
My Mate Rejected Me to Make Her His Luna
Chapter 2
The protection quilt took three days to complete.
Three days of my fingers cramping around the needle, three nights of staying up past midnight after my shifts at The Rusty Fang, carefully stitching ancient protection symbols into the fabric using the techniques my grandmother had taught me. Elder Martin's arthritis had been getting worse with the cold snap, and I'd seen her wince every time she reached for her tea.
The quilt was beautiful—deep blue cotton backing with silver thread forming interlocking moon phases along the border. I'd infused each stitch with chamomile and willow bark essence, following the old healing ways that didn't require a wolf to work. My grandmother always said the best magic came from the heart, not the shift.
I folded it carefully into my canvas bag and walked the two trailers down to Elder Martin's place. The afternoon sun felt warm on my shoulders, a rare kindness from the weather. Maybe today would be good. Maybe—
"Novalee! There you are!"
Alaiya's voice cut through my thoughts like nails on glass. She materialized on Elder Martin's porch as if she'd been waiting, her smile wide and bright and wrong. Behind her, I could see at least five neighbors had gathered—Mrs. Chen with her grocery bags, the Morrison twins taking a break from their yard work, even grumpy old Frank from the end unit.
"I was just telling everyone about our little project," Alaiya continued, her voice carrying across the small yard. She descended the steps with practiced grace, that gold anklet catching the light. Always catching the light.
Our project?
"It took so much work to source the right materials," she said, addressing the small crowd more than me. "But when I heard about dear Elder Martin's pain, I knew we had to do something special. I spent hours teaching Novalee the proper stitching techniques—she's getting so much better with guidance!"
The canvas bag suddenly felt heavy in my hands.
"I guided every stitch," Alaiya placed her hand on her chest, the picture of humble benevolence. "It's what a true Luna does—lifts up those beneath her station, helps them contribute to the pack's welfare."
Mrs. Chen nodded approvingly. The Morrison twins exchanged impressed glances.
"That's so generous of you, Alaiya," Mrs. Chen said. "We're lucky to have someone with your Luna qualities in the neighborhood."
My throat closed. I looked past Alaiya to Elder Martin's door, hoping to see the old she-wolf's knowing eyes, her steady presence that always cut through bullshit. But the door remained closed.
"Oh, it's nothing." Alaiya waved her hand dismissively, then reached for my bag. "Here, let me present it properly. Poor Novalee's been working such long shifts—she's exhausted."
Her fingers closed on the canvas strap. For a moment, we both held it, and her eyes met mine. They were cold and triumphant, daring me to object, to make a scene, to reveal myself as the ungrateful Omega who couldn't appreciate a Luna's generosity.
I let go.
She pulled the quilt from the bag with a flourish, and the neighbors gasped appropriately at its beauty. My three days of work. My grandmother's techniques. My healing magic woven into every thread.
"Isn't it lovely?" Alaiya's voice dripped sweetness. "I'll just take it inside to Elder Martin. You all have a wonderful day!"
She disappeared through the door, taking my gift, my effort, my purpose with her.
I stood there, empty bag hanging from my shoulder, while the neighbors dispersed with warm words about Alaiya's kindness. None of them looked at me. I was just the hands that stitched. The Omega who needed guidance.
The walk back to my trailer felt longer than it should have.
Cairo was waiting inside, pacing the small living room with an energy I hadn't seen in months. His eyes were bright, almost feverish, and he grabbed my shoulders the moment I walked through the door.
"I made contact," he said, his grip tight enough to hurt. "Novalee, I finally made contact with Uncle Marcus."
My brain struggled to shift gears from the theft I'd just witnessed to whatever this new development was.
"Your uncle? The one in New York?"
"The Alpha of the Eastern Seaboard Council." Cairo released me to run his hands through his hair, that old gesture of excitement from before the fall. "He responded to my messages. He wants to meet. This is it, Novalee. This is our way back."
Our way back. The words should have filled me with hope. Instead, they settled like stones in my stomach.
"When?" I asked.
"Two weeks. I need to make the right impression, show him I'm ready to reclaim my position." He turned to me, and something in his expression made me step back. "Start packing. The servant's trunk—you know, the small one."
"The servant's trunk?"
"You don't have the Alpha Aura to stand beside me as a mate in high society, Novalee. Be realistic." His voice carried that patient condescension that made my skin crawl. "You'll come as a pack Omega. It's a generous offer—most Alphas wouldn't bring their contract mistakes into their real territory. But I'm not heartless. You can work in the kitchens or the healing ward until I figure out a way to break the contract quietly. No scandal, no drama."
Contract mistake.
The words hung in the air between us, and I realized with sudden, crushing clarity that this had always been his plan. I was never his mate. I was never his partner. I was a transaction that had outlived its usefulness, a burden to be managed and eventually discarded.
"I need to go to work," I heard myself say.
"Did you hear what I said? Start packing—"
"I heard you."
I walked past him, grabbed my purse, and left. I had four hours until my shift started, but I couldn't stay in that trailer another second. I couldn't breathe.
The streets of the rogue sector blurred past me as I walked without direction. When I finally stopped, I found myself at the small community garden where I grew my healing herbs. My hands moved automatically, checking the chamomile, the lavender, the moonflower that only bloomed at night.
My grandmother's voice echoed in my memory: "The moon sees everything, little one. Even when we can't see her, she's watching. She knows who we really are."
I knelt in the dirt, my fingers digging into the earth, and let myself feel it—all of it. The theft of my work. The casual cruelty of Cairo's dismissal. The three years of sacrifice that meant nothing. The gold anklet that glinted in the sunlight while I counted pennies for heating oil.
When I finally stood, the sun was lower in the sky. I needed to get to work. But first, I needed to go home and check on something.
The keepsake box. The one I kept hidden in the back of my closet, behind the winter coats we couldn't afford to replace. The one that held my grandmother's silver necklace with the strange stone she'd said would "awaken when the time was right." The one that contained her hand-bound Grimoire of healing salves, recipes passed down through five generations of wolfless healers who'd found their own kind of magic.
I needed to make sure it was still there.
Something cold settled in my chest as I walked back to the trailer, a premonition I couldn't name. The afternoon shadows stretched long across the gravel, and somewhere in the distance, a crow called out a warning I was only beginning to understand.
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