
After My Mate Betrayed Me, I Lost Everything
Chapter 2
The pack gathering hall buzzed with the usual Friday night energy—wolves mingling, sharing stories of the week's hunts, pups darting between legs in games of chase. I stood at the edge of the crowd, my fingers nervously tracing the Luna pendant that hung at my throat. It was the symbol of my position, given to me by Alexander on the night he marked me as his mate.
Five days had passed since Alexander's devastating words in the great hall. Five days of silence, of averted gazes, of sleeping alone in our bed while he remained at the hospital with Victoria and James. My wolf, Lyra, had grown increasingly agitated, sensing the fracturing of our mate bond with each passing hour.
"The Alpha approaches," someone murmured, and the crowd parted like water.
Alexander strode into the hall, commanding attention without effort. The sight of him still made my heart clench—his broad shoulders, the sharp line of his jaw, the power that radiated from him. But tonight, Victoria walked half a step behind him, her honey-blonde hair gleaming in the firelight, her delicate hand resting on his arm as if she belonged there.
My stomach twisted into knots. This was wrong. So deeply, fundamentally wrong.
"Shadowmoon Pack," Alexander's voice boomed across the hall, silencing all conversation. "Tonight we gather as we always do, to strengthen our bonds and honor the Moon Goddess."
I moved forward automatically, taking my place beside him as I had done for five years. It was my role as Luna to stand at his side during these gatherings, to offer the blessing over the feast.
But Alexander's cold gaze stopped me in my tracks.
"Charlotte," he said, his voice carrying in the sudden silence. "The pendant."
Confusion washed over me. "What?"
"The Luna pendant," he clarified, extending his hand. "It no longer belongs to you."
The hall went deathly quiet. I could feel hundreds of eyes on me, watching, judging. My fingers clutched protectively at the silver crescent moon hanging from my neck.
"Alexander," I whispered, "please don't do this."
His eyes hardened. "The pendant, Charlotte. Now."
With trembling fingers, I unclasped the chain and placed the precious symbol in his outstretched palm. The metal seemed to burn as it left my possession, taking with it the last vestiges of my identity as Luna.
"Victoria," Alexander said, turning to the woman beside him, "would you do us the honor of blessing tonight's feast?"
Victoria stepped forward, her eyes meeting mine for just a moment. There was no triumph there, no gloating—only a carefully constructed mask of sympathy that didn't reach her eyes.
"Of course, Alpha," she murmured, her voice carrying in the silence.
I stood frozen as she took my place, as she spoke the sacred words that had been mine to say for years. The pack watched in stunned silence, their confusion and pity washing over me in suffocating waves.
I backed away, unable to bear another moment of this public humiliation. No one stopped me as I fled the hall, tears blurring my vision.
* * *
Midnight found me creeping through the darkened corridors of the pack house, my heart pounding against my ribs. I had borrowed clothes from one of the messenger wolves—plain, forgettable garments that wouldn't draw attention. My hair was tucked beneath a cap, my scent masked with herbs from the kitchen.
I needed answers. I needed to understand what had happened to the mate who once looked at me with love in his eyes.
Alexander's office was locked, but I had a key—a small token of trust from happier days. I slipped inside, closing the door silently behind me. Moonlight streamed through the windows, illuminating the familiar space—the massive desk, the wall of books, the Alpha's seal hanging proudly above the fireplace.
I moved to the desk first, rifling through papers with shaking hands. Nothing unusual—pack reports, territory maps, supply inventories. But there had to be something, some explanation for the sudden change in him.
My eyes fell on the painting behind his desk—a landscape of the sacred Moonstone Valley where our pack had first settled centuries ago. On impulse, I lifted it from the wall, revealing a small safe embedded in the plaster.
The combination was our mating date—at least, it had been the last time I'd seen him open it. I held my breath as I dialed the numbers, relief washing through me when the lock clicked open.
Inside was a small wooden box, intricately carved with moon phases. I lifted it out, settling cross-legged on the floor to examine its contents.
What I found shattered my world completely.
Photographs—dozens of them—of Victoria. Victoria laughing, Victoria in formal pack attire, Victoria in what appeared to be private moments. Some were recent, but others were yellowed with age, dating back years before I had even met Alexander.
Beneath the photos were handwritten notes in Alexander's distinctive script:
*Her scent today—vanilla and moonflower, just like Victoria's.*
*When she turns her head just so, the resemblance is uncanny.*
*The Moon Goddess has blessed me with a second chance.*
My hands trembled as I read entry after entry, each one more devastating than the last. Comparisons between Victoria and me. Notes about my scent being so similar to hers. Observations about how he could close his eyes when we made love and pretend...
"What are you doing?"
I gasped, dropping the papers as Alexander's voice cut through the silence. He stood in the doorway, his massive frame blocking any escape, his eyes burning with cold fury.
"You claimed me because I smell like her," I whispered, the horrible truth finally clear. "Our entire relationship—our mate bond—it was all a lie."
Alexander stepped into the room, closing the door behind him. In the moonlight, his face was a mask of stone.
"Not a lie," he said, his voice devoid of emotion. "A compromise. The Moon Goddess denied me my true mate by giving her to my brother. I found... a substitute."
The word cut deeper than any knife. "A substitute," I repeated, my voice hollow.
"And now I no longer need one," he continued, moving to the window. "James will not recover fully from his injuries. His wolf is too damaged to properly protect Victoria."
Understanding dawned, cold and terrible. "So you'll reject me and claim her instead."
Alexander turned, his eyes meeting mine directly for the first time in days. "The rejection ceremony will take place at the next full moon. Three days from now. Be prepared."
"And if I refuse?" I challenged, a spark of my old fire flaring to life.
His lips curved in a smile that held no warmth. "Then I'll make your life in this pack a living hell until you beg for the rejection."
As he turned to leave, I found my voice one last time. "Did any of it mean anything to you? These five years? Did you ever truly see me?"
He paused at the door, his shoulders stiff. "I saw what I wanted to see," he said quietly. "Nothing more."
The door closed behind him, leaving me alone with the scattered evidence of his betrayal and the shattered pieces of what I had thought was love.
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