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After My Mate Replaced Me with His New Luna Novel Cover

After My Mate Replaced Me with His New Luna

The silence in the Grand Hall was heavy, a physical weight that pressed against my chest, making it hard to breathe. I stood in the center of the polished wooden floor, feeling like a criminal awaiting a death sentence rather than a victim recovering from a sacrifice. A thousand eyes bore into me, their gazes sharp with judgment and devoid of pity. My hand trembled as it rose to touch the thick, white gauze wrapped tightly around my neck. The wound beneath throbbed in time with my frantic heartbeat, a jagged remind of the rogue’s claws that had stolen my voice just three days ago. I wanted to scream, to plead my case, to tell them that I was still me, still Rachel. But when I opened my mouth, only a ragged, wet gasp of air escaped. The connection to my wolf was gone, severed along with my vocal cords, leaving me hollow and terrifyingly alone inside my own mind. I looked up at the dais, desperate to lock eyes with the one person who was supposed to protect me. Alpha Wesley sat on his velvet chair, his posture rigid.
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Chapter 2

The wind howled through the gaps in the rotting wood of the groundskeeper’s shack, biting into my skin like invisible teeth. I curled tighter on the thin, moth-eaten mattress, a violent cough racking my body. It wasn't just the cold. It was the rejection. The severed bond in my chest felt like a festering wound that refused to heal, draining my energy drop by drop.

It had been weeks. Weeks of waking up to the smell of mold instead of fresh linen. Weeks of scrubbing the pack house floors until my knuckles bled, only to have my former friends kick over my water bucket and laugh. They called me "Mute." They called me "Wolfless." I was no longer Rachel, the girl who had saved the Alpha’s daughter. I was a stain on the Black Moon Pack’s pristine reputation.

My door banged open. Gamma Josh stood there, holding a servant’s uniform. He didn't look me in the eye. He used to be my sparring partner.

"Alpha requires you in the dining hall," he grunted, tossing the coarse fabric at me. "Special guest. You're serving."

I wanted to refuse. I wanted to scream at him to get out. But my voice was gone, buried under the jagged scar on my throat, and my rank was lower than dirt. Disobedience meant the whip.

I dressed in the scratchy gray uniform, my hands trembling. When I walked up the hill to the Pack House—the home I had grown up in—my heart hammered a frantic rhythm against my ribs.

The dining hall was glowing with warmth and candlelight. The smell of roast beef and rosemary filled the air, making my empty stomach cramp. But it was the other scent that made me freeze.

Vanilla and wild roses. Potent. Seductive.

I walked in, head bowed, carrying a heavy pitcher of wine. And there she was. seated at the Alpha’s right hand. Elena. She was beautiful, with cascading blonde hair and skin that looked like it had never known a day of labor. She radiated the aura of a high-ranking wolf.

Wesley sat beside her. He looked strong, his dark hair gleaming under the chandelier lights. He was laughing at something she said, his hand resting casually, possessively, on her thigh.

The sight hit me like a physical blow. The phantom pain in my chest flared, a hot iron branding my heart. He had moved on. He had replaced me before my scent had even faded from his sheets.

"Pour," the Head Omega hissed in my ear, shoving me forward.

I stepped up to the table. My hands shook as I lifted the pitcher. Wesley didn't even look up. To him, I was just a pair of hands. I was furniture.

"This is the Black Moon specialty," Wesley said to Elena, his voice dripping with a warmth he used to save for me. "I think you’ll find our vintage quite agreeable, my love."

*My love.* Two words. Two daggers.

I moved to Aviana’s seat. My heart clenched. She looked healthy. The color was back in her cheeks, her hair shiny. I had bought that life for her with my blood. I poured her water, desperate for her to look at me. *Aviana, please. It’s Rachel.*

She sensed my gaze. She looked up, her blue eyes meeting mine for a split second. I saw recognition. I saw guilt. But then, she looked at her grandmother, Louise, who was watching like a hawk. Aviana’s face hardened. She turned her shoulder to me, leaning toward Elena.

"You're so pretty, Elena," Aviana chirped, her voice loud and clear. "Way prettier than the last ones."

My grip on the pitcher slipped. A splash of water landed on the tablecloth.

The table went silent.

Wesley turned his head slowly. His eyes were cold, devoid of any history, any mercy. "Clean it up, Omega. And get out of my sight. You’re ruining the mood."

I didn't cry. I couldn't. The pain was too deep for tears. I wiped the spot with a rag, feeling the heat of humiliation burn my neck, and retreated to the shadows of the kitchen.

That night, back in the freezing shack, I stared at the cracked ceiling. The rejection sickness was getting worse. I could feel my strength fading, my essence leaking out into the void where my wolf used to be. If I stayed here, I would die. I would die scrubbing their floors, watching my mate love another woman, watching the child I saved pretend I didn't exist.

*No.*

A spark ignited in the darkness of my mind. It was small, but it was fierce.

I sat up, ignoring the dizziness. I grabbed an old backpack—one I had found in the trash—and stuffed it with the bare essentials. A spare shirt. A stolen loaf of bread. A small knife I had sharpened on a stone.

I knew the patrol routes. I had helped design them when I was training to be Luna.

The moon was hidden behind heavy clouds, offering me a cloak of darkness. I slipped out of the shack, moving not like an Omega, but like the warrior I used to be. I skirted the edge of the forest, holding my breath as the delta patrol passed by, their flashlight beams cutting through the mist just inches from my hiding spot.

Once they passed, I ran.

I ran until my lungs burned and my legs felt like lead. I ran toward the north, toward the neutral territories. They said the lands were lawless, filled with rogues and monsters. But they also spoke of the Silent Healers—monks who owed allegiance to no pack, who possessed ancient magic.

I paused at the border marker, looking back one last time at the Black Moon territory. The Pack House was a distant speck of light on the hill.

I touched the scar on my throat. They had taken my voice. They had taken my wolf. They had taken my heart. But they would not take my life.

I turned my back on Wesley, on Aviana, on everything I had ever known, and stepped into the darkness of the unknown.

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