
Bound to the Alpha, Crowned as Luna
Chapter 2
Silence ruled the clearing.
Not the peaceful kind—but the heavy, suffocating silence that followed disaster. The kind that pressed against the ears until even breathing felt like a crime.
Silver light still clung to my skin, pulsing softly like a second heartbeat. I knelt at the center of the cracked earth, my hands trembling as power settled into my bones. The air smelled of ozone, moonfire, and fear.
Fear—because for the first time in my life, they were afraid of me.
I slowly lifted my head.
Dozens of wolves stared back at me, frozen in place. Some had fallen to their knees, others had taken instinctive steps backward. Even the strongest warriors of the Silver Fang Pack looked uncertain, their hands hovering near their weapons.
I searched for one face.
Alpha Kael Blackthorn.
He stood rigid a few steps away, his expression carved from stone, but his eyes betrayed him. The crimson glow had dimmed, replaced by something darker—something unsettled.
Regret?
No. A man like him didn’t regret.
But he feared what he didn’t control.
“What… what is she?” someone whispered.
“The Moonborn Luna,” Elder Rowan said hoarsely. He remained on his knees, his head bowed low. “A legend. A myth meant to remind Alphas they do not rule alone.”
My heart stuttered.
Moonborn Luna.
The words echoed in my mind, heavy with meaning I didn’t yet understand. I looked down at my hands, at the silver veins faintly glowing beneath my skin. This power—this presence—felt ancient, as though it had been waiting centuries for this moment.
Waiting for me.
“That’s impossible,” another Elder snapped, though his voice trembled. “The Moonborn line was extinguished generations ago.”
“Or hidden,” Elder Rowan replied quietly. “Protected until the world needed balance again.”
My gaze snapped back to Kael.
His jaw tightened. “Enough.”
The authority in his voice rippled outward, forcing some of the wolves to straighten despite their fear. Alpha command. I felt it brush against my consciousness—strong, demanding—
And stop.
Like a wave crashing against an unmovable cliff.
Kael’s eyes flickered.
I felt it then—clear as the moon overhead.
He could not command me.
A murmur swept through the crowd.
“The Alpha’s command didn’t work.”
“She resisted him.”
“No one resists an Alpha…”
Kael took a slow step toward me. Each movement was careful, calculated, as though approaching a wild and dangerous creature.
Perhaps I was one.
“Ariella,” he said, my name heavy on his tongue.
It was the first time he had ever spoken it.
My chest tightened, but I refused to look away.
“You will come with me,” he ordered. “Now.”
The bond stirred between us—unbroken, pulsing with undeniable force. But alongside it was something new. Something higher. Older.
A gentle pull—not from him, but from above.
The moon.
I rose to my feet.
Gasps followed as I stood effortlessly, the ground smoothing beneath my bare feet as if bowing to me. My knees didn’t shake. My heart didn’t race.
For the first time in my life, I felt… steady.
“I will not,” I said.
The words left my mouth calm, steady—nothing like the quiet, submissive voice I had been forced to use for years.
Shock rippled through the clearing.
Kael’s eyes darkened. “You forget yourself.”
“No,” I replied softly. “I believe I am finally remembering.”
The moonlight brightened, bathing the clearing in silver. The air shifted again, thick with divine presence.
A voice echoed—not from the earth, but from everywhere.
“Enough.”
Every wolf dropped to their knees.
Every wolf—except me.
The Moon Goddess’s presence wrapped around me like a cloak, warm and unyielding.
“You rejected what was mine,” the voice continued, sharp as judgment. “And in doing so, you awakened what should never kneel.”
Kael fell to one knee.
The sight sent a strange twist through my chest. The mighty Alpha—bowed.
“Alpha Kael Blackthorn,” the Goddess said, “your bond remains. Your rejection did not sever fate—it tested it.”
My breath hitched.
“You will protect her,” the Goddess commanded. “Not as a mate she must submit to—but as a queen you must answer to.”
A collective gasp echoed.
Kael’s fists clenched against the ground. “And if I refuse?”
The moonlight dimmed, just slightly.
“Then you will lose everything you rule.”
Silence followed.
The Goddess’s presence slowly withdrew, leaving the clearing cold and shaken. The moon returned to its normal glow, but nothing felt normal anymore.
I stood there, heart pounding, as reality settled in.
I was no longer wolfless.
I was no longer nothing.
Kael rose slowly to his feet, his gaze never leaving mine. Something unreadable burned behind his eyes.
“This changes nothing,” he said quietly, though his voice lacked its former certainty. “You will remain under my protection. The pack will not touch you.”
Protection.
After years of abuse, the word tasted strange.
“And if I refuse that?” I asked.
A dangerous silence stretched between us.
“You won’t,” he said.
I tilted my head, studying him—not as a frightened girl, but as an equal. “You rejected me publicly,” I said. “So I will not stand quietly beside you now.”
Whispers erupted around us.
“She’s challenging the Alpha.”
“She’s mad.”
“She’s powerful…”
Kael leaned closer, his voice low. “You don’t understand what you are.”
“Neither do you,” I replied.
For a moment, something shifted between us—raw, electric, tangled. The bond pulsed, alive and aching.
Then Elder Rowan stepped forward carefully. “Alpha… the laws are clear. A Moonborn Luna cannot remain untrained. She must be guided.”
“By whom?” Kael asked sharply.
The Elder’s gaze lifted—to me.
“By the Alpha,” he said. “Or by the Moon herself.”
I exhaled slowly.
“I choose neither,” I said. “Not yet.”
Kael’s eyes narrowed. “You test dangerous boundaries.”
“I’ve lived in danger my entire life,” I replied. “This is the first time it doesn’t belong to me alone.”
I turned away from him—away from the pack that had broken me—and took my first step toward the forest.
No one stopped me.
The trees parted as I approached, their leaves shimmering silver under the moonlight. With each step, I felt my wolf stir—vast, luminous, and patient.
Soon, it whispered. They will know our name.
Behind me, I felt Kael watching.
I didn’t look back.
Because the girl who once begged for belonging had died under the moon.
And in her place walked something the realm had forgotten how to kneel to.
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