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The freezing wind of Denver cut through Luna Monroe’s thin waitress uniform like knives as she scrubbed the last sticky table at 11:47pm. The restaurant was empty now except for the flickering neon sign that buzzed overhead and the faint smell of burnt coffee that had seeped into the wooden floors over the years.
Five years. Five years of being the pack’s joke. Five years of scrubbing floors, cooking meals, taking beatings, all because she had no wolf. Luna’s arms ached. Her hands were red and raw from the harsh cleaning chemicals and the cold water. At 25 years old, most she-wolves had already found their mates, shifted for the first time, and taken their place in pack hierarchy. But Luna? Luna was still wolfless. Still human. Still nothing. “Luna! The Alpha’s Mating Ceremony starts in 13 minutes!” Sarah, the beta’s daughter, yelled from the doorway, her voice dripping with mockery. The pink dress she wore shimmered under the dim light, a stark contrast to Luna’s faded gray uniform. “Not that it matters to a wolfless mutt like you.” Luna didn’t answer. She just dunked the rag deeper into the bucket, watching the dirty water swirl. Tears mixed with the soapy water, but she refused to let them fall. Crying wouldn’t change anything. Crying had never changed anything. Sarah laughed and flipped her blonde hair over her shoulder. “You should just leave the pack, you know? Save us all the embarrassment of having a human living among wolves.” The door slammed shut, leaving Luna in silence. Tonight was her 25th birthday. The night every wolf found their mate under the full moon. The night the Moon Goddess revealed your other half. Luna had prayed to the Moon Goddess every night for the past five years that maybe, just maybe, she wouldn’t be alone forever. That maybe she would get a wolf. That maybe she would get a mate who would look at her like she mattered. But the Moon Goddess had never answered. Luna wiped her hands on her apron and took off her name tag. The cheap plastic had worn smooth from years of use. She folded it carefully and placed it on the counter. She wouldn’t need it anymore. Not after tonight. The Moonlight Pack square was decorated with silver lights and white flowers when Luna arrived, five minutes late. The full moon hung high in the Colorado sky, casting an ethereal glow over the gathered crowd. Two hundred pack members stood in neat rows, dressed in their finest clothes, waiting for their Alpha to arrive. Luna stood at the back, hood pulled low over her head, trying to make herself invisible. She had worn her only decent dress - a plain black one that went down to her ankles. It was three sizes too big and made her look even smaller than she was. She didn’t belong here. She knew that. Everyone knew that. The drums started beating. Low. Steady. Rhythmic. The sound vibrated through the ground and up through Luna’s feet, making her heart race for a reason she couldn’t explain. Then he walked in. Alpha Asher Blackwood. 28 years old. 6’4”. Broad shoulders that could carry the weight of five packs. Cold gray eyes that could freeze hell itself. Dark hair that fell over his forehead in a way that made every she-wolf in the crowd swoon. The Alpha of five packs across Colorado. Worth two billion dollars. The most feared and desired man in the entire werewolf nation. And he was her mate. The bond snapped into place like lightning, burning through Luna’s chest with a force that made her gasp. It was like someone had lit a fire inside her ribs and poured gasoline on it. Her heart stopped. Her knees almost gave out. The ground felt like it was tilting beneath her feet. Mate. The one person in the world meant only for her. The one person whose scent would calm her wolf. The one person who would protect her, cherish her, claim her. Alpha Asher’s head snapped toward her so fast it was inhuman. His gray eyes locked with hers across the crowd of two hundred. For three seconds, something dangerous flashed in his gaze. Possession. Hunger. Something primal and ancient that made Luna’s breath catch in her throat. Then it was gone. Replaced by disgust. Pure, cold, cutting disgust. His jaw clenched. His nostrils flared. And Luna understood. He smelled it. He smelled that she was wolfless. He smelled that she was weak. He smelled that she was nothing. Luna wanted to disappear. To sink into the ground and never come up again. Alpha Asher walked up the stone platform with measured steps, his shoulders straight, his expression carved from ice. Two hundred pack members went quiet instantly. You could hear the wind rustling through the pine trees surrounding the square. “I, Alpha Asher Blackwood,” he said, his voice loud and clear and carrying to every corner of the square, “reject you, Luna Monroe, as my mate.” The words hit her like a physical blow. The mate bond shattered, sending pain lancing