
My Luna Accused Me of Treason to Protect Her Lover
Chapter 1
I crossed the Silverclaw territory line just after midnight, my wolf form still humming with battle energy. Five years. Five years of blood and dirt and Rogue teeth snapping at my throat, all so Livia and the pack could sleep safe. My fur was matted with scars now, silver-tipped black coat dulled by war, but my Alpha blood burned hotter than ever. I'd led the final charge that broke the Rogue coalition at the eastern borders. We'd won.
I shifted back to human form at the tree line, pulling on the spare clothes I'd stashed years ago. They hung loose on my frame—I'd lost weight, gained muscle in all the wrong places. The kind that came from survival, not vanity. But none of that mattered. I was home. I was finally going to complete the bond with Livia, feel her mark on my neck, and start the life we'd promised each other.
Her scent hit me before I saw the packhouse—vanilla and roses, the smell that had kept me sane through every nightmare. My wolf, Ash, surged forward in my chest, desperate and aching. *Mate. Finally. Mate.*
I found her in the Alpha's study, bent over a spread of crystals and cards. She looked up when I entered, and for a heartbeat, I saw something flicker in her eyes. Then it was gone, replaced by something cold.
"Kendrick." She didn't stand. Didn't run to me. "You're back."
"I'm back." My voice came out rougher than I intended. "The borders are secure. The Rogues won't trouble us again."
"That's good." She turned back to her cards, fingers trailing over them like they mattered more than I did. "I've been consulting the Moon Oracle. There's been a development."
Ash whined in my chest. Something was wrong. "What kind of development?"
"The Oracle warns that if we complete the bond now, a plague will descend on the pack." She said it so smoothly, like she'd practiced. "We have to wait."
"Wait." The word tasted like ash in my mouth. "Livia, we've been waiting five years."
"I know." She finally looked at me, and her eyes were distant. "But the Moon Goddess has spoken. Unless you want to risk everyone's lives for your own desires?"
My jaw clenched. She knew exactly how to twist the knife. "How long?"
"Until the signs are clear." She gathered her crystals, dismissing me like I was a subordinate. "There's a welcome banquet tonight. You should rest."
I left before Ash could force a shift. Before I could demand answers she clearly didn't want to give.
The banquet hall buzzed with pack members celebrating the victory I'd won for them. I stood at the entrance, scanning for Livia, and found her at the head table—in the Luna's seat that should've been waiting for our ceremony. The chair beside her sat empty. My chair.
Alpha Marcus raised his glass. "To Kendrick Harris, our Head Enforcer, who secured our borders and brought honor to Silverclaw!"
The pack cheered. I forced myself to walk forward, to accept their gratitude. But Livia didn't meet my eyes.
"There's one more announcement," she said, standing. Her voice carried that practiced sweetness that made my wolf's hackles rise. "Many of you remember Jax. He's returned to us, fully pardoned, ready to serve the pack once more."
The doors opened. The scent hit me first—expensive cologne, cloying and thick, trying to mask the weak wolf underneath. Jax walked in like he owned the place, all charm and easy smiles. He'd been an Omega when he fled. He was still an Omega now, no matter how much he tried to hide it.
Livia's face lit up in a way it hadn't when she saw me.
"Jax." She moved toward him, and my wolf snarled. "Welcome home."
He took her hand, kissed it. "Couldn't stay away from the most beautiful Luna-to-be in all the territories."
A growl rumbled in my chest before I could stop it. Low. Threatening.
Livia's eyes snapped to me, cold and sharp. "Kendrick. Control yourself. That's the feral war trauma talking."
Feral. She called me feral. In front of the entire pack.
Jax smiled at me, all teeth and no warmth. "Good to see you, brother. Heard you've been through hell. Must be hard, adjusting back to civilized life."
I didn't trust myself to speak. I turned and walked out, ignoring the whispers that followed.
Dawn found me at my father's memorial cairn, the sacred ground where we'd laid his ashes after he fell in the last great war. I came here every morning before I left, talking to his memory, promising to protect what he'd died for. The stones were still stacked the way I'd left them, weathered but standing.
But something was wrong.
Orange spray paint marked the ground around the cairn. Construction markers. Survey stakes driven into the earth like tiny violations.
I knelt, touching the paint, and Ash went very, very still inside me.
Someone was planning to build here. On sacred ground. On my father's grave.
The sun rose behind me, cold and pale, and for the first time since I'd returned home, I wondered if I'd been fighting for the wrong thing all along.
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