
My Mate Returned with a Luna and Child
Chapter 1
Five years. That’s exactly how long it takes to turn a grieving heart into a block of ice, and I had become an expert sculptor. As the lead Event Coordinator for the Regional Alpha Council, I didn't have the luxury of emotions. I had a schedule, a clipboard, and a ballroom in downtown Los Angeles that needed to look like the Moon Goddess herself had decorated it.
"The hydrangeas are wilting on table six," I barked into my headset, striding across the polished marble floor of the hotel lobby. My heels clicked a sharp, staccato rhythm that made the junior staff scatter like frightened rabbits. "Replace them. Now. And tell the valet team that if they scratch another Alpha's SUV, they’re paying for it in blood."
I checked my watch. The Moon Goddess Gala was the premier event of the season, a place where alliances were forged and broken over champagne. Everything had to be perfect. It was my armor. If I was the best, if I was indispensable, no one would look at me with that suffocating pity they’d reserved for Ella Harris, the girl whose mate died three days before her wedding.
"Breathe, El. You’re turning purple."
A large, warm hand settled on my shoulder, grounding me instantly. The scent of rich earth, pine needles, and rain enveloped me—a smell that had been my only sanctuary for half a decade.
I turned to see Alpha Corbin Rice of the Obsidian Pack grinning down at me. He was in a tuxedo that strained against his broad shoulders, his dark hair perfectly styled, but his eyes held that familiar, gentle warmth that was just for me.
"I am not turning purple," I huffed, though I leaned into his touch for a fraction of a second. "I am merely exercising my authority."
"You’re stress-eating the inside of your cheek," Corbin countered, holding out a steaming paper cup. "Black coffee. Two sugars. Drink."
I took the cup, the heat seeping into my cold fingers. Corbin was the only reason I hadn't gone rogue years ago. When Sebastian died—when my world ended—Corbin had been the one to pull me out of the darkness. He was my childhood friend, my protector, and the only Alpha who didn't look at me like a broken piece of china.
"The Ironclad Pack is late," I muttered, taking a sip. "They’re the new delegation from the north. If they don't check in within ten minutes, I’m scrubbing their seating assignment near the stage."
Corbin chuckled, a low rumble in his chest. "Ruthless. I like it. I’ll go smooth things over with the Elders. You handle the stragglers."
He gave my shoulder one last squeeze before heading toward the ballroom. I watched him go, a pang of gratitude hitting my chest. He was everything a true Alpha should be—strong, steady, kind. Why couldn't I just fall for him? Why was my heart still buried six feet under with an empty casket?
The automatic doors at the main entrance slid open with a hiss, snapping me back to reality. A gust of cool night air blew in, carrying a scent that made my wolf pace uneasily in my mind. It was a mix of expensive cologne and... something painfully, impossibly familiar.
I adjusted my blazer and marched toward the registration desk. The delegation had arrived.
"You're late," I said, keeping my eyes on the seating chart clamped to my clipboard. "Registration closed five minutes ago. I need the Alpha's name and the size of your party immediately if you want a table."
"My apologies," a deep, smooth voice replied. A voice that haunted my nightmares. A voice I had replayed in my head a thousand times until it faded into static. "We ran into traffic. Alpha Sebastian Edwards, Ironclad Pack."
My pen stopped moving. The world stopped turning.
*Sebastian.*
Slowly, painfully, I lifted my head. The air left my lungs in a violent rush. Standing on the other side of the velvet rope was not a ghost. It was a man. Flesh and blood. Alive.
He looked older, his jawline sharper, his shoulders broader, but it was him. Sebastian. The mate I had mourned for five agonizing years. The man whose "death" in a rogue ambush had shattered my soul.
My fingers went numb. The clipboard slipped from my grasp, clattering loudly against the marble floor. The sound echoed like a gunshot in the sudden silence of the lobby.
Sebastian stared at me, his blue eyes widening in genuine shock. The color drained from his face. "Ella?"
He wasn't dead. He was standing there, in a designer tuxedo, looking at me with panic rather than love. And he wasn't alone.
Wrapped around his arm was a woman—beautiful, curvy, with a smug smile that faltered when she saw his reaction. Luna Kyla. And holding his other hand was a child. A little girl, maybe five years old, with Sebastian’s eyes and a cloud of blonde curls.
My brain couldn't process the image. He was alive. He had a family. He had... replaced me?
"Ella, I—" Sebastian started, taking a step forward, his hand reaching out as if to steady me.
Suddenly, a sharp pain spiked through my temples, blinding and white-hot. It was a pressure I had never felt before, like a radio frequency screaming to be tuned in. My wolf howled in agony, and then, the static cleared.
I didn't hear a voice with my ears. I heard it in the center of my mind. It wasn't the smooth telepathy of a pack link; it was raw, guttural, and primal—the unshielded thought of a wolf that hadn't learned to hide yet.
I looked down at the little girl. She was staring up at me with wide, innocent eyes, clutching a stuffed bear.
But the voice in my head was a monster.
*Is that the broken toy Daddy threw away so he could keep us?* the child’s wolf snarled in my mind, the thought dripping with a malice far too old for her age. *Mommy said she was dead. Mommy said we won.*
You may also like





