and laughter rose naturally among them, creating a kind of warmth that never seemed to reach her.

Aria paused at the entrance for a moment, unnoticed, or perhaps simply ignored, as no one looked up or acknowledged her presence.

For a brief second, she considered stepping forward and taking one of the empty seats, pretending that she belonged there just like everyone else. But the thought faded almost as quickly as it came.

Her stomach tightened slightly, reminding her that she hadn’t eaten properly in days, but she pushed the feeling aside. 

She turned away and walked back toward her room instead. As she passed the kitchen, voices drifted out through the open doorway.

“I guess she’s not coming to eat today,” one of the maids said, her tone carrying mild irritation.

“I guess she’s  desperately wishing for some to notice her absence ,” someone else said, followed by a quiet laugh.

Aria’s fingers tightened slightly against the fabric of her clothes, but she didn’t stop walking. She kept her pace steady, even though each word settled uncomfortably inside her, not because they were new, but because they were said so easily, as though she had already been reduced to something less than a person.

By the time she reached the hallway leading to her room, her steps had slowed without her realizing it.

“Aria.” Her name was spoken softly, and that alone was enough to make her stop.

She turned to see Lina standing nearby, her expression gentle and her eyes filled with concern that felt out of place in a place like this.

“I heard you didn’t come to eat yesterday,” Lina said as she stepped closer. “I was worried.”

The word felt unfamiliar to Aria, and she lowered her gaze slightly. “I was fine.”

Lina didn’t look convinced as she reached for Aria’s hands without asking, holding them lightly.

“You shouldn’t skip meals,” she said quietly. “You’re already looking thinner than before.”

Aria let out a faint breath that almost sounded like a laugh, though there was no real humor behind it. 

“I’m not hungry.”

It wasn’t entirely a lie, because after a while, hunger stopped feeling like hunger and became something quieter, something that blended into everything else she already felt.

“I can get you something better,” Lina offered quickly. “Not what they serve here. Something warm.”

Aria shook her head. “It’s okay.”

Lina studied her for a moment longer, her expression tightening slightly before she looked away, as though she was thinking about something she wasn’t ready to say.

“Things are going to change soon,” she said. Aria stilled.

“Because of the ceremony?”Lina nodded.

 “Packs are coming from everywhere, and not just small ones. Strong ones. Important ones.” 

She hesitated briefly. 

“I’m sure it won’t be so bad for you.”

Aria didn’t respond immediately because she wasn’t sure whether Lina believed that or was simply trying to comfort her.

“Or maybe you might even meet your mate,”Lina added. Before she could respond, laughter carried down the hallway from the dining room.

Selene’s voice stood out among the others, bright and effortless in a way that drew attention without trying.

 “She already acts like she belongs here.””Like the true daughter of a Luna.”Some maids passing by whispered to themselves.

Aria’s grip on her clothes tightened without her noticing, her fingers pressing hard enough to leave faint marks against her skin.

Lina’s gaze dropped to her hands, and she reached out gently, easing her grip.

“Careful,” she murmured.

Aria nodded slightly, though something about the moment felt strange in a way she couldn’t fully understand.

Later that day, Aria found herself standing at the edge of the training grounds again, watching as wolves trained, their movements controlled and precise as they ran and fought.

It used to inspire her when she was younger, when she still believed that one day she would stand among them. Now, it only reminded her of everything she lacked.

“Still watching?” Aria turned slightly at the voice. Lina stood beside her, though Aria hadn’t heard her approach.

“I like it here,” Aria said, even though the noise around them made that untrue.

What she meant was that it was easier to stand there and feel something, even if that feeling came from being reminded of what she could never have.

“You shouldn’t stay too long,” Lina said after a moment. “So people won’t  notice you more.”

“They always notice,” Aria replied.

“This time it will be different,” Lina said quickly.

Aria glanced at her, catching the brief hesitation that followed.

“With the ceremony coming, everyone is paying closer attention,” Lina continued. “Not just our pack.”

Aria felt something tighten in her chest.“Paying attention to what?”

Lina didn’t answer right away. She looked out at the field before speaking “To everything.”

The answer didn’t ease her thoughts, and instead left her with the uneasy feeling that whatever was coming would not pass quietly.

The days that followed moved slowly, each one blending into the next while somehow feeling heavier than the last.

The pack grew busier as the ceremony approached, with preparations filling every corner of the house. 

Decorations were arranged, meetings were held, and the training grounds remained active with constant movement.

Everywhere Aria looked, there was purpose. Everyone had a place. And everywhere she went, she was reminded that she didn’t.

And for Selene, she had not disturbed or made things difficult for her after what  happened the other day.

There was a little peace...But it felt controlled, as though something was slowly shifting beneath the surface, quietly reshaping how the pack saw her.

“Back to earth, Aria.” Lina’s voice broke through her thoughts as they walked near the forest later that evening.

“What are you thinking about?” Lina asked.

Aria frowned slightly. “Do I look like I’m thinking?”

Lina smiled, but there was something restrained about it.

“Everyone is just stressed,” she said “The ceremony and the guests are a lot to handle.”

Aria stopped walking. “How do you know what I was thinking about?”

Lina hesitated briefly before answering. “It’s me. I know you better than anyone.”

Aria held her gaze. “Then why does it feel like all of this is only happening to me?”

Lina’s expression shifted before she answered.  “It’s not. You’re just noticing it more.”

Something about the way she said it made Aria uneasy, as though Lina was choosing her words carefully instead of speaking freely.

Before Aria could question it further, Lina reached for her hand. “You’re not alone,” she said softly.

The words should have brought comfort, especially coming from the only person who had ever stood beside her, but instead they felt distant, as though they lacked the certainty they once carried.

In the night, Aria sat by her window, staring out at the dark sky.

The moon hung low above the trees, steady and unchanged, casting its pale light across the forest as if nothing in the world had shifted.

There was only one night left before the ceremony.

One night before the pack filled with strangers. One night before everything either changed or remained exactly the same.

Aria pulled her knees closer to her chest and rested her chin against them as the familiar emptiness settled inside her again, not in a sharp or overwhelming way, but as a quiet, constant presence that had been there for so long she no longer remembered what it felt like without it.

As she stared out at the sky, a thought formed slowly in her mind, creeping in without urgency but refusing to leave once it settled.

Maybe Lina was wrong. Maybe nothing was going to change.

Maybe the ceremony wouldn’t make things better. Maybe it would only make everything worse.

Aria closed her eyes slowly, and for the first time in a long time, she didn’t allow herself to hope, because hope was beginning to feel like something that only made everything harder to endure

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