
Betrayed Luna's Triumph
Chapter 3
Blood soaked into the earth beneath us as I struggled to maintain consciousness. Emma's sobs pierced through the haze of pain, her small body trembling as she pressed her hand against the wound on her shoulder.
"Mom, I'm scared," she whimpered, her face pale beneath streaks of dirt and tears.
"Stay with me, sweetheart," I managed, my voice barely audible over the pounding in my ears. The rogue's claws had torn through my side, and each breath sent fresh waves of agony through my body.
I reached for the emergency beacon in my pocket, my fingers slick with blood. "Help is coming," I promised, though I wasn't sure if I believed it myself.
The mind-link opened suddenly, Nolan's presence filling my consciousness with startling clarity.
"Katherine," his voice echoed in my mind. "I'm receiving reports of the attack."
"Thank the Moon Goddess," I thought back, relief washing over me. "Emma's hurt badly. We need you."
The silence that followed lasted only seconds, but it felt eternal.
"I can't come," he finally responded, his mental voice distant and cold. "Melanie just contacted me. Jake's first shift ceremony is happening tonight. I need to be there."
The words hit harder than any rogue's claws.
"Nolan, we're bleeding! Your daughter needs you!"
"The pack's future Alpha needs me more," he replied, his tone final. "Gamma patrol is already on their way to you."
The mind-link closed abruptly, leaving me gasping not from physical pain but from the hollow ache of betrayal.
"Mom?" Emma's voice was small, frightened. "Is Dad coming?"
I swallowed hard, forcing my voice to remain steady. "Gamma patrol is on their way, sweetheart. Just hold on."
Twenty minutes later—twenty minutes of Emma's weakening whimpers and my own fading consciousness—the Gamma team finally arrived. By then, Emma had stopped crying entirely, her eyes glassy with shock.
---
The antiseptic smell of the pack infirmary burned my nostrils as consciousness returned. Bandages wrapped around my torso, and the dull ache of healing magic throbbed beneath my skin.
Emma lay in the bed beside mine, her small form dwarfed by the white sheets. Her shoulder was heavily bandaged, her face peaceful in sedated sleep.
"She's stable," the pack healer murmured, checking my vitals. "The wounds were deep, but she'll recover fully."
"What about her wolf?" I asked, my throat raw.
The healer's expression darkened. "Still no sign of emergence. The trauma... it may have delayed her even further."
Voices drifted from the hallway—pack members visiting other patients, their conversations carrying through the thin walls.
"I don't understand how he could leave them," a female voice hissed. "His own mate and daughter, bleeding in the forest."
"He's the Alpha," another responded defensively. "Difficult choices have to be made."
"Difficult choices?" the first voice scoffed. "What's more important than family?"
I closed my eyes, letting their words wash over me. The pack was divided—some outraged by Nolan's abandonment, others blindly defending their Alpha's decisions.
A gentle knock interrupted my thoughts. Elder Sophia Blackwood stood in the doorway, her silver hair gleaming in the dim light.
"May I speak with you privately, Luna Katherine?" she asked, though her tone suggested it wasn't really a question.
I nodded, and she approached, her eyes darting to Emma's sleeping form before settling on me.
"These ancient artifacts," she said quietly, pressing something small and cool into my palm. "They hold secrets about our pack's healing abilities. Secrets that have been... misused."
Before I could respond, she leaned closer. "The historical archives in the east wing. Look there for answers about your mate's gifts."
Then she was gone, leaving me clutching what felt like a small stone pendant and her cryptic warning echoing in my mind.
---
Midnight found me standing alone in the pack's sacred grove, my body still aching from the rogue attack. The ancient trees swayed overhead, their leaves whispering secrets I was only beginning to understand.
I knew what I had to do.
"Under the witness of the Moon Goddess," I began, my voice steady despite the tears streaming down my face, "I, Katherine Boyd, reject the mate bond with Nolan Boyd."
The words felt like glass in my throat, each syllable cutting deeper than the last.
"I reclaim my heart, my soul, and my future," I continued, feeling something inside me begin to tear—the mate bond stretching thin as I spoke the ancient words.
"By my will and the Goddess's mercy, let this bond be broken."
The final words left my lips in a rush of breath. For one suspended moment, nothing happened.
Then pain—sharp, sudden, and overwhelming—tore through my chest as the mate bond snapped like a physical cord.
I collapsed to my knees, gasping for air as the connection that had defined me for years shattered completely.
But beneath the pain, beneath the grief and shock, I felt something unexpected bloom in my chest.
Freedom.
For the first time since meeting Nolan, I could think clearly without his influence clouding my judgment. I could feel my own emotions without his Alpha presence dampening or amplifying them.
I was Katherine Boyd again—not just Luna, not just mate, but me.
And I was finally free to uncover the truth about the man I had loved.
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