Follow
Chapters
Share
I Was Pregnant When His Real Luna Returned Novel Cover

I Was Pregnant When His Real Luna Returned

Sabrina left on a Tuesday night. She didn't say goodbye. She didn't leave an explanation, not really — just a folded note on top of her packed suitcase that said she refused to be auctioned off like livestock. The handwriting was neat and unhurried, like she'd had time to think about it. Like she'd been planning it for a while. I found out the same way I found out most things in our house. I was summoned. "Kitchen. Now." My mother's voice through the door, flat and clipped. I came downstairs in my socks to find both my parents standing at the kitchen island.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 4

I almost missed it.

Enzo reached over without looking at me, without breaking the conversation he was having with Damien, and straightened the collar of my cloak. One hand, two seconds, completely automatic — the way you'd adjust something that belonged to you.

I went very still.

Around us, the pack was assembling for the gathering in the main courtyard. Ranked wolves, Deltas, the Gamma's unit forming up near the east wall. I watched, in my peripheral vision, the three unmated males nearest to us take a single, synchronized step backward. Not dramatic. Not obvious. Just — back. Like something had been communicated that I hadn't heard.

Enzo finished his sentence to Damien and moved forward to take his place at the front.

I stood there with my cloak sitting perfectly straight on my shoulders and my wolf so quiet inside me that for a moment I thought something was wrong. Then I realized she wasn't distressed. She was just — still. The way you go still when something you've been waiting for finally arrives and you don't want to move in case it leaves.

I spent the rest of the gathering staring at the middle distance and trying very hard not to think about how warm his hands had been.

It didn't work.

---

I found the clinic by accident, three weeks ago. A small place on the edge of Millhaven, the human town twenty minutes from Ironveil, tucked between a pharmacy and a dry cleaner with a sign so modest you'd miss it if you weren't looking. I'd driven past it twice before I stopped.

I gave them a false name. Sarah. Sarah Collins. The receptionist didn't look up.

The examination room was small and very white and smelled like antiseptic and something faintly floral, and I sat on the edge of the table with my hands in my lap and waited for the healer to tell me what my body had been trying to tell me for days.

Four weeks.

She said it gently, the way people say things they've learned to deliver carefully. I nodded like I'd expected it, which I had, and then I sat there after she left the room and pressed my hand flat against my stomach and felt two things at exactly the same time.

Joy. The kind that comes up from somewhere so deep it frightens you, fierce and immediate and completely irrational given everything — the false name, the borrowed identity, the mate bond I had no right to. It was there before I could stop it, warm and absolute, and it had nothing to do with logic.

And terror. The kind that empties you out from the inside, that takes everything you've been carefully not thinking about and lays it out in front of you all at once. The documents with Sabrina's name. The pack that thought I was someone else. The Alpha who had touched my cloak this morning like it was the most natural thing in the world.

I sat in that white room for a long time.

On the drive back to Ironveil, I made a decision.

I was going to tell him. All of it. My real name, the pregnancy, the night my parents handed me Sabrina's luggage and told me to be someone else. I was going to walk into his office and I was going to tell him the truth and whatever happened after that — whatever he decided, whatever it cost me — at least it would be real. At least it would be mine.

I rehearsed it the whole way back. The words, the order, the part where I said *I'm not Sabrina* and watched his face change. I rehearsed it until it felt almost possible.

I was still rehearsing it when I walked through the front door of the pack house.

---

I heard her before I saw her.

That voice — bright and carrying and completely at ease with the space it occupied, the way Sabrina had always been at ease with every space she walked into. I stopped in the entrance hall doorway and my brain took a moment to catch up with what my eyes were seeing.

Sabrina. Standing in the foyer with her luggage piled behind her — three bags, the expensive ones, the ones our mother had bought her for the trip she'd refused to take. She was talking, her voice filling the room the way it always had, something about *her rightful place* and *the arrangement* and *what she was owed*.

Enzo was in front of her.

His hands were on her shoulders.

From where I stood, in the doorway, with the light coming from behind them — it looked like a reunion. It looked like two people who had been waiting for each other. His head was bent slightly toward hers, the posture close and private, and Sabrina's face was turned up toward him with that particular expression she wore when she was getting exactly what she wanted.

My wolf made a sound I had never heard from her before. Not a howl. Something worse — a low, broken thing, like something tearing.

Every insecurity I had ever carried detonated at once.

Of course. Of course this was how it ended. I had walked into a life that was never mine, wearing a name that wasn't mine, and I had let myself feel things I had no right to feel, and now the real Sabrina was back and Enzo's hands were on her shoulders and the universe was simply correcting its own mistake.

I had always been the substitute. I had just forgotten, for a little while, to remember that.

I pressed my fingertips together. Hard. The familiar pressure, the old anchor.

I turned around.

I walked back through the front door, down the steps, across the gravel drive. I didn't run. Running would have meant something was wrong, and I needed, more than anything, for nothing to look wrong. I needed to be invisible one more time. I was very good at invisible.

The evening air was cool against my face. The pack house lights were warm behind me.

I kept walking.

I did not tell anyone about the pup.

