
My Mate Betrayed My Child
Chapter 3
Pain was my first sensation. A deep, throbbing ache that radiated from my ribs with each shallow breath. The second was the antiseptic smell of the pack's healing den—herbs, tinctures, and the lingering scent of illness. My eyes felt weighted, but I forced them open, blinking against the harsh light filtering through white curtains.
Memory crashed into me like a physical blow.
Derek. Sophia. The elixir.
Emma.
"Emma!" I tried to scream, but my voice emerged as a broken rasp. My hand flew to my throat, feeling the tender bruises where Derek's fingers had crushed against my windpipe.
I struggled to sit up, ignoring the stabbing pain in my side. Three days. I had been unconscious for three days based on the moon calendar beside my bed. The full moon had risen last night.
Panic seized me as I reached for our bond, the special connection between mother and daughter.
*Emma, baby, answer Mommy. Please.*
Silence. A chilling, absolute silence where my daughter's bright presence should have been.
"Luna, you shouldn't be moving." Marcus Vance, our pack Beta, stood in the doorway, his normally confident posture slumped with exhaustion. His eyes wouldn't meet mine.
"Where is she?" I demanded, my damaged voice barely above a whisper. "Where's Emma?"
Marcus crossed the room slowly, each step heavy with reluctance. When he finally looked at me, the grief in his eyes told me everything before his words confirmed my worst nightmare.
"I'm so sorry, Luna. Emma...she couldn't shift when the moon rose. Without the elixir..." His voice broke. "We tried everything. She passed last night."
Something feral and wounded clawed its way up from my chest—a sound I didn't recognize as human. My wolf howled in anguish, surging forward with such force that I felt my bones begin to crack, my skin ripple with the beginning of an uncontrolled shift.
"Luna, control your wolf!" Marcus commanded, gripping my shoulders. "If you go feral now, you'll never get to say goodbye."
Goodbye. The word penetrated my grief enough to halt the shift. Emma deserved a proper farewell ceremony. I needed to prepare her body according to our traditions, to whisper the ancient words that would guide her spirit to the Moon Goddess.
"Take me to her," I managed, forcing my wolf back with every ounce of willpower I possessed. "Now."
Marcus hesitated, then nodded, helping me to my feet. Each step sent daggers of pain through my broken ribs, but I welcomed it—physical pain was a merciful distraction from the hollow agony in my chest.
The walk to our sacred grounds felt endless. My legs trembled beneath me, weak from days of unconsciousness. The pack members we passed lowered their eyes, some murmuring condolences that washed over me like meaningless noise.
As we approached the ceremonial clearing where our dead were honored, I noticed something wrong. The farewell ritual for a child took three days of preparation—three days I had been unconscious. Yet the air already carried the scent of burned sage and cedar, the traditional herbs used in the final moments of the ceremony.
"Marcus?" I questioned, my steps faltering.
His grip on my arm tightened. "Luna, there's something you should know—"
But I had already seen it. In the center of the clearing stood the ceremonial urn, its lid removed. Inside were ashes—my daughter's ashes—already scattered across the sacred soil.
"No," I whispered, breaking free from Marcus's support and stumbling forward. "No, no, no!"
I fell to my knees beside the empty urn, my fingers trembling as they reached for the scattered remains. The ceremony had been completed without me. I hadn't been allowed to wash her small body with sacred oils, to dress her in ceremonial robes, to whisper my final words of love as her spirit departed.
Something caught my eye among the ashes—a small, half-finished wooden carving. Emma's wolf. The project she had been working on for weeks, guided by the old Omega who taught her to whittle. I picked it up with shaking hands, running my fingers over the rough edges where she had planned to carve the tail, the details she would never complete.
"Who did this?" My voice was deadly quiet, my grief crystallizing into something hard and cold. "Who performed the ceremony without me?"
"Derek," Marcus answered, his tone carefully neutral. "He had your consent mark."
I looked up sharply. "My what?"
"Your mate mark. He showed it to the Alpha as proof you had given permission for him to conduct the ceremony in your absence."
A forgery. A desecration. My daughter's body burned without her mother's goodbye.
I clutched the wooden wolf to my chest, feeling something within me shatter and reform—not into grief, but into something far more dangerous.
Vengeance.
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