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My Luna Bond Faded After My Mate’s Betrayal Novel Cover

My Luna Bond Faded After My Mate’s Betrayal

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.
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Chapter 3

The storm hit hard around midnight.

I'd been lying on the couch with a book I wasn't reading, listening to the rain come down in sheets against the windows. Pacific Northwest storms don't build gradually — they arrive all at once, like something that's been waiting. The wind picked up, the lights flickered once, and then the mate bond did something it hadn't done in weeks.

It pulsed.

Not the dull, distant ache I'd gotten used to — the one that sat in my sternum like a bruise I'd stopped pressing on. This was sharper. Warmer. The particular heat that meant proximity, that meant he was close.

I set the book down.

I didn't move for a moment. Just sat there with my hand flat against my chest, feeling the pull of it, hating that my body still knew his presence before my mind caught up. The silence where my wolf used to be felt louder than usual. She should have been the one telling me this. She should have been pressing forward against my ribs, restless and certain. Instead there was just me, alone in my own chest, feeling something I couldn't fully trust anymore.

I got up and went to the window.

I didn't pull the curtain back. I stood to the side and looked through the narrow gap between the fabric and the frame, the way I'd learned to do things now — carefully, from angles that didn't announce themselves.

His truck was parked across the street.

Black, engine off, headlights dark. Rain hammering the roof and the hood and the windshield in long silver streaks. He'd been there long enough that the windows had fogged slightly at the edges, except for the driver's side, where the glass was clear.

And in that clear space, two points of amber light.

Wolf eyes. Steady and unblinking, aimed directly at my window.

I stood very still.

My phone buzzed on the coffee table behind me. I didn't look away from the window. I already knew what it would say — I could feel the mind-link opening, that faint pressure at the back of my skull that meant he was pushing a message through.

I picked up the phone without moving from the gap in the curtain.

*Running late at the pack house. Eastern patrol needed extra coverage tonight. Don't wait up.*

I read it twice. Then I looked back at the truck.

The amber eyes hadn't moved.

There's a specific kind of cold that has nothing to do with temperature. I felt it now, moving through me slowly, settling somewhere behind my ribs. He was watching my window while telling me he was miles away. Not even a careful lie — a careless one, the kind you tell when you've stopped worrying about being caught because you've decided the other person has no recourse.

I went to the kitchen drawer and got my phone — the good one, not the prepaid. I came back to the window and angled the camera through the gap in the curtain. Slow. No flash.

I took four photographs.

The truck's license plate, clear in the streetlight. The make and model. The fogged windows with that one clear patch. And the last one — the best one — where the amber glow of his eyes was visible just above the steering wheel, two points of light in the dark cab, patient and unblinking and aimed straight at me.

I checked the timestamps. 12:47 AM.

I saved them to the encrypted folder I'd set up on a cloud account registered under a name that didn't exist, then I put the phone down and pressed my thumb against the inside of my wrist. Hard. Held it there until the skin went white and the warmth of the bond receded to something manageable.

Then I closed the curtain, went back to the couch, and picked up my book.

I didn't sleep. But I didn't look out the window again either.

In the morning, the truck was gone.

---

Reid's envelope arrived ten days later.

No return address. My mother's maiden name on the label, the P.O. box number I'd given him at the diner. I picked it up on a Wednesday afternoon and drove home without opening it, which took more discipline than I expected. I set it on the kitchen table and made coffee first. Stood at the counter while it brewed and looked at the envelope and thought about nothing in particular.

Then I sat down and opened it.

Seventeen photographs. Printed on matte paper, each one stamped on the back with a date, a time, and GPS coordinates. Reid had organized them chronologically, which I appreciated. He was thorough. I'd paid for thorough.

I spread them across the table one by one.

Evelynn arriving at the cabin in Boston's SUV, a weekend bag over her shoulder, her hair loose. Boston at the door. His hand on the small of her back as she stepped inside — not a greeting, not a courtesy gesture. Familiar. Proprietary. The kind of touch that belongs to a history.

A window shot, taken from a distance with a long lens: two figures inside, close enough that the space between them was barely visible. Her head tilted toward him. His hand raised, touching her face or her hair — the angle made it hard to be certain, and Reid had been careful not to speculate in his notes. He didn't need to. The photograph said enough.

Evelynn leaving the next morning in different clothes.

Two of the dates on the back matched nights Boston had sent me mind-link messages about sensitive pack business at the eastern outpost. I checked my phone log to be sure. I was sure.

I arranged all seventeen photographs in a single row across the table, oldest to newest, and I sat back and looked at them.

I waited to feel something.

My wolf didn't stir. The silence inside me was so complete, so total, that it pressed against the inside of my chest like a held breath. Weeks ago, even through the chemical fog of whatever Evelynn had put in those capsules, I'd still felt faint echoes — anger, grief, the distant howl of something that knew it was being caged. Now there was nothing. Just the photographs on the table and the rain starting up again outside and the particular quiet of a body that has been emptied of something it was built to carry.

That frightened me more than the photographs did.

Not the betrayal. Not the lies, not the dates, not Boston's hand on her back in the gray morning light. Those things I had already known, in the way you know things before you have proof — in your bones, in the silence where your wolf used to speak.

What frightened me was the silence itself. How complete it had become. How long it had been since I'd felt her.

I pressed my thumb against my wrist and held it there for a long moment.

Then I stacked the photographs carefully, slid them back into the envelope, and carried it to the fireproof box under the floorboards. I set it beside the sealed lab report I was still waiting on, beside the printed copies of the truck photographs with their timestamps, beside the list I'd been adding to since the night I moved out.

I locked the box.

I went back to the kitchen and stood at the window with my coffee going cold in my hands, watching the rain come down, and I thought about the GPS coordinates Reid had included with each photograph. The cabin. Forty minutes outside pack territory, the same coordinates I'd pulled from Boston's deleted email four months ago and written down and almost forgotten.

Almost.

I thought about the lab report still in transit. About what it would say, and what I would do when it said it.

I thought about my wolf — about the last time I'd felt her clearly, the last time she'd pressed forward against my ribs with any real force. How long ago that was. Whether the damage was reversible, or whether I was already fighting for something that couldn't be recovered.

I didn't let myself stay in that thought for long.

I rinsed my coffee cup, dried my hands, and picked up my pen.

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