
He Called Me A Convenient Luna
Chapter 2
The elevator ride to my private laboratory felt longer than usual, each floor counting down like a timer on my old life. My palm still throbbed from the shattered moonstone, but I welcomed the sharp reminder of what I'd just discovered. The blood had dried into dark crescents under my fingernails—fitting, considering I was about to perform surgery on seven years of my own work.
My keycard beeped against the scanner, and the lab door hissed open. The familiar scent of cedar and chemical compounds should have been comforting, but tonight it felt like walking into a tomb. Everything here—the custom-built centrifuge, the temperature-controlled storage units, the meticulously organized compound library—represented thousands of hours of research that Lucian had dismissed as "little pharmaceutical projects."
I moved to the main terminal with mechanical precision, my fingers flying across the keyboard as I initiated Protocol Seven—the data lockdown sequence I'd programmed months ago but never thought I'd use. Each keystroke felt like a small act of rebellion.
"Access transferred to external servers," the screen confirmed. "Local files encrypted. Authorization required for future access."
I changed every password, every security code, every backup authorization. The combat enhancement serums that had made Black Moon warriors legendary? Mine. The rapid healing compounds that had saved dozens of pack members? Mine. The territorial scent maskers that had given us strategic advantages in negotiations? All mine.
My phone buzzed against the laboratory bench. A text message from Miranda, but the preview made my stomach clench.
"Oops! Wrong number! But since you're reading this... do you like the necklace? Lucian has such exquisite taste. The diamonds catch the light so beautifully when I'm beneath him."
Attached was a photo of Miranda's throat adorned with the Cartier necklace I'd admired in the jewelry store window six months ago. The same necklace I'd hinted about for my birthday, my anniversary, Christmas. The price tag had been fifteen thousand dollars—money that apparently was better spent on his secretary's satisfaction than his future Luna's happiness.
My hands stilled on the keyboard. For a moment, the old Barbara surfaced—the one who would have demanded explanations, who would have confronted Lucian with tears and accusations. Who would have begged to know what Miranda had that I didn't.
But that Barbara had died in the hallway outside his office.
I picked up my phone and typed back with steady fingers: "Have fun."
Two words. Simple, clean, final. I hit send and immediately blocked her number.
The lab's computer chimed softly as the final data transfer completed. Terabytes of research, formulations, and supplier contacts—the entire foundation of Black Moon's pharmaceutical advantage—now existed only in servers that required my biometric authorization to access.
I pulled out my phone again, this time scrolling to a contact I'd cultivated carefully over the past year. Captain Rodriguez at Seattle Port Authority owed me a favor after I'd developed a motion sickness remedy for his crew. Time to collect.
"Captain, this is Barbara Chen. I need passage to New York on the earliest available vessel. Tonight if possible."
"Dr. Chen? It's past midnight. Is everything alright?"
"Emergency relocation for work. Can you help me?"
A pause, then: "The Wentworth Maritime freighter leaves at dawn. They've got executive quarters available. I can make a call."
Wentworth Maritime. The irony wasn't lost on me—even my escape route seemed to be pointing toward my new employer. "Please do. I'll be there within the hour."
"Consider it done. Safe travels, Doc."
I hung up and looked around the lab one final time. Seven years of my life lived in these walls, in the careful notes tucked into filing cabinets, in the prototype compounds lined up like soldiers on the shelves. Lucian thought he owned all of this. Tomorrow, he'd discover exactly how wrong he was.
My phone buzzed again. Another text from an unknown number—Miranda using a different phone.
"You can't ignore me forever, Barbara. We need to talk about tomorrow's ceremony. Lucian wants me to coordinate with you on the final arrangements."
The audacity was breathtaking. She wanted me to help plan my own humiliation, to coordinate the logistics of my replacement. I stared at the message for a long moment, then deleted it without responding.
Instead, I opened my laptop and began typing an email to every department head in Black Moon Pack:
"Due to unforeseen circumstances, all pharmaceutical operations will be suspended effective immediately. Current inventory should be preserved for emergency use only. No new production can be authorized without my direct involvement. Thank you for your cooperation. - Dr. Barbara Chen, Head of Pharmaceutical Development"
I scheduled the email to send at 6 AM, two hours after I'd be on a ship heading east.
The laboratory felt smaller now, like a cocoon I'd finally outgrown. I gathered the few personal items that mattered—my research journals, a photo of my parents, the fountain pen my mother had given me for my college graduation. Everything else could stay. Let Lucian figure out what to do with equipment he didn't understand, producing compounds he couldn't replicate.
As I packed, my mind wandered to the conversation I'd overheard. "She'll never leave," he'd said with such certainty. The confidence of a man who'd never bothered to truly know the woman he claimed to love.
But I wasn't leaving—I was evolving. The Barbara who had spent seven years making herself smaller, quieter, more convenient, was staying behind in this lab. The woman boarding that ship at dawn would be someone entirely new.
My phone chimed with a final notification. The Wentworth Pharmaceuticals contract had arrived, dense with legal language that boiled down to one simple truth: they valued my work enough to pay me what I was worth.
I signed it with my mother's fountain pen, each letter of my name feeling like a small act of resurrection.
The lab door sealed behind me with a soft hiss, and I didn't look back. In six hours, I'd be watching Seattle's skyline shrink in the distance. By tomorrow evening, while Lucian stood at the altar waiting for a bride who would never come, I'd be in Manhattan, starting the life I should have built seven years ago.
The elevator carried me down toward the parking garage, toward my car, toward the port where a new future waited. My reflection in the polished steel doors looked different somehow—sharper, more defined. Like someone who'd finally stopped apologizing for taking up space.
Tomorrow's coronation would still be memorable, just not in the way anyone expected. I smiled at my reflection, and for the first time in years, the woman looking back smiled like she had secrets worth keeping.
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