Follow
Chapters
Share
Omega to Luna: Rejecting My Betrayed Mate Novel Cover

Omega to Luna: Rejecting My Betrayed Mate

The grocery bags slipped from my hands, hitting the hardwood floor with a dull thud that echoed through our bedroom like a gunshot. Caelen was on top of her—Seraphina from the council's administrative office—her auburn hair splayed across our pillows like spilled wine. The scent hit me before my eyes could fully process what I was seeing: his familiar rosemary mixing with her cloying gardenia perfume, creating a nauseating cocktail that made my inner wolf, Aria, recoil in physical agony. "Lyra!" Caelen's voice cracked as he scrambled off the bed, his Beta aura flaring in what I'd once mistaken for protective instinct but now recognized as pure irritation. Not shame. Not remorse. Irritation. Seraphina clutched the sheet to her chest, her green eyes wide with panic as she gathered her scattered clothes. "I—I should go," she stammered, practically falling over herself to escape. "Yes, you should," I whispered, my voice barely audible over the roaring in my ears.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

The grocery bags slipped from my hands, hitting the hardwood floor with a dull thud that echoed through our bedroom like a gunshot.

Caelen was on top of her—Seraphina from the council's administrative office—her auburn hair splayed across our pillows like spilled wine.

The scent hit me before my eyes could fully process what I was seeing: his familiar rosemary mixing with her cloying gardenia perfume, creating a nauseating cocktail that made my inner wolf, Aria, recoil in physical agony.

"Lyra!" Caelen's voice cracked as he scrambled off the bed, his Beta aura flaring in what I'd once mistaken for protective instinct but now recognized as pure irritation.

Not shame. Not remorse.

Irritation.

Seraphina clutched the sheet to her chest, her green eyes wide with panic as she gathered her scattered clothes. "I—I should go," she stammered, practically falling over herself to escape.

"Yes, you should," I whispered, my voice barely audible over the roaring in my ears.

The bedroom door slammed behind her, leaving me alone with the man I'd called my mate for four years. The man whose child I'd carried. The man I'd trusted with every vulnerable piece of my heart.

"It's not what it looks like," Caelen said, reaching for his discarded shirt. Even now, even caught red-handed, he had the audacity to lie.

I stared at him—really looked at him—and wondered how I'd been so blind. His dark hair was mussed, his lips swollen, and that damned gardenia scent clung to his skin like evidence of his betrayal. "On our daughter's birthday," I said, the words scraping my throat raw. "On Sylvi's fourth birthday, Caelen."

He had the grace to flinch at that, but only for a moment. "Lyra, listen to me—"

"Mommy?" Sylvi's small voice cut through his excuse like a blade. "I heard something break."

My heart stopped. Our daughter stood in the doorway, clutching her stuffed wolf, Shadow, to her chest. Her dark eyes—so much like mine—took in the scene with the unsettling perceptiveness that had always made her seem older than her years.

I dropped to my knees, trying to block her view of Caelen as he hastily pulled on his clothes. "It's okay, sweetheart. Mommy just dropped the groceries."

But Sylvi's nose wrinkled, and she tilted her head in that way that meant she was processing something that didn't make sense. "Daddy," she said, her voice carrying that innocent clarity that children wielded like weapons, "why does that lady's flower smell stick to your shirt?"

The question hung in the air like a death sentence. Caelen's face went white, then red, his composure cracking like ice under pressure. I watched him struggle for an answer that wouldn't damn him further, but there was nothing he could say. Nothing that would explain away the scent evidence that even our four-year-old daughter could detect.

"Sylvi, go to your room," he said finally, his voice tight with barely controlled panic.

"But it's my birthday," she protested, looking between us with growing confusion. "Mommy promised we'd have cake."

I forced a smile that felt like swallowing glass. "We will, baby. Just give Mommy a few minutes, okay?"

She nodded reluctantly and padded back down the hall, Shadow dragging behind her. The sound of her bedroom door closing was like the final nail in a coffin.

Caelen and I stared at each other across the wreckage of our life. The silence stretched between us, heavy with the weight of everything that could never be unsaid, never be undone.

"How long?" I asked.

He didn't pretend to misunderstand. "Lyra—"

"How. Long."

His jaw worked as he weighed his options, probably calculating which version of the truth would do the least damage. "It doesn't matter."

"It matters to me."

"Six months," he said finally, and the number hit me like a physical blow. Six months. While I'd been planning Sylvi's birthday party, while I'd been working extra shifts to save for her new bike, while I'd been falling asleep alone because he claimed exhaustion from his Beta duties.

"Just Seraphina?"

Another pause. Another calculation. Another lie by omission.

"Answer me, Caelen."

"No," he said quietly. "Not just her."

