Follow
Chapters
Share
My Alpha Chose a Younger Luna Over Me Novel Cover

My Alpha Chose a Younger Luna Over Me

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.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

The mud of the training ring was cold and slick beneath my bare feet. It was six in the morning, and the Obsidian Shadow Pack grounds were already alive with the sounds of grunts, thuds, and the clatter of wooden practice swords. But the moment I stepped onto the mat, the noise dropped to a hushed murmur.

I could hear them. My hearing was still sharp, despite what Hayden claimed.

"That's the Silver Crescent Luna," a young warrior whispered, nudging his friend. "I heard her mate traded her in for a younger model."

"She looks tired," another muttered. "What is she doing here? She should be in the healing ward, not the ring."

I tightened my ponytail, ignoring the sting in my chest. I wasn't here to be pitied. I was here to work.

Gamma Silas, a brute of a wolf with shoulders like boulders and a scar running down his cheek, stepped into the center of the ring. He looked me up and down, a smirk playing on his lips. "Luna Madeline. Are you sure about this? We don't go easy on guests. Especially... fragile ones."

"I'm not a Luna anymore, Silas," I said, my voice steady. "And I didn't ask for easy."

He chuckled, cracking his knuckles. "Alright. First to yield."

He lunged. It was a sloppy move, relying entirely on his massive weight and superior strength. He expected me to dodge or cower. He expected me to fight like a Luna—defensive and hesitant.

I didn't dodge. I stepped *into* his guard.

Using the momentum of his own charge, I dropped my center of gravity, hooked my leg behind his knee, and drove my elbow into his solar plexus. It wasn't about strength; it was about physics. Silas hit the mud with a wet slap that echoed across the field. Before he could scramble up, I had his arm twisted behind his back, my knee pressed firmly between his shoulder blades.

"Yield," I commanded, applying just enough pressure to strain the joint.

"I... yield!" he wheezed, slapping the ground.

I released him and stood up, wiping the mud from my hands. The training grounds were dead silent. The pity in the warriors' eyes had vanished, replaced by wide-eyed shock.

Slow clapping broke the silence. I turned to see Alpha Lennox leaning against the fence, a dark coffee in his hand. He wasn't looking at me with shock. He was looking at me with a dark, simmering intensity that made my skin prickle with heat. There was pride in his amber eyes, and something else—a raw, magnetic attraction that made my inner wolf stir for the first time in days.

"Nicely done, Strategist," Lennox called out, his voice carrying effortlessly. "Silas, run ten laps. Never underestimate an opponent just because you think you know their story."

The warriors bowed their heads as I walked off the field. I wasn't just a rejected mate to them anymore. I was a warrior.

But the high of the victory didn't last long.

Back in my temporary quarters, after a hot shower, I picked up my tablet to check the regional news feeds. My stomach dropped. The notification light was blinking furiously.

*"The Truth About the Silver Crescent Split,"* the headline screamed on the Pack Forum.

I clicked it, my fingers trembling slightly. It was a post from an anonymous account, but the scent of desperation was all over it. *Avani.*

"Madeline Scott didn't leave—she was pushed out," the post read. "She was abusive to Alpha Hayden, controlling his every move. And worse, she was barren. She denied the Alpha an heir for five years because she was too old to carry a strong pup. She abandoned the pack to run off with a secret lover."

I stared at the screen, the white text blurring. *Barren.* It was a low blow, a lie designed to hit a she-wolf where it hurt most. We had never tried for pups because Hayden claimed he wasn't ready. Now, he was using his own hesitation as a weapon against me.

My reputation was bleeding out in real-time. Comments were flooding in from neighboring packs, calling me a traitor and a hag.

My phone buzzed. A text from my mother. *"Meet us at the Junction Café. Now. Alone."*

I drove to the neutral territory in a daze. The café was quiet, smelling of burnt coffee and tension. My parents were sitting in a corner booth. My mother, Eleanor, sat with her back rigid, her pearls perfectly aligned, her face a mask of cold disapproval. My father wouldn't even meet my eyes.

"Sit," Eleanor commanded, not waiting for me to greet them.

I slid into the booth. "Hello, Mother. Father."

"Look at this mess, Madeline," Eleanor hissed, sliding a printed copy of the forum post across the table. "Do you have any idea what this is doing to our family's standing? The Scotts have been advisors to Alphas for generations. Now look at us."

"It's a lie," I said, my voice hard. "Avani is spreading rumors because she's failing. The Silver Crescent lands are dying because she isn't a true Luna."

"It doesn't matter if it's a lie!" Eleanor snapped, slamming her hand on the table. "It matters that you left. You made a scene. You rejected your mate."

"He cheated on me, Mother! He humiliated me in front of the entire pack!"

"So?" Eleanor's eyes were ice. "Your father cheated on me three times. Do you see me running away? Do you see me crying in a rival Alpha's territory? No. I stayed. I maintained my position. I did my duty."

