
After My Mate Replaced Me with His New Luna
Chapter 5
Sweat stung my eyes, blurring the sterile white lights of the royal training arena. My chest heaved, lungs burning as I circled my opponent. Prince Fletcher didn't prowl like a wolf; he moved with the calculated grace of a storm waiting to break.
Most men in the court looked at the jagged, ropy scar across my throat and offered soft eyes or gentle words. They saw the victim. They saw the mute girl who had been broken.
Fletcher saw a target.
"You're guarding your left side, Rachel," he called out, his voice a deep rumble that vibrated in the floorboards. "You think your neck is your weak point. It's not. Your fear is."
He didn't give me time to process the insult. He lunged.
He was faster than any Alpha I had ever seen, a blur of muscle and dark intent. But I wasn't the same girl who had cowered in an Omega's shack. I dropped low, my new Lycan reflexes screaming in delight as I swept my leg out.
Fletcher anticipated it. He hopped over my sweep, bringing a heavy fist down toward my shoulder. I didn't retreat. I rolled forward, inside his guard, and drove my elbow into his ribs. The impact jarred my bone, but a satisfying grunt of pain escaped his lips.
We broke apart, breathing hard. For the first time, I saw a grin split his face. It wasn't mocking. It was feral. It was approval.
"Good," he panted, wiping a bead of sweat from his brow. "You didn't flinch."
He stepped closer, invading my personal space, but my wolf, Artemis, didn't growl. She purred. He reached out, his thumb tracing the air an inch from my scar. He didn't touch it, but the heat of his hand made my skin tingle.
"Wear it like armor, Princess," he murmured, his golden eyes locking onto mine. "It proves you survived something that should have killed you. That makes you dangerous."
In his gaze, I didn't see pity. I saw a reflection of my own power. And for the first time since Wesley shattered my heart, the ice in my chest began to melt.
***
The violence of the arena gave way to the quiet intimacy of the royal library. A fire crackled in the hearth, casting long, dancing shadows across the chessboard between us.
I moved my knight, taking his bishop. "Check."
Fletcher leaned back in his leather armchair, swirling a glass of amber liquid. The scent of him filled the room—cedar wood and the sharp, electric smell of a coming storm. It was a stark contrast to the cloying vanilla scent that Wesley had chased. This scent didn't demand attention; it commanded it. It soothed the jagged edges of my trauma in a way I hadn't thought possible.
"You play aggressively," Fletcher noted, his eyes studying the board rather than me. "You sacrifice pawns to clear a path for the queen."
"Pawns are expendable," I replied, my voice steady. "Queens are essential."
He looked up then, his gaze intense. "And Kings?"
"Kings require a partner, not a servant," I said, meeting his challenge. "Wesley wanted a Luna who would look pretty and stay silent. He wanted a prop."
Fletcher reached across the table. He didn't grab my hand; he laid his palm open, waiting. A choice.
I placed my hand in his. His grip was warm, solid, and grounding.
"I don't care about fate, Rachel," he said softly. "The Moon Goddess can tie souls together, but she can't force respect. I choose you. Not because of a scent, and not because of a title. But because you are the only one strong enough to stand beside me."
My heart hammered against my ribs, not with the frantic panic of rejection, but with the steady rhythm of belonging. This wasn't a bond forged in magic; it was forged in iron.
***
The heavy oak doors creaked open, shattering the moment. My father’s head spy, a wiry Lycan named Silas, stepped in. He looked like he had run a hundred miles. Mud splattered his boots, and his face was grim.
"Your Highnesses," Silas bowed low. "The report from the Black Moon territory."
I pulled my hand from Fletcher’s, the warmth replaced instantly by a cold, sharp focus. "Speak."
"It’s worse than we thought," Silas said, handing me a dossier. "Alpha Wesley has drained the pack's coffers. Investments have failed. The border patrols are thin, and rogues are testing their defenses nightly. The pack is rotting from the inside out."
I flipped through the pages. Bank statements in the red. Reports of injured Deltas. It was a disaster.
"And Wesley?" I asked, my voice dropping to a dangerous octave.
"He is desperate to hide the weakness," Silas replied. "He has announced a Grand Mating Ceremony for himself and Elena. He’s invited Alphas from three neighboring territories to witness it. He intends to use the alliance with Elena’s pack to secure a loan to save Black Moon."
A laugh bubbled up in my throat—a dark, humorless sound. "He’s throwing a party while his house burns down. Typical."
I stood up, walking to the window. The moon was high and bright. Somewhere out there, Wesley was preparing to mark the woman he replaced me with, thinking he had won. Thinking I was still rotting in a shack.
"He wants a show?" I whispered, my reflection in the glass shifting, my eyes glowing silver. "I’ll give him a show."
I felt Fletcher stand behind me. He didn't try to stop me. He didn't tell me to let it go. He stepped close, his chest brushing my back, his presence a solid wall of support.
"The Royal Legion is at your command, Rachel," Fletcher said, his voice lethal and low in my ear. "Say the word, and we march. We will burn his fantasy to the ground."
I turned to face him, a cruel smile playing on my lips.
"Prepare the jet, Fletcher," I said. "We have a wedding to crash."
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