
Luna's Rebirth: After the Alpha Rejects Her Plea
Chapter 3
The guards who escorted me back to my chambers were different from the ones who had served my family for years. These men wore Blackridge colors, their faces cold and unfamiliar. They deposited me at the door like a piece of cargo, their boots echoing down the corridor as they took up positions outside.
I sank onto the bed, my hands instinctively moving to my swollen belly. The baby had been restless since witnessing my father's murder, kicking and turning as if trying to escape the horror that had invaded our world. I pressed my palms against the movement, trying to offer comfort I didn't feel.
That's when I heard them.
Voices in the corridor, just beyond my door. Pack members—servants, by the sound of their hushed tones—whispering as they passed.
"—can't believe she's carrying his child too—"
"—Maeve's barely showing, but everyone knows—"
"—poor Luna, doesn't even know her mate's been—"
"Shh! The guards will hear."
Their footsteps faded, but their words echoed in my mind like hammer blows. Maeve. Pregnant. Caelan's child.
The room tilted around me. I gripped the edge of the bed, my knuckles white against the dark fabric. My baby kicked hard, a sharp jab that made me gasp, and suddenly I was doubled over, retching onto the stone floor.
Maeve was carrying Caelan's child.
While I had been playing the devoted mate, signing documents I didn't understand, helping him orchestrate my father's downfall, he had been with her. Planning. Plotting. Creating the future he truly wanted.
I don't know how long I sat there on the floor, my back against the bed, staring at nothing. The baby's movements had settled into an uneasy rhythm, as if even my unborn child could sense the poison spreading through my veins.
When the door finally opened, I didn't look up. I knew his footsteps, his scent, the particular way he moved through a room. Once, those things had brought me comfort. Now they made my skin crawl.
"Aislin." His voice was carefully neutral, as if he were addressing a stranger.
I forced myself to stand, though my legs felt unsteady. When I finally met his eyes, I saw nothing of the man who had once whispered promises against my skin in the darkness.
"Is it true?" The words came out steadier than I felt.
He didn't pretend not to understand. "Yes."
The simple confirmation hit me like a physical blow. I pressed my hand to my stomach, feeling our child move restlessly beneath my palm.
"How long?" I whispered.
Caelan moved to the window, his back to me. In the fading light, his silhouette looked like a stranger's. "Does it matter?"
"It matters to me." My voice cracked on the words. "It matters to your child."
He turned then, and for a moment I thought I saw something flicker in his dark eyes. But it was gone so quickly I might have imagined it.
"Maeve is my true mate," he said, his tone matter-of-fact. "She always has been."
The words hung in the air between us like poison. I felt something inside me breaking, not just my heart but something deeper, more fundamental.
"Then what am I?" The question escaped before I could stop it, raw and desperate.
Caelan studied me for a long moment, his expression unreadable. When he spoke, his voice was soft, almost gentle, which somehow made the words infinitely worse.
"Your bond was punishment, not a gift."
The room went silent except for the sound of my own breathing, sharp and ragged. I stared at him, this man I had loved since I was barely more than a girl, and felt the last pieces of my world crumble to dust.
"Punishment," I repeated, the word foreign on my tongue.
"Your father destroyed the woman I loved," Caelan continued, his voice gaining strength. "He stripped away her rank, her dignity, her place in this pack. He cast her out like refuse, despite my pleas for mercy."
Memory crashed over me like a cold wave. Maeve, caught embezzling pack funds. My father's fury, his absolute refusal to show leniency. Caelan on his knees, begging for her reprieve. And me—young, naive, moved by his obvious pain—adding my own voice to his pleas.
My father had reduced her sentence because of my intervention. Exile instead of execution. A mercy I had thought generous at the time.
"You planned this," I breathed, understanding flooding through me like ice water. "All of it. From the very beginning."
"I planned justice," he corrected. "I planned to make your father pay for what he took from me. And you—" His eyes moved to my swollen belly. "You were the perfect tool."
Tool. The word echoed in my mind, each repetition driving the knife deeper. Every tender moment, every whispered endearment, every night spent in his arms—all of it calculated. All of it lies.
I don't remember sinking to my knees. I only became aware I had fallen when the cold stone bit into my skin through my dress. The baby kicked frantically, as if trying to escape the horror surrounding us.
"My child," I whispered, my hands protective over my belly. "What about my child?"
Caelan's expression didn't change. "The child is mine as well. It will be raised accordingly."
Raised accordingly. As if my baby were just another piece in his game, another tool to be shaped to his will.
Days blurred together after that. Caelan came and went from our chambers—no, his chambers, I reminded myself—conducting the business of his new reign. I was a ghost in my own home, invisible unless he needed something from me.
When he finally appeared with the contract, I wasn't surprised. I had been expecting it, dreading it, knowing it would come.
The parchment was thick and official, bearing the seals of both packs. The terms were simple and devastating: all Silverclaw trade routes, territories, and assets would be transferred to Blackridge control. In exchange, the remaining pack members would be spared.
Spared. As if Caelan's mercy was something to be grateful for.
"Sign it," he said, placing a quill beside the document.
I stared at the contract, the words blurring together. This was my birthright, my father's legacy, everything the O'Rourke line had built over generations. And I was being asked to hand it over to the man who had murdered my father.
"The pack members," I said slowly. "They'll be safe?"
"They'll be protected under Blackridge law," Caelan confirmed. "They'll have homes, work, purpose. More than they would have under a dead Alpha's rule."
The casual cruelty of the words made me flinch. I picked up the quill with trembling fingers, its weight somehow enormous.
"Your father's pride cost him everything," Caelan continued as I hesitated. "Don't let it cost them everything too."
I pressed the quill to the parchment, and a drop of blood fell from my fingertip—I had been gripping the instrument so tightly it had cut into my skin. The red stain spread across the white paper like a wound.
With shaking hands, I signed away everything I had ever known.
Caelan took the contract without ceremony, rolling it up with practiced efficiency. As he moved toward the door, I found my voice one last time.
"Did you ever love me? Even a little?"
He paused in the doorway, his hand on the frame. For a moment, I thought he might answer, might give me some small comfort to carry into the darkness ahead.
Instead, he walked away, leaving me alone with the blood on my fingers and the weight of my betrayal.
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