
Luna's Rebirth: After the Alpha Rejects Her Plea
Chapter 4
The blood moon hung like a wound in the sky as they dragged me from my cell.
My legs could barely support my weight after days of confinement, but the guards showed no mercy, their iron grips bruising my arms as they hauled me up the stone steps. Each footfall echoed through the corridors like a death knell, and with every step, the sound of voices grew louder—pack members gathering in the great hall, their murmurs carrying the electric tension of impending judgment.
The massive doors to the hall groaned open, and suddenly I was blinded by torchlight. Hundreds of faces turned toward me, some filled with pity, others with disgust, most with the terrible fascination of those about to witness an execution. The air was thick with the scent of burning wood and something else—fear, anticipation, the metallic tang of blood that seemed to permeate everything now.
At the center of it all stood Caelan.
He had positioned himself on the raised dais where my father once held court, where I had sat beside him as his daughter and heir. Now he wore robes of deep black trimmed with silver, the colors of Blackridge, and the Alpha's ceremonial crown sat upon his head like it had always belonged there.
"Bring her forward," his voice cut through the murmur of the crowd, cold and commanding.
The guards forced me to walk the length of the hall, past faces I had known since childhood. Some couldn't meet my eyes. Others stared with the kind of morbid curiosity reserved for the condemned. My swollen belly made each step awkward and painful, the baby inside me restless and agitated, as if sensing the danger surrounding us.
When we reached the dais, one of the guards kicked the back of my knees, sending me crashing to the stone floor. The impact sent a shock of pain through my pregnant body, and I bit back a cry, refusing to give them the satisfaction of hearing me break.
"Pack of Silverclaw," Caelan's voice boomed across the hall, "tonight we cleanse ourselves of the poison that has infected our bloodline."
The words hit me like physical blows. I looked up at him from my knees, this man who had shared my bed, who had whispered promises in the dark, who had placed his hand on my belly and spoken of our future child with such tenderness.
There was nothing of that man in his face now.
"Ronan O'Rourke has been executed for his crimes against our people," Caelan continued, his voice carrying easily through the silent hall. "His corruption ran so deep that it poisoned even his own blood. His daughter"—his eyes found mine, cold as winter stone—"aided in his treachery, signing documents that would have delivered us all to our enemies."
A collective gasp rose from the crowd. I wanted to scream, to tell them the truth, to explain how I had been deceived, manipulated, used. But my voice seemed trapped in my throat, strangled by the weight of my despair.
"She will cleanse this sin with traitor's blood," Caelan declared, his words formal and final. "Let her death wash away the stain her family has left upon our pack."
The hall erupted in a mixture of cheers and horrified whispers. Some called for mercy, others for swift justice. But their voices seemed to come from very far away, as if I were drowning and they were shouting from the surface of a deep, dark lake.
Caelan stepped down from the dais, his movements deliberate and measured. When he reached me, he crouched down, bringing his face level with mine. For a moment, just a moment, I thought I saw something flicker in his dark eyes—regret, perhaps, or the ghost of the love I had once believed we shared.
His hand reached out to cup my chin, tilting my face up toward his. The gesture was achingly familiar, a mirror of countless tender moments we had shared in private. But his touch was cold now, clinical, devoid of any warmth.
"Please," I whispered, my voice barely audible above the crowd's murmur. "Our child. Think of our child."
His thumb brushed across my cheek, almost gentle, and for a heartbeat I dared to hope. Then his expression hardened, and when he spoke, his voice carried clearly through the hall.
"Our bond should not shield sin," he said, his tone flat and emotionless. "Justice must be served, regardless of the ties that once bound us."
The words shattered something inside me, something that had been cracking since the night my father died but had somehow held together until this moment. The last fragile thread of hope snapped, and with it, my ability to remain upright.
I collapsed forward, my hands hitting the stone floor as my body convulsed. The taste of copper filled my mouth, and when I tried to breathe, blood spattered across the stones beneath me. The baby kicked frantically, as if trying to escape the horror surrounding us both.
The hall spun around me, voices becoming a distant roar. Through the haze of pain and shock, I was dimly aware of Caelan standing, stepping back, his face a mask of cold indifference as I retched blood onto the floor where my father had once dispensed justice.
"Take her to the cells," I heard him say, his voice seeming to come from very far away. "The execution will be at dawn."
Rough hands seized me again, hauling my limp form from the hall. As they dragged me away, I caught one last glimpse of Caelan on his stolen throne, the crown glinting in the torchlight, his eyes already turned away from my broken form as if I were nothing more than an unpleasant task completed.
The cell they threw me into was cold and damp, water seeping through the stone walls and pooling on the floor. They left me there in the darkness, my body wracked with pain, blood still staining my lips. The baby had gone still inside me, as if even my unborn child understood that we were beyond hope now.
I curled on my side on the filthy straw, one hand pressed to my belly, the other clutched against my chest where my heart felt like it was tearing itself apart. In the distance, I could hear the sounds of celebration—Caelan's supporters toasting his victory, his justice, his new reign.
And in that moment, as the blood moon's light filtered through the barred window of my cell, I finally understood the true depth of his betrayal. This had never been about justice or protecting the pack. This had been about revenge, pure and simple. Revenge against my father for daring to punish the woman Caelan truly loved.
I was not his mate. I was not even his enemy.
I was simply the weapon he had used to destroy everything I had ever held dear.
You may also like