through her chest like a thousand shards of broken glass. Luna staggered back, clutching her chest as if she could hold the pieces together. Her vision blurred. Her ears were ringing. “A wolfless omega is not worthy of standing beside the Alpha of Moonlight Pack,” he continued, his voice devoid of any emotion. He didn’t even look at her. His gaze was fixed on the crowd, as if Luna wasn’t even there. “The Moon Goddess made a mistake.” Gasps rippled through the crowd. Whispers started. Luna felt 200 eyes burning into her, watching her humiliation, judging her, pitying her. Wolfless. Useless. Embarrassment. Mistake. The words echoed in her mind, mixing with the pain in her chest. Her wolf… the wolf she didn’t have… howled in agony inside her chest. But there was no wolf. There was only empty, broken silence where the howl should have been. Only a void that felt like it was swallowing her whole. Luna’s legs gave out. She dropped to her knees in the cold snow, not caring that her dress was getting wet and dirty. Not caring that everyone was watching. The rejection hurt more than any beating she’d ever received in the past five years. More than any insult. More than any cold night she’d spent sleeping on the floor because the packhouse had no room for a wolfless omega. Luna turned and ran. She didn’t care that she was running in the middle of a sacred ceremony. She didn’t care that pack law said she should kneel and accept the rejection with dignity. She didn’t care that running would only make her look more pathetic. She just ran. Out of the square. Past the guards who didn’t even try to stop her. Past the decorated archway with silver ribbons. Into the dark Colorado forest where the trees stood like silent witnesses to her shame. The snow was up to her ankles and the temperature was dropping below zero, but Luna didn’t feel the cold. The only thing she felt was the emptiness where her mate bond used to be. A gaping hole in her chest that was bleeding and raw and wouldn’t stop aching. She ran until her lungs burned. Until her feet were numb. Until she couldn’t hear the sounds of the ceremony anymore. Until she couldn’t see the lights of the packhouse anymore. Finally, she slid behind a massive pine tree and collapsed, her back sliding down the rough bark until she was sitting in the snow. Her shoulders shook with silent sobs. She bit her lip hard to keep from crying out, but it didn’t help. The pain was too much. The humiliation was too much. The loneliness was too much. Her hands pressed against her stomach unconsciously. She didn’t know why, but she had a feeling she wasn’t alone anymore. A feeling that had been growing for the past four weeks. A feeling she had been trying to ignore because it was impossible. It couldn’t be possible. Four weeks. She was four weeks pregnant with Alpha Asher’s child. Luna’s eyes widened as the realization hit her like a second blow. That was why she’d been feeling sick every morning. That was why she’d been so tired lately. That was why her chest had been tender and her appetite had been strange. She was carrying his child. The child of the man who had just rejected her in front of the entire pack. The child of the most powerful Alpha in Colorado. The child of the man who thought she was nothing. A bitter laugh escaped her lips, sounding harsh in the quiet forest. The irony was almost laughable. If it wasn’t so devastating. She would rather die in this forest than let him know. She would rather freeze to death than let Alpha Asher claim her child. He would take the baby. He would use the baby as leverage. He would raise the child to hate her, just like he hated her now. Luna wrapped her arms around her stomach protectively, as if she could shield the tiny life inside her from the world. From Alpha Asher. From the pack that had never wanted her. “I’ll protect you,” she whispered to her unborn child, her voice barely audible over the wind. “I promise. No matter what. I’ll keep you safe.” The wind howled through the trees, carrying her promise away into the darkness. But as Luna closed her eyes, exhaustion finally catching up to her, she heard it. Heavy footsteps in the snow. Measured. Deliberate. Getting closer. A low, dangerous growl echoed through the trees, making the hair on the back of Luna’s neck stand up. It wasn’t a normal growl. It was deep. Resonant. Inhuman. The growl of a predator who had found his prey. Alpha Asher had followed her. Luna’s heart stopped again. She pressed herself harder against the tree trunk, trying to make herself smaller, trying to disappear into the shadows. It was useless. A wolf could smell fear from a mile away. A wolf could track scent in a blizzard. She opened her eyes slowly and looked up. And there he was. Alpha Asher stood ten feet away, his tall frame silhouetted against the moonlight filtering through the pine branches. His shoulders were tense. His fists were