Follow
Chapters
Share
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.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 4

The banquet invitation arrived on a Thursday morning, slipped under the door of my eastern property like an afterthought.

Heavy cream paper. Embossed silver lettering. The Silverfang crest pressed into the wax seal — my family's crest, on his invitation. I stood in the hallway in my bare feet and read it twice.

Alpha Kody Sullivan requests the honor of your presence at a formal gathering of allied pack families. A celebration of continuity and territorial legacy. The great hall. Three weeks from Saturday.

At the bottom, in smaller print: Seating arrangements coordinated by Ms. Celia Diaz, honored companion to the Alpha.

Honored companion.

I set the card on the kitchen table and went to make coffee.

Ivey found me there twenty minutes later, both hands wrapped around my mug, staring at nothing. She picked up the invitation. Read it. Set it back down.

"Honored companion," she said flatly.

"That's what it says."

"Seven Alpha families," Ivey said. "He's going to make it official in front of everyone. Lock in the territorial claim before anyone can challenge it."

"That's the plan," I agreed.

She looked at me. Waiting.

I finished my coffee. "Give me an hour."

She left without another word.

I carried the invitation to the back room and closed the door.

The dossier was spread across my desk the way it always was — organized by category, cross-referenced, each piece of evidence labeled and dated. I had looked at these documents so many times over the past weeks that I could have reconstructed them from memory. But I looked at them again now. Carefully. All of it.

The forged death records, including the filed incident report that listed three witnesses whose testimony I now had documented reason to discredit. The intercepted mind-link fragment — Cole's own voice, saying *when I was Alpha* — saved and certified by Elder Morris, who had submitted a sworn affidavit to go alongside it. Dax Mercer's eyewitness account, the crude sketch of Marcus Hale, Ben Foster, and Riley Cross, and the safe passage agreement I'd signed that formalized his cooperation. The territorial transfer documents with their three administrative irregularities, each one annotated with the relevant procedural code it violated. Celia's documented confessions — the gathering at the guest house, her careless words to a room full of witnesses, every gloating sentence my informants had recorded and transcribed.

And last: the forensic signature comparison.

I had requested that one early on, quietly, through a pack lawyer who owed my father a long-standing professional debt. A certified forensic analyst had compared twelve administrative documents filed by "Kody Sullivan" since Cole's death against pre-death records on file with the Council. Eleven of the twelve showed statistically significant matching patterns consistent with a single author. The twelfth was inconclusive.

Eleven out of twelve.

I sat with all of it for the full hour. Checked every gap, every potential counter-argument, every place a Council warden might look for reasonable doubt. There were very few. Cole had been careful, but careful wasn't the same as thorough. And careful didn't account for a mate whose senses were sharper than he'd ever bothered to calculate.

When the hour was up, I knew what I had.

I picked up my phone and called the Alpha Council's enforcement division.

---

Warden Callum Brix was not what I expected.

I'd anticipated someone bureaucratic. Someone who'd make me wait, make me repeat myself, make me feel small for challenging a sitting Alpha's claim. Instead, he met me in a secured conference room two days later — just him, a legal recorder, and a deputy whose name I never caught — and he listened. Completely. Without interrupting.

He went through the dossier page by page.

I watched his face as he read. It was professionally neutral for most of it — the documents, the signatures, the territorial filings. But when he reached the mind-link fragment and pressed play on the audio file, something shifted. His jaw tightened slightly. He replayed it.

*When I was Alpha.*

He set the recorder down and looked at me. "Ms. Griffin. What you're presenting here is a claim that the current Alpha of Silverfang is not Kody Sullivan but Cole Sullivan, using a falsified identity to advance an illegitimate territorial claim." A pause. "That is an extraordinary allegation."

"Yes," I said. "It is."

"The identity evidence is compelling but circumstantial. Voice patterns, behavioral tells, administrative signatures." He leaned back. "A skilled defense attorney could argue that twins share these characteristics naturally."

"I know," I said. "That's why I saved the scent evidence for last."

I slid two documents across the table.

"My own certified wolf-sense affidavit," I said. "Sworn before a neutral pack notary, with full chain of custody documentation. I identified Cole Sullivan's mate-scent on the man presenting as Kody Sullivan at the March territorial council meeting. The mate bond is specific. It cannot be replicated between any two wolves, including twins."

Brix picked up the first document.

"The second affidavit," I continued, "is from Dax Mercer. A neutral packless witness with no prior connection to either the Griffin or Sullivan bloodlines. He independently identifies the same scent signature as consistent with the wolf he observed walking away from the staged rogue attack — alive, with Cole's personal guard — on the morning of the reported death."

Brix read the second affidavit. Read it again. Set both documents down side by side.

The room was very quiet.

I didn't fill the silence. I had learned a long time ago that patience was its own kind of pressure.

Finally, Brix looked up. "If we act and we're wrong," he said, "the Council will have interfered in a legitimate Alpha transition. The political fallout—"

"If you don't act," I said quietly, "a sitting Alpha will have successfully defrauded the Alpha Council, faked his own death, assumed a stolen identity, and stripped a Luna of her bloodline's ancestral territory." I met his eyes. "Which precedent would you rather set?"

Another silence. Longer this time.

Brix exhaled slowly. He closed the dossier. "The banquet is in three weeks."

"Yes."

"Let it proceed," he said. "We move when he makes his territorial declaration. Public venue, allied witnesses, full record." He paused. "Ms. Griffin. If this is what you say it is, I want you to understand — the scene at that banquet will not be quiet."

"Good," I said.

I reached across the table and shook his hand.

