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Betrayed Luna's New Hope Novel Cover

Betrayed Luna's New Hope

The silver dress whispered against my legs as I climbed the mahogany staircase, each step careful and deliberate. Eight years. Eight years since Deacon had slipped this very dress over my head on our first anniversary, his hands trembling with what I'd believed was love. The memory warmed me as I balanced the handmade ceremonial candles in my arms, their vanilla and rosemary scent filling the hallway—the same fragrance that had marked our original mating ceremony. I'd spent weeks crafting these candles in secret, melting down the wax from our first anniversary dinner, embedding dried moonflowers from our mating grove. Tonight would be perfect. A private renewal ceremony, just the two of us, before the pack's formal celebration tomorrow. My bare feet made no sound on the hardwood as I approached our bedroom door. The twins were safely tucked away in their rooms, and the pack house had settled into its evening quiet. This moment belonged to us alone.
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Chapter 3

The ceremonial drums echoed through the pack house as I arranged silver platters of honey cakes and moon-blessed wine on the serving table. My hands trembled slightly as I smoothed the white serving apron over my simple gray dress—a far cry from the ceremonial robes I'd once worn to such occasions.

Today marked the blessing ceremony for three new births in our pack, including Myra's announcement about her pregnancy. The great hall buzzed with excitement, pack members dressed in their finest clothes, children weaving between adults with barely contained energy.

I kept my eyes down as I worked, focusing on the precise arrangement of crystal goblets. Each movement felt mechanical, practiced—the motions of a servant who knew her place.

"Scout, more wine for the council table," Beta James called out, his voice carefully neutral. He wouldn't meet my eyes anymore, hadn't since that night three weeks ago when he'd escorted me to the dungeons.

I lifted the heavy silver pitcher and made my way through the crowd. Conversations quieted as I passed, replaced by meaningful glances and whispered observations.

"Look how far she's fallen," someone murmured behind me.

"It's for the best," another voice replied. "The pack needs real strength now."

At the council table, Elder Morrison gestured for his goblet without looking at me. "Fill it properly this time," he said dismissively. "We can't have sloppy service during such an important ceremony."

My cheeks burned as I poured the wine with steady hands, determined not to spill a single drop. Around the table, the other council members discussed pack business as if I were invisible furniture.

"The border patrols report increased rogue activity," Gamma Stevens was saying. "We'll need stronger leadership to handle the threats."

"Fortunately, that's exactly what we're celebrating today," Elder Morrison replied, raising his freshly filled goblet toward the front of the hall.

Myra stood at the ceremonial altar, resplendent in deep blue silk that caught the candlelight. The Luna's circlet gleamed in her dark hair, and her hand rested protectively over her still-flat stomach. She commanded the room's attention with an authority I'd never quite managed.

"My fellow pack members," Myra's voice carried easily through the hall, rich with confidence and warmth. "Today we celebrate not just new life, but the promise of our pack's strongest future."

Applause rippled through the crowd. I continued my silent circuit with the wine pitcher, invisible among the celebration.

"The child I carry," Myra continued, her voice growing stronger, "represents the true heir our pack has been waiting for. With bloodlines tracing back to European Lycan nobility, this pup will possess Alpha strength beyond anything we've seen in generations."

My steps faltered slightly. True heir. The words hit like physical blows, each syllable designed to cut away whatever remained of my children's legitimacy—and mine.

"Unlike previous... attempts at producing strong leadership," Myra's eyes found mine across the room, her smile sharp as winter wind, "this child will be born from a union of pure strength. No diluted bloodlines. No weak wolf genetics to compromise our pack's future."

The crowd murmured approval. I caught fragments of conversation as I moved between tables:

"About time we had proper breeding protocols."

"Those poor twins, imagine what they could have been with stronger genetics."

"Myra understands what real leadership requires."

Near the front of the hall, I spotted Kai and Kira sitting with their new tutor, Miss Elena. My heart clenched at the sight of them—my babies, dressed in formal clothes I hadn't been allowed to help them choose, their small faces serious as they listened to Myra's speech.

I approached their table to refill water glasses, desperate for even a moment near them. "Kai, sweetheart, do you need—"

"We don't need anything from you," Kira said without looking up, her voice carrying that disturbing adult authority. "Miss Elena takes care of us now."

Kai nodded solemnly. "Aunt Myra says the true heir will teach us what real Alpha strength looks like. We're going to be the most powerful Alphas because we're learning from someone strong."

The water pitcher nearly slipped from my numb fingers. My own children, discussing their replacement sibling with eager anticipation, completely convinced that I had been the obstacle to their greatness.

"Children," Miss Elena said smoothly, "remember what we discussed about showing proper respect for pack hierarchy. Even former Lunas deserve basic courtesy."

Former Luna. The title hit like a slap, casual and final.

Myra's voice rose from the altar, drawing the room's attention back to her grand announcement. "This true heir will unite our pack under genuine strength, healing the divisions caused by... previous leadership failures."

The crowd erupted in enthusiastic applause. Pack members raised their goblets in toast, their faces bright with hope and excitement for this promised future—a future that required erasing everything I'd given this pack.

I backed away from my children's table, the empty water pitcher clutched against my chest like armor. Around me, the celebration continued, voices rising in joy for the child who would replace mine, the Luna who had already replaced me.

The ceremonial drums beat on, marking time for a future where I no longer existed.

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