Follow
Chapters
Share
My Alpha Abandoned Me for the Pack’s New Luna Novel Cover

My Alpha Abandoned Me for the Pack’s New Luna

I heard the first explosion at 2 a.m. I was already awake — I'd been awake for an hour, lying in the dark with Weston's side of the bed cold beside me, listening to the silence that had become the loudest thing in our room. When the blast shook the walls, I was on my feet before the echo died. The pack house was chaos. Smoke poured through the east corridor, thick and black, and I could hear warriors shouting somewhere above me. I pulled on my boots and ran toward the sound — toward the basement stairwell, where two of our younger Deltas were trying to drag a jammed door open. The rogue raid had hit the supply wing first. Smart. Cut the weapons cache, collapse the structure, drive everyone into the open. I'd helped design our raid response protocols.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

I heard the first explosion at 2 a.m.

I was already awake — I'd been awake for an hour, lying in the dark with Weston's side of the bed cold beside me, listening to the silence that had become the loudest thing in our room. When the blast shook the walls, I was on my feet before the echo died.

The pack house was chaos. Smoke poured through the east corridor, thick and black, and I could hear warriors shouting somewhere above me. I pulled on my boots and ran toward the sound — toward the basement stairwell, where two of our younger Deltas were trying to drag a jammed door open. The rogue raid had hit the supply wing first. Smart. Cut the weapons cache, collapse the structure, drive everyone into the open.

I'd helped design our raid response protocols. I knew exactly what was happening.

"Get back," I told the Deltas. "East exit. Now."

They went. I went down.

The basement storage room held the pack's emergency medical supplies — the real ones, not the ward's public stock. If the fire reached them, we'd lose everything we needed to treat casualties. I got the door open, got the first crate, and that's when the ceiling came down.

Not all of it. Just enough.

The beam caught me across the back and drove me into the floor. The crate skidded away. I felt the heat before I felt the pain — a wall of it, pressing against my arms, my side, the left side of my face. I tried to push up and couldn't. The beam had me pinned at the hips, and the fire was moving fast along the far wall, eating through the shelving, and I could smell my own skin.

I opened the mind-link.

Weston.

I hadn't used it in weeks. He'd been keeping it half-closed — not deliberately, he would have said, just distracted — but I pushed through the barrier and I screamed his name down the bond with everything I had.

He heard me. I felt him hear me. The bond flared, and for one second I felt him clearly — his location, his heartbeat, the sharp spike of his awareness as my pain hit him through the link. He knew exactly where I was. He knew exactly what was happening to me.

And then I felt him turn.

Not physically. Through the bond. I felt his attention shift — felt it the way you feel a hand pull away from yours in the dark — and I felt what pulled it. Mckenzie's scent. Her voice, somewhere above me, calling his name in that soft, breathless way she had. I felt him register that she was unharmed. Standing in a corridor. Safe.

The mind-link went quiet.

Not closed. Quiet. Like he'd simply stopped listening.

My wolf screamed. Not in pain — she'd gone past pain. She screamed the way an animal screams when it understands, finally and completely, that no one is coming.

I don't know how long I was down there. Long enough. The warriors who pulled me out said later they'd followed the sound of my wolf's howl through the smoke. I don't remember howling. I remember the heat. I remember the smell. I remember thinking, with a strange, distant clarity, that I had brokered the alliance with the Greywood Pack in this basement, sitting on those same supply crates, three years ago. I'd spent six hours on that negotiation. I'd been so proud of it.

The night air hit my skin like broken glass.

They carried me out through the east yard, and the first thing I saw was Weston. He was standing near the tree line with Mckenzie tucked against his side, her face pressed to his chest, his arm around her shoulders. She was wearing his jacket. She didn't have a mark on her.

He looked at me. Just for a moment. His expression did something complicated — not guilt, not quite — and then he looked away.

I made them put me down.

My hands were shaking. My left arm was bad — I could see that without looking directly at it, from the way the warriors around me were carefully not looking at it. My face felt tight and wrong on one side. I stood up anyway.

I had a mating pendant. Weston had given it to me the night he marked me — a silver disc on a chain, engraved with the Silverfang crest. I'd worn it every day for ten years. The heat had warped it, bent the chain into something twisted and ugly, and it burned against my collarbone where the metal had conducted the fire's temperature into my skin.

I pulled it off.

The clasp tore. I didn't care.

"I, Harper Larson, Luna of the Silverfang Pack," I said. My voice came out steady. I don't know how. "Reject you, Weston Cooper, Alpha of the Silverfang Pack, as my fated mate."

The words landed in the air between us like stones dropped into still water.

Weston stared at me. Then he let out a short, disbelieving breath. "You're being dramatic."

Beside him, Mckenzie pressed her fingers to her collarbone — that small, practiced gesture — and her eyes went wide and soft with performed distress. "Weston," she murmured. "She's in shock. She doesn't mean it."

I looked at her hand on his chest. I looked at his face. I looked at the warped pendant in my burned palm.

I felt the first thread of the bond snap.

It hurt. Of course it hurt. It hurt in a place that had no name, somewhere below the ribs and behind the sternum, a tearing sensation that made my wolf go very still inside me. But underneath the pain was something else — something I didn't have a word for yet. Something that felt, distantly and terribly, like the first breath of clean air.

I closed my fingers around the pendant and said nothing else.

There was nothing left to say.

