
My Rogue Defied His Bond
Chapter 2
The Moonveil Pack House loomed before me like a fortress of glass and stone, all sharp angles and intimidating grandeur. My fingers trembled as I clutched the single bag containing my meager possessions—worn clothes and a few precious mementos from my life with the rogues.
"This way," Ethan commanded, not bothering to look back as he strode through the massive oak doors.
I hurried after him, my new wolf stirring restlessly beneath my skin. She—Olivia's wolf—recognized this place, flooding my mind with memories of running through these halls, training in the courtyard, watching Ethan from shadowed corners. The disorientation made me stumble.
"Keep up," he said sharply, his silver eyes cutting to me with barely concealed irritation.
We climbed a sweeping staircase to the third floor. Pack members passed us in the halls, their eyes widening as they caught my scent—rogue mixed with something else, something that made them bow their heads in submission. To Olivia's wolf, not to me.
Ethan stopped at a set of double doors, pushing them open to reveal a suite that took my breath away. Cream walls, silk curtains, a bed large enough for five people, and a sitting area with furniture that probably cost more than everything I'd ever owned.
"Your rooms," he said, his tone flat. "Everything you need will be provided. Clothes, food, whatever a Luna requires."
"Ethan, I—"
"Alpha Shaw," he corrected coldly. "In public, you will address me properly."
The rejection stung more than it should have. Inside me, Olivia's wolf whined, desperate to close the distance between us.
"There are expectations," he continued, moving to the window. The morning sun caught his profile, highlighting the harsh beauty of his features. "You will attend pack functions. You will conduct yourself as befitting a Luna-in-waiting. You will not embarrass me or this pack."
"I didn't ask for this," I whispered.
He turned then, and for a moment, something flickered in his eyes—grief? Anger? It vanished before I could identify it.
"Neither did I." His voice dropped to a dangerous rumble. "But Olivia made her choice, and now we both pay for it."
The cruelty of his words made me flinch. He noticed, his jaw tightening.
"Dinner is at seven. Don't be late." He strode toward the door, pausing at the threshold. "And Lily? Don't mistake this for anything more than duty. You may carry her wolf, but you are not her."
The door closed with a decisive click, leaving me alone in my beautiful prison.
---
Dawn came too quickly. The pack link buzzed with activity as wolves prepared for the morning run—a sacred tradition I'd only observed from afar. Now, as the Luna-in-waiting, I was expected to participate.
I dressed in the running clothes that had appeared in my wardrobe overnight, the fabric finer than anything I'd worn before. My hands shook as I braided my hair, Olivia's muscle memory guiding the movements.
*You can do this,* her voice whispered in my mind. *Our wolf is strong.*
The pack had already gathered in the courtyard when I arrived. Hundreds of wolves, their power humming in the air like electricity. They parted as I approached, creating a path straight to where Ethan stood at the front.
He was magnificent in the pale morning light, wearing only loose pants, his muscled chest bare. Power radiated from him in waves that made even the strongest warriors bow their heads. His eyes found mine across the distance, cold and assessing.
I stopped a few feet away, unsure of my place. In other packs, the Luna ran beside the Alpha, their wolves in perfect synchronization. But the space beside him remained empty, a chasm I didn't dare cross.
"We run," he announced, his Alpha command rippling through the pack.
Bones cracked and reformed as wolves shifted around me. Ethan's transformation was seamless, his massive black wolf emerging in seconds. He didn't wait, didn't look back, just took off into the forest with the pack streaming behind him.
I stood frozen, watching them disappear into the trees. A few wolves glanced back at me, confusion in their eyes, but none dared defy their Alpha's silent dismissal.
*Shift,* Olivia's voice urged. *Let me run.*
"I can't," I whispered to the empty courtyard. "Not yet."
The humiliation burned as I turned back to the pack house, alone.
---
That night, I locked myself in the suite's private training room. Sweat dripped down my spine as I faced my reflection in the mirrored wall.
*Again,* Olivia's voice commanded. *Feel the wolf. Let her free.*
I closed my eyes, reaching for the power that coiled inside me like a living thing. It was nothing like my weak wolf—this was raw strength, barely contained. When I tried to grasp it, memories flooded my mind: Olivia's memories of shifting, of running, of fighting.
My bones began to crack. The pain was excruciating, but different from my birthday. This time, the wolf had the strength to emerge. Fur sprouted along my arms as my body contorted.
Then I saw him—Ethan in Olivia's memories, younger, smiling at something off-camera. The longing that accompanied the image was so intense it shattered my concentration.
I collapsed, human again, gasping on the cold floor.
*You must learn control,* Olivia whispered, her presence both comforting and invasive. *For him.*
"For him?" I laughed bitterly. "He despises me."
*He fears what you represent. But underneath...* Her voice faded, leaving me with the phantom sensation of a heart that had loved too deeply.
I pulled myself up, facing my reflection again. The woman staring back wasn't the weak rogue I'd been three days ago. Olivia's wolf had changed me—made me stronger, more beautiful, more everything.
But I was still just a ghost wearing another woman's life.
Tomorrow, I would try again. Tomorrow, I would master this power that wasn't mine. Because if I didn't, I'd remain forever trapped in this golden cage, neither fully myself nor the woman whose love I was supposed to fulfill.
As if sensing my thoughts, a howl echoed from the forest—long, mournful, and achingly alone. Ethan. Even his wolf sounded cold.
I pressed my palm against the window, wondering if I'd ever bridge the distance between us, or if I was doomed to love a man who would only ever see another woman when he looked at me.
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