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My Mate Faked Death to Steal My Luna Title Novel Cover

My Mate Faked Death to Steal My Luna Title

Three weeks after I buried my mate, his twin brother called a council meeting to discuss territorial transition procedures. I sat at the far end of the Silverfang pack council table, in the seat I'd occupied since my eighteenth birthday when my father formally named me future Luna. The wood was old oak, scarred from decades of claws and arguments. I kept my hands folded on the surface and my expression carefully blank. Grief was expected. I wore it like armor. "Kody Sullivan" stood at the head of the table, shuffling through documentation my father's Beta had prepared. He looked exactly like Cole—same dark hair, same sharp jawline, same broad shoulders that filled out his shirt in a way that used to make my wolf purr. The resemblance was perfect because they were identical twins. Estranged, Cole had said.
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Chapter 3

The invitation arrived on ivory cardstock, hand-delivered by a young she-wolf I didn't recognize.

"Luna Diaz requests the honor of your presence," the girl recited, her eyes downcast. "A gathering of allied pack Lunas. Tomorrow evening, seven o'clock."

I took the card. Studied the elegant script. Celia's handwriting, I was certain. The return address was the Silverfang guest house—the one Cole used to reserve for visiting dignitaries.

She was already acting like she owned it.

"Tell Luna Diaz I appreciate the invitation," I said evenly. "But I'll have to decline. Please give her my regrets."

The girl nodded and left quickly, relief visible in the set of her shoulders.

I closed the door and walked the card directly to Ivey's room. She was at her desk, reviewing patrol schedules. I set the invitation in front of her without a word.

She read it. Her jaw tightened. "She's calling herself Luna already."

"She's testing boundaries," I said. "Seeing how far she can push before anyone pushes back."

"You want me there?"

I nodded. "Two informants minimum. I want every word she says. Every name she drops. Every promise she makes."

Ivey's mouth curved into something sharp and cold. "Consider it done."

The gathering happened exactly as planned. Ivey positioned two of our most reliable informants—both she-wolves with ties to allied packs, both loyal to the Griffin bloodline going back generations. They attended. They smiled. They listened.

And they reported everything.

Celia held court in the guest house parlor like she'd already been crowned. She served imported wine. She wore a dress that probably cost more than most pack members made in a month. And she talked.

Oh, she talked.

"The Silverfang transition is a concluded matter," she told the gathered Lunas, her voice bright with confidence. "The Council is simply finalizing paperwork at this point. Kody has been incredibly efficient."

One of the Lunas—Margot Chen from the Riverbend Pack—asked about me. The informant's account was word-perfect.

"And what about Gracelyn Griffin? She was named future Luna years ago."

Celia's laugh was light. Dismissive. "The Griffin girl is grieving. She needs time to heal, and frankly, she's not equipped to manage a territory this size on her own. It's better this way. Kinder, really."

The Griffin girl.

I read that line three times when the report came in. Let it settle. Let the cold, sharp thing in my chest sharpen further.

"She also mentioned the Luna ceremony," the informant wrote. "Said hers would be 'properly elegant, nothing like the modest affair Gracelyn would have managed.' Direct quote."

I filed the report with the others. Added it to the folder that was growing thicker every day. Evidence of intent. Evidence of conspiracy. Evidence of a woman so confident in her victory she couldn't stop herself from gloating.

Celia was digging her own grave, one careless word at a time.

And I was taking notes.

The summons from Kody came two days later.

Formal. Professional. A request for a meeting to "discuss practical arrangements for the transition period." The message suggested we finalize my departure from the pack house. Make it official. Clean.

I read it twice, then dressed carefully. Simple clothes. Neutral colors. The appearance of a grieving, cooperative Luna who just wanted to move forward.

Ivey offered to come with me. I shook my head.

"I need to see him alone," I said. "I need to watch him lie to my face one more time."

She didn't like it. But she didn't argue.

The meeting was in Cole's old office. Kody sat behind the desk—Cole's desk—with papers spread in front of him. He stood when I entered. Gestured to the chair across from him.

"Gracelyn. Thank you for coming."

I sat. Folded my hands in my lap. Waited.

He cleared his throat. Shuffled the papers. "I know this is difficult. But we need to discuss the pack house situation. With the territorial transition underway, it would be... cleaner... if you relocated to one of the Griffin secondary properties. Just temporarily. Until everything is finalized."

I kept my expression neutral. "You want me to leave."

"I'm suggesting," he corrected gently, "that it might be easier for everyone. Less complicated. You'd have privacy. Space to grieve properly."

His eyes met mine. Held for a beat. Then flickered away.

There.

That fractional pause. That tiny tell. The same one Cole always had when he was lying. The same one I'd catalogued over three years of loving a man who was never really mine.

My wolf snarled inside my chest. I kept her leashed.

"When?" I asked quietly.

"Within the week would be ideal," Kody said. He slid a document across the desk. "I've prepared a formal agreement. Nothing binding. Just an acknowledgment that the relocation is voluntary. For Council records."

I picked up the paper. Read it slowly. It was exactly what he said—a voluntary relocation agreement, framed as a compassionate accommodation during my grief period.

It was also evidence. Proof that he was systematically removing me from my own territory. Coercion dressed up as kindness.

I signed it.

Kody blinked. He'd expected resistance, I realized. Expected me to argue or cry or make it difficult.

I gave him none of that.

"I'll be out by Friday," I said. I stood. Smoothed my skirt. "Is there anything else?"

"No. That's... that's all." He stood too, looking slightly off-balance. "Thank you for being reasonable about this."

I met his eyes one last time. Saw Cole looking back at me through a mask that was wearing thinner every day.

"Of course," I said softly. "I just want what's best for the pack."

I left before he could respond.

Three days later, I moved.

Ivey coordinated everything. We kept it quiet—just her, me, and three pack members whose loyalty to the Griffin bloodline was absolute. No announcements. No drama. We packed my things into two vehicles and drove to the eastern property before dawn.

The house was smaller than the pack house. Older. But it sat on Griffin land, purchased by my grandfather sixty years ago. It was mine in a way the pack house had never been.

And more importantly, it was outside Cole's surveillance range.

We unloaded in silence. Ivey set up a secure office in the back room. I spread my evidence across the desk—documents, testimonies, audio fragments, sketches. Everything we'd compiled.

The public story was simple: a grieving Luna, respecting the transition, giving the new leadership space.

The private reality was sharper.

I had moved my war room to a fortress Cole couldn't touch. And I was almost ready to strike.

Ivey stood in the doorway, watching me arrange the files. "How much longer?"

I looked at the evidence. At the careful, methodical case we'd built. At the threads we'd pulled until the whole scheme was visible.

"Soon," I said. "Very soon."

Outside, the sun rose over Griffin land. My land.

And I smiled.

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