clenched at his sides. His gray eyes were no longer cold. Now they were glowing. Glowing red. His wolf was close to the surface. Too close. Luna held her breath. She didn’t move. She didn’t blink. She didn’t dare make a sound. Alpha Asher took one step forward. Then another. The snow crunched beneath his expensive leather boots. His jaw was clenched so tight Luna could see the muscle ticking. His expression was a mask of barely controlled fury. “You shouldn’t have run,” he said, his voice low and rough, like gravel. It wasn’t the cold, authoritative voice he’d used in the square. This voice was darker. More primal. More dangerous. “Pack law says you should have knelt and accepted.” Luna swallowed hard. “Pack law doesn’t apply to wolfless omegas,” she whispered back, her voice shaking despite her best efforts. “Remember? I’m nothing to you.” Alpha Asher’s eyes narrowed. The red glow intensified. “Don’t speak to me like that, Luna.” The way he said her name sent a shiver down her spine. It was the first time he’d ever said her name without contempt. And it terrified her more than his anger. “I don’t want anything from you, Alpha,” Luna said, forcing herself to stand up despite her trembling legs. The snow was wet through her thin dress and she was shivering uncontrollably now, but she refused to show weakness. “I don’t want your pity. I don’t want your protection. I don’t want you.” That was a lie. And they both knew it. The mate bond might be shattered, but the ache was still there. The longing was still there. The pull was still there, faint but persistent, like a thread connecting her heart to his. Alpha Asher took another step forward, and Luna instinctively took one step back. Her back hit the rough bark of the pine tree. She had nowhere else to go. “Then why does my wolf want you?” Alpha Asher growled, his voice dropping even lower. “Why can I smell your fear and your pain and still want to claim you?” Luna’s eyes widened. “Your wolf is confused,” she said quickly. “It’s the mate bond. It’s rejecting me too. It will pass.” “It won’t pass,” Alpha Asher said, and there was something almost vulnerable in his voice now. Something he was trying to hide. “I tried to ignore it. I tried to forget you. But I couldn’t.” Luna shook her head. “You don’t get to say that. Not after what you did in front of everyone. Not after you humiliated me.” “I had to,” Alpha Asher said, and for the first time, Luna saw something crack in his cold mask. “If I claimed you, the other Alphas would see weakness. They would attack. They would destroy everything I’ve built.” “So I’m supposed to thank you for rejecting me?” Luna’s voice rose despite herself. Anger was better than pain. Anger was better than tears. “For making me a public spectacle?” Alpha Asher’s jaw clenched. “I never wanted to hurt you, Luna.” “You did,” Luna said quietly. “You did more than hurt me, Alpha. You broke me.” The words hung between them in the cold night air. For a moment, neither of them spoke. The only sound was the wind through the trees and Luna’s shaky breathing. Alpha Asher’s red eyes studied her face, taking in her pale skin, her chapped lips, her trembling body. “You’re cold,” he said finally, his voice softer now. Almost gentle. “You’re going to freeze to death out here.” “Better to freeze than to go back,” Luna replied, wrapping her arms around herself. “Better to die than to face the pack’s mockery tomorrow.” Alpha Asher’s expression hardened again. “You’re not dying. Not on my watch.” He reached into his black coat and pulled out a thick fur cloak. Without another word, he draped it around Luna’s shoulders. The fur was warm and heavy and smelled like pine and snow and something distinctly male. Something distinctly him. Luna should have pushed it off. Should have thrown it back at him. Should have told him she didn’t need his help. Instead, she clutched the cloak tighter around her shoulders and let the warmth seep into her frozen skin. She was too cold. Too tired. Too broken to be proud. “Why are you really here, Alpha?” Luna asked, looking up at him. “If you hate me so much, why did you follow me into the forest?” Alpha Asher was silent for a long moment. The red glow in his eyes faded slightly, replaced by something else. Something that looked almost like pain. “Because I couldn’t let you go,” he said finally, his voice barely above a whisper. “Because when I rejected you, I felt like I was tearing my own heart out.” Luna stared at him, stunned. “That doesn’t make sense.” “It doesn’t have to make sense,” Alpha Asher said. “It just is.” He reached out suddenly and tucked a strand of Luna’s hair behind her ear. His fingers were cold, but his touch was gentle. So gentle it made Luna’s breath catch. Luna should have pulled away. Should have slapped his hand. Should have reminded him that he’d rejected her. That she meant nothing to him. Instead, she closed her eyes and leaned