
My Alpha Chose a Younger Luna Over Me
Chapter 1
The ink on the trade treaty with the Northern Timber Pack was barely dry. It had taken me six months of grueling negotiations, sleepless nights, and endless strategic maneuvering to secure these borders, but looking at the signature on the final page, I knew it was worth it. This treaty would secure the Silver Crescent Pack’s prosperity for another decade.
I smoothed the skirt of my emerald evening gown, the silk cool against my fingertips, and walked down the hallway toward the Alpha’s office. The Unity Gala was already in full swing downstairs; the floorboards vibrated slightly with the bass of the music and the stomping of feet. I wanted to give Hayden the good news before we made our entrance. I wanted to see his eyes light up, to hear him acknowledge that we had done this together.
I was a fool.
As I reached the heavy mahogany door, my hand raised to knock, a sound stopped me cold. It was laughter. Not the warm, hearty laugh Hayden used to share with me over morning coffee, but a cruel, mocking sound that made the hair on my arms stand up.
“Come on, Alpha,” Marcus, our Beta, chuckled. His voice was muffled but clear enough to my heightened hearing. “You have to admit, the timing is tricky. Madeline is… well, she’s a fixture.”
I froze. My hand hovered inches from the wood.
“A fixture is just furniture, Marcus,” Hayden’s voice replied, dripping with an arrogance I had spent five years trying to temper. “And furniture can be replaced when it gets worn out.”
My heart hammered against my ribs, a frantic bird trapped in a cage. I leaned closer, my breath hitching.
“She’s thirty-five, Marcus,” Hayden continued, the dismissive tone slicing through me sharper than any claw. “She’s drying up. I can smell it on her. Her scent… it’s fading. It’s stale. How am I supposed to produce strong Alpha heirs with a wolf whose womb is practically dusty?”
A sharp, cloying scent wafted through the crack under the door. It hit my nose like a physical blow—synthetic vanilla and overly sweet florals. It wasn’t a natural wolf scent. It was store-bought perfume masking the musk of a newly shifted she-wolf. *Avani.*
The betrayal didn't break my heart; it incinerated it. I realized then that the scent had been clinging to Hayden’s shirts for weeks. I had told myself it was from the pack members he hugged, or the office staff. I had willfully blinded myself.
“So, what’s the plan?” Marcus asked, the sound of glass clinking against glass following his words.
“I’ll move her to the Omega quarters after the Gala,” Hayden said casually, as if discussing where to move a potted plant. “Avani is fresh. She’s young. She looks at me like I’m a god, not a project. Madeline thinks she made me. She thinks she owns me. It’s time the pack learns who the real Alpha is.”
I didn't scream. I didn't kick down the door. I didn't shift into my wolf and tear their throats out, though my inner wolf was howling in a mix of agony and murderous rage. instead, a cold, icy calm settled over me. It was the calm of a strategist who had just realized the alliance was broken.
I turned on my heel and walked away. My steps were silent, a predator stalking through the night.
I went straight to our shared bedroom—no, *his* bedroom. I pulled my vintage leather suitcase from the back of the closet. I didn't pack the clothes he had bought me, or the jewelry he had given me as apologies for missed dinners. I packed my leather-bound journals filled with five years of political strategies. I packed the ancient dagger my grandmother gave me. I packed the maps of the territory lines I had drawn myself.
I caught my reflection in the vanity mirror. The woman staring back wasn’t “washed up.” My eyes were sharp, glowing with power. My skin was unblemished, my posture straight. I wasn’t old; I was seasoned. I was powerful. And I was done being the ladder he stood on.
Closing the suitcase, I walked out of the room and headed for the ballroom.
The double doors to the gala were open. The room was a sea of glittering dresses and tuxedos. Laughter rang out, glasses clinked, and the smell of champagne and roasted meat filled the air. At the center of the room, on the raised dais, stood Hayden. He was holding a microphone, looking every bit the golden king I had crafted him to be.
I stepped into the room.
I didn't need a microphone. I simply released my aura. It rolled off me in a suffocating wave of dominance, heavier and darker than it had ever been. The music died instantly. The chatter ceased. Every head turned toward me. The air grew thick, making it hard for weaker wolves to breathe.
Hayden’s smile faltered. He looked at me, confusion flickering in his eyes. “Madeline? You’re late. I was just—”
“You were just boasting about moving me to the Omega quarters,” I said. My voice wasn't loud, but in the dead silence, it carried to every corner of the room. “You were telling your Beta that I am too old. That I am losing my scent.”
Gasps rippled through the crowd. Hayden’s face drained of color. He stepped forward, his hands raised. “Maddie, baby, don’t do this here. You’re hysterical. We can talk about this upstairs—”
“I am not hysterical, *Alpha*,” I spat the title like a curse. “And we have nothing left to talk about. You want youth? You want a fresh plaything who looks at you like a god because she doesn’t know you’re a fraud? You can have her.”
I locked eyes with him. I could feel the mate bond stretching between us, a golden thread that had once been my lifeline. Now, it was a noose.
“I, Madeline Scott,” I began, my voice thundering with the power of the Moon Goddess.
“No!” Hayden shouted, rushing toward the edge of the stage. “Madeline, stop!”
“I reject you, Alpha Hayden Pierce, as my mate!”
The snap was audible, like a whip cracking against bone. A shockwave of pure energy blasted outward from my chest. Hayden screamed, crumbling to his knees on the stage, clutching his chest as if he’d been shot. The pain hit me too—a searing, tearing agony deep in my soul—but I refused to bow. I locked my knees. I dug my nails into my palms.
A single drop of blood trickled from my nose. I wiped it away with the back of my hand, staring down at the man who was now a stranger.
“You wanted to be the Alpha without me?” I said into the stunned silence. “Let’s see how long you last.”
I turned my back on him, grabbed the handle of my suitcase, and walked out the door, leaving the Silver Crescent Pack behind forever.
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