
My Luna Bond Faded After My Mate’s Betrayal
My Luna Bond Faded After My Mate’s Betrayal Chapter 1
I woke up at 2 AM and reached for him out of habit.
The sheets on his side were cold. Not just empty — cold, the way they get when someone has been gone for hours. I lay there for a moment, staring at the ceiling, listening to the rain hit the pack house windows in long, uneven sheets. Pacific Northwest storms have a particular sound. Heavy and relentless, like they're trying to say something.
Then I smelled it.
Cedar and rain — Boston's scent, the one that used to make my wolf press forward against my ribs like she was trying to get closer. But threaded through it tonight was something else. Something warm and floral, soft in the way that only comes from skin contact, from hours of proximity. Another she-wolf's scent, woven so deep into his that it hadn't faded on the pillow yet.
My wolf didn't stir. She hadn't stirred in weeks.
The silence inside my chest was the loudest thing in the room.
I sat up slowly. His phone was on the nightstand, screen still lit — he'd left in a hurry, then. Boston never left his phone unlocked. I looked at it for a long moment before I picked it up.
One text thread. Evelynn Moreno.
The last message, sent at 11:52 PM, read: *Landed. Terminal B.*
I set the phone down exactly as I found it. Same angle, same position. Then I walked to the small desk in the corner where Boston kept the pack house security tablet and pulled up the sign-out log.
*Boston Russell. 11:47 PM. Pack patrol — eastern boundary.*
The airport is west. Forty minutes west, on a clear night. Longer in this rain.
I went back to bed. I lay in the dark with my eyes open and the rain coming down and his scent still on the pillow beside me, and I did not sleep.
---
In the morning he was back. Showered, dressed, moving through the bedroom with the easy confidence of a man who has never once been questioned. He kissed the top of my head and told me he'd gotten in late, that the eastern patrol had run long, that I should eat something before my supplements.
"I'll take them in a minute," I said.
He nodded and went downstairs.
I waited until I heard the shower running again — he always showered twice on patrol nights, a habit I'd never thought about before — and then I opened my supplement case.
The capsules were the same size they'd always been. Same white casing. I'd been taking them every morning for eight months, ever since I became Luna. Wolfsbane-regulation supplements, standard issue for she-wolves in bonded pairs. The pack healer before Evelynn had prescribed them. I'd never looked closely.
I looked closely now.
I twisted one open over the bathroom counter.
The powder inside was pale. Almost white. I stared at it for a long moment, trying to remember what it used to look like. Amber. It used to be amber — I could picture it clearly now, the warm color against the white casing, the faint earthy smell of regulated wolfsbane. This powder had no color and no smell except a faint chemical bitterness that sat at the back of my throat even before I'd touched it.
My wolf should have reacted to that. Even suppressed, even faint, she should have felt the wrongness of it.
She didn't make a sound.
I sealed the powder in a small plastic bag from the bathroom drawer, tucked it inside my locked jewelry box under the sink, and went downstairs to have breakfast with my mate.
---
The restaurant he chose was the kind of place with white tablecloths and candles and a wine list that took ten minutes to read. A date night to reconnect, he'd said. His exact words.
I let him order the wine. I let him talk about the pack's eastern expansion, about the new training schedule, about nothing. I watched his hands on the table — steady, unhurried, the hands of a man with a clean conscience — and I thought about the powder in my jewelry box and the text on his phone and the cold sheets at 2 AM.
When the wine came, I reached into my bag and set the pill bottle on the white tablecloth between our glasses.
Boston looked at it. Then he looked at me.
"I know you went to the airport last night," I said. "Terminal B. I know you picked up Evelynn Moreno. And I know these aren't my wolfsbane supplements."
The silence lasted exactly two seconds.
Then I felt it — not heard, felt, a pressure that started in my sternum and moved outward, the particular frequency of his Alpha tone that the body processes before the mind catches up. It wasn't a shout. It was never a shout. It was something older and heavier than that, something that made the air in the room feel thicker.
"The capsules," he said, his voice low and even, "are an experimental sleep supplement. From Evelynn's lab. You've been under significant stress, Liana. I was trying to help you sleep."
"I'm rejecting the bond, Boston."
The pressure intensified. Across the table, his eyes had gone very still.
"I don't accept that," he said. "You are my Luna. Whatever you think you've found, you're wrong about what it means. This conversation is over."
I pressed my thumb against the inside of my wrist under the table. Hard. A small, private anchor.
I didn't say anything else. I didn't need to. I had already decided, somewhere between 2 AM and the pale powder on the bathroom counter, that words were not the tool I needed anymore.
I picked up my wine glass and took a slow sip and let him believe the conversation was over.
---
Forty-eight hours later, I moved out.
I rented the apartment under my mother's maiden name — Thompson was too easy to trace through pack records. I took what I could carry in two bags: clothes, documents, the jewelry box, and the sealed capsule. I filed the separation notice with Maren Cole, the pack's administrative officer, citing personal health concerns requiring independent living arrangements. It was technically within Luna protocol. Maren's eyes moved over my face when I handed her the form, and something in her expression shifted — not surprise, exactly. Something more careful than that. She stamped it without a word.
Boston didn't contest it publicly.
That night I sat on the bare floor of the apartment with the sealed capsule in my hand and the rain coming down outside and no scent in the air except the neutral smell of a place that didn't know me yet. I gave myself ten minutes. I felt the full weight of it — the cold sheets, the pale powder, the Alpha tone pressing against my ribs like a hand on a door, the silence where my wolf used to be.
Ten minutes.
Then I put the capsule in my bag, found a pen, and started making a list.
My Luna Bond Faded After My Mate’s Betrayal of Contents
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