into his touch for just one second. Just one second of warmth. Just one second of feeling wanted. Then she remembered. Remembered the public rejection. Remembered the humiliation. Remembered the pain. Luna stepped back sharply, pulling away from him. “Don’t,” she said, her voice firm despite her trembling. “Don’t touch me, Alpha. Don’t confuse me. You made your choice.” Alpha Asher’s hand froze in mid-air. His expression shuttered again, the vulnerability disappearing behind a mask of ice. “I’m trying to help you, Luna.” “I don’t need your help,” Luna said, even though it was a lie. She needed help. She needed warmth. She needed food. She needed shelter. She needed someone to tell her that everything would be okay. But she couldn’t accept it from him. Not after what he’d done. Alpha Asher stared at her for a long moment, his jaw working as if he wanted to say something else. But in the end, he just nodded. “Fine,” he said, his voice cold again. “Have it your way.” He turned and started walking away, his broad shoulders tense, his posture rigid. Luna watched him go, her heart breaking all over again. She wanted to call out to him. Wanted to tell him about the baby. Wanted to tell him that she was scared and alone and didn’t know what to do. But she couldn’t. She wouldn’t. Alpha Asher had made his choice. And Luna had to make hers. She would raise this child alone. She would survive alone. She would be strong alone. Even if it killed her. Alpha Asher stopped walking and looked back over his shoulder. The moonlight caught his profile, highlighting the sharp angles of his face. “Luna,” he said quietly. “If you change your mind…” “I won’t,” Luna said firmly, cutting him off. Alpha Asher nodded once, then disappeared into the darkness of the forest, his footsteps silent on the snow. Luna sank back down against the tree, the fur cloak wrapped tightly around her shoulders. The warmth was comforting, but it didn’t fill the emptiness in her chest. She was alone. Again. But this time, she wasn’t just alone. She was pregnant. She was rejected. She was broken. And she had no idea what to do next. The wind howled through the trees again, carrying with it the sound of Alpha Asher’s wolf howling in the distance. A mournful, lonely sound that echoed Luna’s own pain. Luna closed her eyes and whispered to her unborn child. “We’re going to be okay,” she said, though she wasn’t sure she believed it herself. “Mommy will protect you. I promise.” And in the darkness of the Colorado forest, under the light of the full moon, Luna Monroe made a vow. She would survive. She would protect her child. And someday, somehow, she would make Alpha Asher Blackwood regret the day he rejected her.The pull was agony.Luna felt her soul stretch like thread about to snap. The black moon with the silver ring hung above her, calling. It promised peace. Promised an end to war. Promised she’d never have to choose between Blood Moon and Silver Moon again.All she had to do was let go.Let go of Damian’s hand. Let go of her mother’s tears. Let go of her father’s broken attempt at being a man instead of a king. Let go of being Luna.Become the Third Moon. Eternal. Balanced. Alone forever.“Don’t,” Damian’s voice cracked. King-gold eyes were wild with fear. He was pulling her back, but his mortal strength was nothing against a goddess’s call. “You chose me. You chose us. Don’t leave.”Selene’s starlight eyes were sad but certain. “He cannot follow you there, child. No mortal lives as a moon. She would be eternal, and he would age and die in a breath. This is mercy.”“Mercy?” Luna gasped. Her feet were already lifting off the stone. Galaxy eyes half silver, half black. “Mercy is letting m
Hundreds of them. Dragged across the black stone courtyard by wolves who wore no crowns, no marks, no pack tattoos. Just scars. Old scars. Freedom scars.Luna stood on the steps of the Court of Two Moons with Damian on one side, Valen on the other. Galaxy eyes tracked every chain, every scar.“They’re not here to fight,” Luna whispered. “They’re here to see if I’m real.”Valen’s jaw tightened. “The Free Wolves are legends. They rejected both Courts 200 years ago. Said kings and queens were just new chains. If they’re here for you…”“Then they think I’m the answer,” Luna finished.The chains stopped at the base of the steps. The wolves parted.And she walked out.Tall. Lean. Hair shaved on one side, long on the other. Eyes silver, but not like Luna’s. Older. Harder. A scar ran from her temple to her jaw. No crown. Just a collar around her neck. Broken. Open.The leader of the Free Wolves.She stopped three steps below Luna. Didn’t kneel. Didn’t bow. Just looked.“You’re the rumor,” she