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Open the Official Website

You may also like

After My Alpha Killed My Mother, I Escaped Him Novel Cover
9.0
I rushed through the corridors of the Pack House, my heart pounding against my ribs. The guards nodded respectfully as I passed, but their eyes held a pity I didn't understand. My mother had been imprisoned for three days now, accused of a crime I knew she couldn't have committed. Her fragile mind wouldn't allow her to harm anyone. "Please," I whispered to myself, "let him listen this time." I tracked Jaxxon's scent to his private office—the room where pack business was conducted, where decisions that shaped our lives were made. My mate, the Alpha of the Silver Moon Pack, had been avoiding me since my mother's arrest. Today, I wouldn't let him escape. I didn't knock. The door swung open under my desperate push. The scent hit me first—vanilla and musk, arousal and betrayal mingling in the air.
After My Wife Was Sacrificed for His Lie Novel Cover
8.1
The chandeliers of the Obsidian Palace didn’t sparkle tonight; they glared. Ten years. It had been a decade since I traded half my lifespan to the Guardian, Spencer Graham, for the foresight that placed the crown upon Carter Bishop’s head. Tonight was supposed to be our triumph, the tenth anniversary of a reign built on my sacrifice and his ambition. Instead, the wine in my goblet tasted like ash. Carter sat beside me on the dais, his knuckles white as he gripped the armrests of the Iron Throne. He was handsome, with the jagged jawline of a warrior king, but the lines around his eyes had deepened into fissures of paranoia. He didn't look at me. He looked at the crowd, searching for threats in the sea of bowing nobles. Then, the crowd parted like water disturbed by a shark.
Heina: The Red Demon Dragon  Novel Cover
8.9
Suddenly, it was his turn to gasp. Fear. Shock. Disbelief. I couldn't tell, but he released my hand like it was some poisonous object. He turned away from me, towards the boys. "We are doomed. She will bring an end to us all." ********************************************************************** She's plus sized She's partially blind A nerd with brains...and bullies Her name... isn't a name. It's a curse. She's a curse A curse living in the human world And someone followed her there - her greatest bully. She hates her birthdays, they are her nightmares. But her eighteenth birthday turns out to be her worse - finding out the man she's called 'dad' all these years isn't her dad. And his biological twin sons are her destined mates. But that's not the problem. She is. She's the dragon that shouldn't be let to live. She's a doom to the dragon tribe...even to her own mates. Now, every dragon wants her dead. And the witches' clan want her powerful blood. The only people who can protect her, are the very people her demon dragon wants to destroy! Dive into this paranormal fantasy and follow Heina on a journey of self-discovery, character growth and unleashing powers that will ruin everything and everyone... including her mates.
My Alpha Sold Me to His Enemy Novel Cover
8.6
The packhouse gleamed like a jewel tonight, every surface polished to perfection—mostly by my own raw, blistered hands. I stood in the servants' corridor, my fingers still wrinkled from the bleach water I'd been scrubbing with for the past twelve hours. The annual Mate Ceremony was in full swing in the grand hall, and I could hear the music and laughter bleeding through the walls like a world I wasn't meant to touch. I wasn't supposed to be anywhere near the celebration. Omegas like me—wolfless, worthless—we stayed in the shadows where we belonged. But then Maya, one of the kitchen staff, came barreling around the corner with a tray of champagne flutes, and in her haste, she slammed directly into me. The impact sent me stumbling forward, through the servant's entrance, and straight into the swirling crowd of elegantly dressed pack members. I froze. Every eye in the room seemed to turn toward me at once. My stained work dress, my tangled hair still damp with sweat, the sharp chemical smell of bleach clinging to my skin—I was a stain on their perfect evening.
My Fake Alpha Mate Uses My Life to Save His Human Mistress Novel Cover
9.5
I stood perfectly still in the red moon downpour, watching the sharp pine and winter snow scent physically drip off my fated mate’s jaw as grey sludge. For three years, I turned my back on my royal bloodline for Silas, the powerful Alpha who claimed our souls were bound but refused to scar my neck with his mark. I bled my own veins dry to protect him from challengers. But as the storm washed away the expensive witch’s potion he bathed in every morning, the suffocating stench of a rotting, feral Rogue hit my nostrils. He wasn't delaying our mating to protect me from his enemies. He was using my pureblood aura to mask the scent of the heavily pregnant human woman he kept locked in our soundproof basement. Silas wiped the grey sludge from his cheek, his eyes flashing a soulless, feral red as he reached for my throat.
Reborn To Reign: Choosing The Monster Over The Prince Novel Cover
9.6
The bullet tore through my chest, ending my life as the perfect mafia princess. My fiancé, Connor Walls, watched me bleed out on the cold tile floor while he calmly cleaned his gun. Standing beside him was my cousin Jana, the girl I trusted with my life, looking at him with adoration as I took my last breath. I died realizing that the "Golden Prince" of the Chicago Outfit was actually a monster who had beaten me behind closed doors for years. And the man I had been terrified of—his brother Brannon, the "Butcher"—was the only one who had ever truly protected me. I died full of regret, hatred, and the metallic taste of blood. But then, I gasped, my body jolting upright on a blue gym mat. My skin was smooth. My heart was beating. Connor stood above me, young and arrogant, offering me a hand. I was twenty-one again. The beatings, the betrayal, the murder—none of it had happened yet. Connor smiled, thinking I was still the naive girl he planned to break and discard. He thought I would walk into the Rite of Choice tonight and obediently become his property. He was wrong. That night, under the crystal chandeliers, the Don asked me to pledge myself to the heir. The entire room held its breath, waiting for the rehearsed "I do." I looked at Connor, then turned my gaze to the terrifying shadow in the corner. "The debt requires a union with the Walls bloodline," I said, my voice steel. "It does not specify the heir." I pointed at the monster everyone feared. "I choose Brannon Walls."