I looked at her, really looked at her, and saw the bitterness etched into the lines of her face. She had sacrificed her happiness for power, and she hated me for refusing to do the same.

"We have negotiated terms with Hayden," my father spoke up, his voice gruff. "He is willing to take you back. But there are conditions."

"Conditions?" I laughed, a dry, humorless sound. "He wants me back?"

"He needs your mind, Madeline," Eleanor said. "But to restore the pack's honor, you must submit to a Cleansing Ritual. You will publicly apologize for your rebellion, accept Avani as a second mate, and resume your duties as Head Administrator. In the shadows. Where a wife belongs."

A Cleansing Ritual. It was a barbaric practice from the old laws—stripped naked, bathed in ice water in the town square, forced to beg the Alpha for forgiveness. It was social suicide.

I stood up, my chair scraping loudly against the floor. The contrast between Lennox, who watched me defeat his Gamma with pride, and my own parents, who wanted to break me for political convenience, was blinding.

"I am not a wife anymore, Mother," I said, my voice trembling with suppressed rage. "And I am certainly not a victim. Tell Hayden that if he wants me back, he can come and get me himself. But he better bring an army, because I am done kneeling."

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Open the Official Website

You may also like

After My Alpha Betrayed Me, I Found the Lycan King Novel Cover
7.9
The Moon Goddess Festival always made my heart race—not from fear, but from pure, electric anticipation. Tonight was no different. I stood on the launch platform, my fingers steady on the ignition switch despite the adrenaline singing through my veins. Below me, the entire Silver Moon Pack had gathered in the ceremonial clearing, their faces turned upward like flowers seeking the sun. This was my moment. My art. I'd spent three months perfecting this finale. Every fuse timed to the second. Every burst choreographed to paint the night sky in silver and gold—the Moon Goddess's colors. As the pack's Delta and head fireworks coordinator, I took pride in making our most sacred night unforgettable.
After My Alpha Rejected Me, I Stole His Pack Novel Cover
7.8
The forest blurred past as I ran, my legs burning with each step. Five years of darkness. Five years of pain. And now, finally, freedom—if I could just make it back to Silver Crescent territory before the rogues realized I was gone. "Mama, are we safe now?" Mabel's small voice came from where she clung to my back, her tiny arms wrapped around my neck. "Almost, my little moon," I whispered, adjusting her weight. She was so light—too light. Five years of malnutrition had left her fragile, her silver-blonde hair dull and her amber eyes too large in her thin face. "Just a little further." My wolf, Silver, pushed me forward with what little strength she had left. *We're almost home.
After My Death, I Exposed Her Perfect Crimes Novel Cover
9.0
I jolted awake with a gasp, my heart hammering against my ribs like it wanted to escape. The familiar ceiling of my bedroom came into focus—the same pale blue I'd stared at for years, the same hairline crack running from the corner that Dad kept promising to fix. For one blissful moment, confusion reigned. Then reality crashed down on me like a tidal wave. I remembered dying. I remembered everything. My trembling hand reached for my phone on the nightstand, fingers fumbling as I checked the date. October 15th. The day that had destroyed my life stared back at me from the screen, mocking me with its innocuous numbers. I sat up slowly, my gaze drifting to the wall calendar where I'd circled the date in red marker—'Dance Committee Meeting' scrawled beside it in my looping handwriting.
After Ninety-Nine Ceremonies, I Rejected My Mate Novel Cover
9.1
The silver moonlight bathed the sacred marking grounds in an ethereal glow as I stood alone for the ninety-ninth time. My white Luna gown—the same one I'd worn for every failed ceremony—fluttered gently around my ankles, the delicate fabric catching the night breeze. The clearing was perfect: ceremonial candles placed in a circle, the sacred marking stones arranged precisely as tradition demanded, moonflowers blooming in abundance. Everything was ready. Everything except my mate. "He'll come this time," I whispered, more to convince myself than my wolf. Luna, my silver wolf, whimpered inside my mind. *He won't. You know he won't.* I pushed her doubt away, focusing instead on smoothing invisible wrinkles from my gown. Seven years of devotion couldn't be wrong.
He Banished Me But Sheltered His Mistress Novel Cover
9.7
The scent of detergent filled my nostrils as I mechanically sorted through another load of laundry. Three years as Luna of the Silver Creek Pack, and here I was, still doing the work of an Omega. My hands were raw from the harsh chemicals, but that physical discomfort paled compared to the ache in my chest. I glanced at the clock—Atticus would be finishing his afternoon pack reports soon. Maybe if I caught him before his evening meetings, he'd actually listen to what I had to say. My parents' medical bills had been piling up for months. Dad's heart condition required specialized treatment, and Mom's arthritis medication wasn't covered by their insurance. As Luna, I had access to pack funds for emergencies, but Atticus controlled all financial decisions. I gathered my courage and made my way to his office, the familiar weight of disappointment already settling in my stomach. Atticus didn't look up when I entered.