Three nights. That was all they had.Three nights before the Blood Altar ritual. Three nights before the Warlords arrived. Three nights before Luna had to decide if she was weapon or queen.She didn’t sleep. Neither did Damian.They trained. Not with Valen. Against him.The underground room was filled with red and silver light now. Luna’s power was changing. No longer just healing, no longer just taking. It was… balancing.“Again,” Valen commanded. He threw a bolt of red shadow at her.Luna caught it with silver light. But instead of destroying it, she wove it. Red thread, silver needle. When she released it, it became a shield. Red on the outside, silver on the inside.Valen stared. “You’re not choosing a side. You’re making a third.”“Good,” Luna said. Sweat dripped down her face. “Because I’m tired of choosing between my parents.”Damian watched from the edge, king-gold eyes sharp. He couldn’t fight with Alpha strength, but he’d learned new tricks. King by bond meant he could borro
Cold. That was the first thing Luna felt.Not winter cold. Blood cold. The kind that crawled through your veins and told your bones you were in a place that didn’t want you alive.The portal spat them out onto black stone.The Blood Moon Court.No sky. Just a ceiling of swirling red clouds. No sun. Just three pale moons hanging like wounds. The air smelled like iron, old snow, and something sweeter. Decay.Damian stumbled beside her, king-gold eyes scanning instantly. One arm locked around her waist. “You okay?”Luna nodded. Her silver crown was dim here. The power felt… thinner. Like the Court was eating it.“Welcome home, daughter,” Valen’s voice echoed from everywhere and nowhere.He appeared on a throne made of bone and red crystal. Same crown. Same red eyes. But here, he looked bigger. Older. Like the Court itself was part of him.Guards lined the hall. Hundreds. All with red eyes. All kneeling, but not to Valen. To Luna.“Blood Moon blood,” one whispered. “The prophecy.”Luna’s
“Hello, daughter.”The word hit harder than the monster’s claws. Harder than losing the Alpha title. Harder than the queen’s crown burning into Luna’s skin.Luna stumbled back a step. The cracked crown above her head flickered. “No. You’re dead. I saw… the council said…”The woman in the doorway smiled. Same silver eyes. Same sharp cheekbones. Same scar above her left eyebrow that Luna had in the mirror every morning.Her mother. Alive.“I’m Elena,” she said softly. “And I’m sorry I had to lie. But dead women don’t get hunted, Luna.”The chamber froze. The monster stopped mid-lunge. Even the shadows recoiled.Elder Mara dropped to her knees, weeping. “Elena… we buried you. We saw your body.”“You buried a glamour,” Elena said without looking at her. Her eyes never left Luna. “A corpse I made from moonlight and regret. I needed the Blood Moon Court to think they’d won. I needed you safe.”Luna’s legs gave out. Damian caught her before she hit the floor. His new king-gold eyes burned as
The howl didn’t stop.It vibrated through stone, through soil, through the marrow of every wolf in Blackwood territory. Pups woke screaming. Mated pairs clutched each other as their bonds flickered. Old wolves collapsed to their knees, blood dripping from their noses.In the center of it all stood Luna.Silver light poured from her like a second moon had been born in that room. The crescent mark on her palm had spread into vines of light, wrapping up her arm, across her collarbone, stopping just below her jaw. A crown hovered above her head, made of moonlight and blood and something older than the pack itself.Damian was on his knees too. Not by choice. His body remembered hierarchy even if his heart didn’t. The Alpha flame that had burned in his chest since he was 18 flickered… then went out. Gone.He pressed a hand to his chest where the bond used to sit. Empty. Cold. But Luna was still there. Still his. Even without the goddess’s mark.“Goddess forgive me,” Selene whispered from t
The hall went silent when Alpha Derek pointed at her.“Lyra Blackwood. Step forward.”His voice wasn’t loud. It didn’t need to be. When an Alpha spoke, the whole Blood Moon Pack felt it in their bones. Fifty wolves turned. Fifty pairs of eyes. Fifty judgments.Lyra walked. Bare feet on cold stone.
Luna woke to cold sheets and an empty space beside her. For five years, Asher’s body heat had been her alarm clock. His scent, pine and snow and something darker that was only him, told her she was safe before her eyes even opened. Tonight, there was only cold.Her hand moved to her stomach before
Five years had passed since Aurora’s first birthday.The mountains of Moonlight Pack were covered in a fresh layer of snow, the moon hanging high and bright in the clear winter sky. The packhouse glowed with warm light from every window, laughter and music spilling out into the cold night. Luna s
One year and three months had passed since Aurora was born.Winter had returned to Moonlight Pack, but this time the snow didn’t feel cold or empty. It felt peaceful. Safe. Like a blanket covering the mountains and the packhouse and the people inside. Luna stood on the balcony of their suite, wra