You may also like

After My Mate Marked the Rogue, I Rejected Him Novel Cover
9.5
The Black River Pack house looked exactly as I remembered it—stone and timber rising against the night sky, warm lights glowing in the windows. I'd been gone for two years leading allied pack training across Europe, and every day I'd thought about coming home to this. To him. I adjusted the tactical vest still strapped across my chest, feeling the weight of the rare dagger I'd forged for Caleb tucked against my ribs. My wolf stirred inside me, eager after the long flight. We were finally home. The front entrance was unlocked. I slipped inside, boots silent on the hardwood floors. Tomorrow was Caleb's birthday ceremony, but tonight—tonight was just for us. I wanted to see his face when he realized I'd come back early, that I was done with the front lines.
Her Dangerous Distraction Novel Cover
7.8
Amara Daniels doesn't believe in destiny or happy endings; having survived from the dark shadows of her past, her life no longer has room for mistakes or attractive billionaires like Ethan Cole. Ethan enters her life with his charming persistence, and she becomes worried after he meets her four-year-old son, her past that she has carefully buried. He is her dangerous distraction. But their chemistry conceals shocking secrets and connecting fates - that might either bring them together or set them apart forever. In a game where hearts and careers collide, can she have it all or will passion cost her everything?
My Peace Beyond His Regret Novel Cover
8.4
My boyfriend, Damien, chose a Vegas trip with his toxic best friend, Branden, over our relationship, ignoring my ultimatum that if he walked out, we were over. He walked. A week later, he was back, dangling a designer handbag as a peace offering. But while he was partying, I was in the ER with a severe, stress-induced anxiety attack. The final blow came when I saw Damien had 'liked' Branden' s social media post mocking my pain. He stood outside my apartment, laughing with Branden, calling me "dramatic" and "clingy," completely unaware I had already packed his entire life into boxes. "What... what is all this, Cecil?" he stammered, his face turning from shock to rage as he saw his belongings ready for the movers. "What have you done?" I looked him dead in the eye, my voice cold and steady. "We're over, Damien. So, are these boxes going to your place, or to Branden's?"
Reborn To Save My Broken Lover Novel Cover
8.7
I was dying in a cold hospital bed, listening to the monitor count down my final seconds. As a ghost, I watched my own funeral. My popular friends and wealthy family soon moved on, but one person stayed. Cas Riley. The invisible outcast from the back of my history class. He brought a white rose to my grave every single day, withering away until he collapsed on the frozen ground, dying of a broken heart for a girl who barely knew his name. Opening my eyes again, the hospital smell was gone. I was reborn back in my high school classroom. I immediately tracked him down, only to witness the brutal hell he was trapped in. He was humiliated by a cruel foreman for pennies, violently slapped by his uncle over his sick mother's medical money, and forced into bloody street fights. He was starving, covered in bruises, and completely alone. When I tried to buy him medicine and step into his life to protect him, he violently pushed me away in the pouring rain. "Stay out of my life! To protect you, I have to fight, and when I fight, I lose everything!" He wasn't rejecting me out of hate. He was terrified that his dark, violent reality would drag me down with him. Standing soaked in the rain, my resolve hardened like steel. Gentle kindness wasn't going to save him from this hell. To protect the boy who died for me, I had to become ruthless enough to tear down his entire rotten world and build him a new one.
Revenge Of The Forsaken Pregnant Wife Novel Cover
7.0
My marriage ended at a charity gala I organized. One moment, I was the pregnant, happy wife of tech mogul Gabe Sullivan; the next, a reporter' s phone screen announced to the world that he and his childhood sweetheart, Harper, were expecting a child. Across the room, I saw them together, his hand resting on her stomach. This wasn't just an affair; it was a public declaration that erased me and our unborn baby. To protect his company's billion-dollar IPO, Gabe, his mother, and even my own adoptive parents conspired against me. They moved Harper into our home, into my bed, treating her like royalty while I became a prisoner. They painted me as unstable, a threat to the family's image. They accused me of cheating and claimed my child wasn't his. The final command was unthinkable: terminate my pregnancy. They locked me in a room and scheduled the procedure, promising to drag me there if I refused. But they made a mistake. They gave me back my phone to keep me quiet. Feigning surrender, I made one last, desperate call to a number I had kept hidden for years-a number belonging to my biological father, Antony Dean, the head of a family so powerful, they could make my husband's world burn.
Spoiling The Unfiltered Goddess With My Wealth Novel Cover
9.2
Chelsi was down to her last fourteen dollars. After a humiliating job rejection for being "too low-class," the threat of eviction forced her to try live-streaming. Terrified of her exhausted, tear-stained face, she cranked the AR beauty filter to the max, morphing into a bizarre plastic alien. She was immediately dragged into a forced streaming battle with Kamron, the platform's most arrogant top streamer. Seeing her distorted filter, Kamron sneered, unleashing fifty thousand fans to flood her chat with toxic insults. Kamron set a ruthless penalty for her inevitable loss. "You're going to take a bar of soap, scrub your face completely clean, and shove your bare face right into the camera." Desperate to keep the fifty dollars she had just earned for rent, Chelsi begged for a different punishment, but Kamron coldly refused. With her heart pounding, she walked to the freezing bathroom, her hands shaking as she scrubbed her skin raw, bracing for the cyberbullying. She squeezed her eyes shut, feeling utterly humiliated by the cruelty of the internet. Why did she have to be stripped of her dignity just to survive? She clicked off the filter, waiting for the tidal wave of disgust to destroy her. But the insults never came. The high-definition camera revealed a breathtakingly delicate, flawless face that no algorithm could ever replicate. The chat went dead silent, Kamron was so stunned he dropped a ten-thousand-dollar virtual yacht, and a silent war between two mysterious billionaires was about to begin.