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Luna's Rebirth: After the Alpha Rejects Her Plea Novel Cover

Luna's Rebirth: After the Alpha Rejects Her Plea

"The evidence is irrefutable," Caelan's voice rang out, clear and authoritative. My mate—my beloved Alpha—held up a stack of documents, his dark eyes scanning the assembled council members with practiced gravity. "Alpha Ronan O'Rourke has committed acts of treason against the territorial accords." The words hit me like physical blows. Treason. My father. I pressed my hand against my belly, feeling our unborn child shift restlessly inside me, as if sensing my distress. The baby kicked hard, and I had to steady myself against the stone pillar beside me. "These documents," Caelan continued, his voice never wavering, "detail unauthorized military movements, secret negotiations with enemy packs, and the deliberate weakening of our territorial defenses." Elder Faelan leaned forward in his seat, his weathered face grave. "These are serious accusations, Alpha Caelan. What proof do we have of their authenticity?" Caelan's lips curved into what might have been a smile, but there was no warmth in it. "The documents bear Luna Aislin's seal and signature. She can verify their legitimacy." Every eye in the chamber turned to me. The weight of their stares felt crushing, but it was nothing compared to the ice-cold realization spreading through my chest. Those late nights when Caelan had asked me to review correspondence. The defensive strategies I had helped him draft. The supply chain modifications I had approved at his request. I had signed my father's death warrant without even knowing it. "Luna Aislin?" Elder Faelan's voice seemed to come from very far away. "Can you confirm these documents?"
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Chapter 2

The first thing I noticed when I woke was the silence.

Not the comfortable quiet of early morning in our chambers, but something heavier, more deliberate. The kind of silence that pressed against your ears and made you strain to hear what should have been there—the familiar sounds of pack life stirring to wakefulness beyond our walls.

I pushed myself up from the bed, my swollen belly making the movement awkward and slow. The baby had been restless all night, kicking and turning as if sensing my unease. Now, in the pale light filtering through the windows, I felt that same restlessness clawing at my chest.

Something was wrong.

I moved to the window, my bare feet silent on the cold stone floor. What I saw made my blood freeze in my veins.

The Silverclaw banners that had flown outside our chambers for as long as I could remember were gone. In their place hung the black and silver wolf crests of Blackridge—Caelan's personal emblem. The sight hit me like a physical blow, and I had to grip the window frame to keep from staggering.

This wasn't just political maneuvering. This was conquest.

My hands shook as I reached for the writing desk in the corner of our chambers. If I could just get word to my father, explain what had happened in the council chamber, make him understand that I had been deceived—

I wrote three letters that morning. Each one carefully worded, explaining my innocence, begging for a chance to speak with him. I sealed them with my personal signet and called for the servants who usually attended me.

None came.

I tried the door to our chambers and found it locked from the outside. The sound of the handle refusing to turn echoed in the room like a death knell. I was a prisoner in my own home.

Hours passed. I paced the confines of our chambers like a caged wolf, my mind racing through possibilities, explanations, escape routes. The baby kicked constantly now, as if feeding off my agitation. I pressed my hands to my belly, trying to calm both myself and the child within.

"Shh," I whispered to my unborn son or daughter. "Everything will be all right. Your grandfather will come for us. He'll understand."

But even as I spoke the words, I felt their hollowness. The Blackridge banners outside our windows told a different story.

As darkness fell, I heard them.

Footsteps in the corridor outside our chambers, but not the measured pace of servants or the casual gait of pack members going about their evening routines. These were the sharp, purposeful steps of soldiers. Armed soldiers, from the sound of the metal that clinked softly with each footfall.

I pressed my ear to the door, my heart hammering against my ribs.

"—positions by midnight," a voice was saying. I recognized it as Liam, Caelan's second-in-command. The man who had once smiled at me with respectful warmth now spoke with the cold efficiency of a military operation.

"What about the main keep?" another voice asked.

"We storm it at dawn. The Alpha's guard will be minimal—most of them are still loyal to the old ways. They won't expect an attack from within."

The words crashed over me like ice water. Storm the main keep. My father's stronghold. The heart of Silverclaw territory.

This wasn't just a political coup. This was war.

"And if there's resistance?" the second voice pressed.

"There won't be," Liam replied with chilling certainty. "The Alpha is isolated. His daughter is... contained. His most trusted advisors have already been dealt with. By tomorrow evening, Blackridge will control everything."