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Open the Official Website

You may also like

After My Mate Humiliated Me, I Struck Back Novel Cover
8.7
The full moon hung like a silver pendant in the night sky, casting an ethereal glow over the Moonstone Pack's ceremonial grounds. I smoothed down the front of my silver dress, a garment I'd spent weeks selecting for this special occasion. Tonight was meant to be a celebration—a time when the pack came together under the moon's blessing, when mates reaffirmed their bonds, and when I, as Luna, should have stood proudly beside my Alpha. Instead, I found myself on the periphery of the gathering, watching as Marcus commanded the attention of every wolf present. His powerful frame moved with casual dominance through the crowd, his dark hair catching the moonlight. And as always, Stephanie hovered nearby, her sleek figure draped in a dress that complemented his suit perfectly. "You should join them," whispered Silvana, my wolf, her voice tinged with the same longing I felt. "You are his Luna." I nodded, gathering my courage. Three years into our mate bond, and I still had to remind myself of my position. With trembling fingers, I pulled out my phone and approached Marcus during a rare moment when Stephanie had been called away.
After the Alpha’s Mistress Pushed Me into the Lake Novel Cover
8.6
The Winter Solstice Banquet was in full swing when I walked through the lakeside pavilion doors. Ice sculptures lined the entrance. White lights hung from every beam. The place was packed with allied pack representatives—Alphas, Betas, their mates. Everyone dressed sharp. Everyone smiling. I smoothed my hand over my belly. Five months along. The bump was obvious now under the soft blue dress I'd chosen. I'd thought, maybe tonight, Gideon would acknowledge it.
Alpha's Betrayal Unveiled Novel Cover
8.5
I smoothed down the front of my silver gown, the one Alexander had gifted me on our fifth anniversary, as I entered the monthly Silverfang council meeting. The familiar faces of pack members nodded respectfully as I passed, taking my seat beside the ornate chair reserved for my mate, the Alpha. Seven years as Luna had taught me the rhythm of these gatherings—budget discussions, territory reports, and the occasional dispute resolution. Nothing I couldn't handle with the grace expected of Alexander's mate. My wolf, Aria, stirred within me. *Something feels wrong today.* I dismissed her concern with practiced ease. *It's just another meeting, dear one.* But when Alexander entered, his gaze swept past me as if I were invisible. The chill that ran down my spine wasn't just from the draft in the ancient stone chamber. "Let's begin," he announced, his voice carrying that natural authority that had first drawn me to him all those years ago. The meeting proceeded normally until Sarah Mitchell, the Beta's sister, rose from her seat across the chamber.
Betrayed by My Alpha Mate Novel Cover
9.8
The cold stone table beneath me had become as familiar as my own bed these past months. I stared at the ceiling of the medical chamber, counting the cracks in the plaster as the pack healer inserted another needle into my arm. The sharp sting barely registered anymore. "Hold still," he muttered, though I hadn't moved. My body had learned that resistance only made things worse. I watched my blood flow through the clear tube, crimson life force destined for another woman's veins. For Luna Blackwood. The woman my mate had chosen over me, despite our bond, despite the child growing inside me. His child. The first rays of dawn filtered through the high windows, casting long shadows across the room.
Fated To The Alpha Novel Cover
9.1
She has no wolf. He is her fated mate. But you can't run from fate. Katya has always been different. Born to a Beta father and a legendary warrior mother, she was meant to be strong, powerful—a future leader. Instead, she has nothing. No wolf. No connection to the Moon Goddess. No place in her pack. On the night of her 18th birthday, everything shatters. Her family is disgraced, their titles stripped, and they are forced into exile. Seeking refuge in the Black Creek Pack, Katya tries to start over, to prove her worth even if it means hiding the one thing that could destroy her. However, Katya finds keeping her secret harder than she thought when the Alpha shows a keen interest in her. She is forced to move into the packhouse. With nowhere to hide, she is forced to take extreme measures to keep him from discovering she has no wolf. But then fate intervenes. Ezra is her mate. Katya never wanted a mate. Not when she has spent her entire life being told she is not enough. And Ezra cannot understand how the Moon Goddess would pair him with a wolf-less mate. Now, Katya and Ezra must decide—fight fate or embrace it. Because love may be the most powerful magic of all.
Grandma's Ultimate Sacrifice Novel Cover
8.4
After Thanksgiving, Grandma insisted I take a herbal remedy. Her voice was filled with fear as she said, "The holiday's over, and it's coming back. Once you've taken the remedy, scales will appear on your body when it shows up." Back in the city, my boyfriend Kendrick couldn't wait to get close. The moment he hugged me, an unbearable itch spread across my back. I reached around to scratch and felt several hard scales. The cold, slimy sensation sent a shiver down my spine, like an electric shock. Kendrick teased, "How come you're so sensitive after just one holiday?" I couldn’t believe it and ran my fingers over the spot several times, only to confirm it wasn't an illusion. Beneath those scales, it felt as if countless tiny bugs were sucking and wriggling. The deep, relentless itch made my nails dig painfully into my skin. At the same time, an uncontrollable chill crept through my body.