
Luna Rejects Cheating Alpha
Chapter 3
The pack meeting hall had never felt so charged with tension. I stood before the semicircle of Moonrise Pack's most respected members—the elders, healers, and senior warriors whose opinions shaped our community's future. Marcus stood at my right, his presence a steady anchor as I faced the council.
"These are serious allegations, London," Elder Blackwood said, her ancient eyes studying me carefully. "You understand what you're asking for?"
I nodded, my grip tightening on the leather folder in my hands. "I do. And I wouldn't bring this before the council if there were any other way."
Aria stirred within me, her presence stronger each day since Dylan's birth. *Show them. Make them see what he's done.*
One by one, I presented the evidence we'd gathered. Photographs of Sullivan bringing Yasmin into sacred spaces meant only for pack leadership. Documents showing pack resources diverted to renovate the Alpha residence for her comfort. Testimonies from pack members who'd witnessed her intercepting official communications.
"Most damning," I said, pulling out a final document, "is this. Authorization for territory negotiations with the Eastern Ridge Pack—negotiations that should have been handled by the Alpha, but were instead conducted by Yasmin without proper oversight."
The council members exchanged troubled glances as they passed the document among themselves.
"This is unprecedented," Healer Morris finally said, her normally calm voice tight with concern. "A rogue with no formal standing making decisions that affect our entire pack."
"And Sullivan allowed it," I added quietly. "In fact, he encouraged it."
The formal hearing lasted hours. Pack members came forward one after another, each testimony more damaging than the last. Warrior Kane described how Sullivan had neglected border patrols, spending days at a time away from pack duties while pursuing his obsession with Yasmin. Elder Morris recounted how Yasmin had disrupted sacred ceremonies, wearing symbols she had no right to claim.
"She told my daughter that as the new Luna, she would decide who could participate in the coming-of-age rituals," one mother testified, her voice trembling with barely controlled anger. "My daughter has been preparing for that ceremony her entire life."
Throughout it all, Sullivan sat stone-faced, his eyes never meeting mine. Yasmin wasn't even present—a final insult that seemed to seal their fate.
When the voting began, I held my breath. One by one, the council members cast their votes.
"For removal of Alpha status: unanimous," Elder Blackwood announced, her voice heavy with the weight of the decision. "For permanent banishment of the rogue Yasmin Wagner: unanimous."
Sullivan finally looked at me then, his eyes a storm of emotions I couldn't—or wouldn't—decipher.
"You have three days," I told him quietly when the council had dispersed. "Three days to gather whatever you wish to take with you."
"Don't think this is over," he replied, but his voice lacked conviction.
I watched him walk away, feeling nothing but a hollow exhaustion where our bond had once been.
---
Six months passed in a blur of rebuilding and healing. I threw myself into pack duties, into raising Dylan, into anything that kept me from dwelling on the emptiness inside me where Sullivan once resided.
Then Dylan fell ill.
I'd never seen anything like it—a fever that burned through his tiny body like wildfire, his skin almost too hot to touch. His cries were weak, his eyes glassy with pain.
"This isn't normal," our pack doctor said, her face drawn with concern. "I've never seen a pup this young with wolf fever this severe."
We tried everything. Cool compresses. Herbal remedies. Prayer ceremonies under the full moon. Nothing helped.
"I'll contact neighboring territories," Marcus promised. "There must be someone who can help."
For three days, Dylan's condition worsened. I barely left his side, singing lullabies through my tears, whispering promises that I would find a way to save him.
On the third night, as moonlight spilled through the window of the pack hospital, a stranger arrived.
"I'm Nicholas Holmes," he said simply, setting down his healer's bag. "I understand you need help with your son."
Something about him made Aria stir within me—a recognition that sent a jolt through my exhausted body.
"Where have you been?" our doctor asked, relief evident in her voice. "We've been sending messages to every healer in the region."
Nicholas's eyes—a warm amber that seemed to see straight through me—never left Dylan's tiny form. "I was in the northern territories. I came as soon as I received word."
For three days, Nicholas barely left Dylan's side. He worked with a quiet intensity that commanded respect, mixing herbs with practiced hands, singing ancient healing songs that seemed to ease my son's pain.
On the third night, as Dylan's fever finally broke, I felt something impossible stir within me—a pull toward this stranger that made no sense after everything I'd been through.
Aria whined softly. *Him. It's him.*
"No," I whispered, backing away from Nicholas as he turned to me with a gentle smile. "I can't. Not again."
But as our eyes met, I knew with terrible certainty that the Moon Goddess had sent me a second chance at love—and that terrified me more than anything.
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