Their footsteps continued down the corridor, but I remained frozen against the door, my mind reeling. Dealt with. What did that mean? Were my father's advisors dead? Imprisoned? How many people had Caelan's forces already eliminated in this carefully orchestrated takeover?

And how long had this been planned?

The questions multiplied in my mind like poison, each one more devastating than the last. Every moment of tenderness Caelan had shown me, every piece of advice he'd given, every document he'd asked me to review—it all took on a sinister new meaning.

I had been his unwitting accomplice in my own father's destruction.

The baby kicked hard, and I gasped, doubling over slightly. The movement was sharp enough to bring tears to my eyes, but I welcomed the physical pain. It was easier to bear than the emotional agony tearing through my chest.

I couldn't stay here. I couldn't remain locked in these chambers while my father faced Caelan's forces alone. Whatever was happening, whatever Caelan had planned, I had to warn him.

I moved through our chambers with desperate purpose, searching for anything that might help me escape. The main door was locked and likely guarded. The windows were too high and too narrow. But there—behind the tapestry depicting the founding of Silverclaw—was the servants' entrance.

My fingers found the hidden catch, and the narrow door swung open silently. The passage beyond was dark and cramped, designed for discretion rather than comfort. I had used it as a child to sneak treats from the kitchens, never imagining I would one day use it to escape my own husband.

The passage wound through the walls of the keep, emerging in the lower levels near the kitchens. I could hear voices and movement throughout the building—too much activity for the middle of the night. Caelan's forces were already in motion.

I slipped through the shadows, my pregnancy making stealth difficult but not impossible. Every step sent fresh waves of fear through me, but I pressed on. I had to reach my father. I had to warn him.

The first flames appeared as I reached the outer courtyard.

Orange light danced against the stone walls, and the acrid smell of smoke filled the air. Shouts echoed from multiple directions—orders being barked, metal clashing against metal, the sounds of battle erupting throughout the keep.

I ran.

My swollen belly made each step awkward and painful, but terror drove me forward. The baby thrashed inside me as if trying to escape the chaos surrounding us. I pressed one hand to my stomach and used the other to steady myself against walls and doorframes as I navigated the familiar paths of my childhood home.

The main gate came into view just as the worst of my fears materialized before my eyes.

My father stood in the center of the courtyard, surrounded by Caelan's soldiers. Even from a distance, I could see the blood on his clothes, the exhaustion in his stance. He had fought—of course he had fought—but he was outnumbered and overwhelmed.

Liam stepped forward, his sword gleaming in the firelight.

"No!" The scream tore from my throat, but it was too late.

The blade slid between my father's ribs with sickening ease. For a moment, time seemed suspended. My father's eyes found mine across the courtyard, and I saw recognition flicker in them. His lips moved, forming my name, but no sound emerged.

Then he fell.

I collapsed to my knees in the dirt, my hands pressed to the ground as if I could somehow anchor myself against the reality of what I had just witnessed. The sound that came from my throat wasn't quite human—a keening wail of grief and rage that seemed to tear something vital from my chest.

"Father!" I screamed his name over and over, my voice growing hoarse and broken. "Father, no!"

Rough hands seized my arms, hauling me to my feet. I fought against them, clawing and struggling, but my pregnant body was no match for trained soldiers. They dragged me away from my father's still form, away from the spreading pool of blood that reflected the flames consuming our home.

That's when I saw him.

Caelan stood on the raised platform overlooking the courtyard, his dark silhouette framed against the burning keep. Even from this distance, I could see the coldness in his posture, the complete absence of emotion as he surveyed the destruction he had orchestrated.

When his eyes met mine, there was nothing there. No regret, no love, no recognition of the woman who had shared his bed and carried his child. Just the calculating gaze of a conqueror assessing a defeated enemy.

"The rebellion has been quelled," his voice rang out across the courtyard, clear and authoritative. "Silverclaw is now under Blackridge protection."

Protection. The word was obscene in the context of my father's blood soaking into the earth.

As the guards dragged me back toward the keep, I twisted in their grip for one last look at the man I had loved. He remained on his platform, unmoved by my struggles, untouched by my grief.

In that moment, I understood with crystalline clarity that the Caelan I had fallen in love with had never existed at all.

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