The room tilted. I gripped the doorframe to keep from falling as the full scope of his betrayal crashed over me. This wasn't a mistake. This wasn't a moment of weakness. This was a pattern. A lifestyle. A systematic destruction of everything I'd thought was real.

"I need you to leave," I said.

He stepped toward me, his Beta aura pressing against my senses in a way that had once comforted me but now felt suffocating. "Lyra, we can work through this. For Sylvi's sake—"

"Don't you dare," I snarled, and for the first time in years, I felt Aria surge to the surface, her fury giving strength to my voice. "Don't you dare use our daughter to justify what you've done."

Caelen's eyes flashed with something dangerous. "I'm a Beta, Lyra. You're an Omega. Think carefully about how far you want to push this."

The threat was subtle but unmistakable. He was reminding me of my place in the pack hierarchy, warning me that challenging him could have consequences I wasn't prepared to face. It was a tactic he'd used before, so smoothly that I'd barely noticed it. But now, with the scales fallen from my eyes, I saw it for what it was: manipulation wrapped in the authority of his rank.

"Get out," I repeated, my voice steady despite the chaos in my chest.

He grabbed his jacket and headed for the door, pausing only to look back at me with something that might have been regret if I'd still been naive enough to believe it. "I'll be back tomorrow. We'll talk when you've had time to calm down."

The front door slammed, leaving me alone with the echo of his footsteps and the lingering scent of betrayal. I sank to the floor among the scattered groceries, my hands shaking as I stared at the birthday cake I'd bought for Sylvi—chocolate with pink roses, her favorite.

From down the hall came the soft sound of my daughter humming to herself, oblivious to the fact that her world had just shattered along with mine. I had to hold it together for her. Had to find a way to salvage this day, this birthday, this moment of innocence before the real consequences of what I'd discovered came crashing down.

But first, I needed answers. Real answers. Because something told me that what I'd witnessed today was just the tip of an iceberg that went much deeper than I'd ever imagined.

You may also like

After My Mate Crowned His Mistress Luna, I Fought Back Novel Cover
9.3
The heavy oak doors of the Silver Claw Pack's grand hall magnified the silence as I stood at the podium. My voice, usually steady and commanding, echoed slightly as I pointed to the map of our northern borders. "As you can see, the rogue incursions have increased by twelve percent since the last full moon," I stated, meeting the gaze of the Council elders. "I propose shifting the Gamma unit to the ridge line to—" "That will be enough, Cecilia." My mate’s voice cut through the air like a whip. I froze, my hand hovering over the map. Alpha August Spencer stood up from his throne, his aura restless and agitated. He wasn't looking at me. His eyes were fixed on the side entrance, where the heavy curtains parted. A hush fell over the room. Violette Fox stepped forward.
Betrayed By The Alpha's Order Novel Cover
9.8
To help the fake heiress marry my intended mate, on the day of our mark ceremony, my brother abandoned me in a cave filled with rogues. Under his orders, several rogue wolves, their faces twisted with malice, closed in on me. No matter how I pleaded, my brother remained unmoved. “Willow, Joaquin was always meant to be Emelia’s mate. Your presence has disrupted her happiness,” he said coldly. Three days later, he returned to take me home, asking if I still dared to challenge Emelia. “I won’t,” I replied hollowly. “I’ll give up everything for her.” What my brother didn’t know was that to protect myself from the rogues, I had jumped into the Moonstone Altar, a forbidden and dangerous place. The one who saved me wasn’t a rogue or a pack member but a powerful Lycan, hidden away and feared by all. --- My brother stood at the entrance of the cave, his expression stern as he looked down at me.
Mommy, Daddy Doesn't Want Us Back? Novel Cover
8.4
He never took care of me like he did to her. When our first born was contracted with AIDS, I knew whom to blame immediately. My husband, my mate broke my heart and still chose to stay with the woman who gave my child AIDS and dragged him through mud to his deathbed. But who was kicked out of the pack despite enduring all the pain? Me.
My Mate Gave My Paintings to His Mistress Novel Cover
8.6
The rain hits our territory like the Moon Goddess herself is weeping, each drop sharp as ice against the packhouse windows. I press my face to the glass, watching the storm tear through the forest with a violence that makes my wolf whimper deep in my chest. "Stella." Henry's voice cuts through the howling wind, flat and commanding. "We're taking the SUV for patrol." I turn from the window to find my fated mate pulling on his leather jacket, Caleb beside him already dressed for the weather. The sight of them together—so alike with their dark hair and strong Alpha jawlines—still makes my heart skip, even after all these years. "In this storm?" The words slip out before I can stop them. "Henry, it's dangerous out there. The roads—" "Are pack territory." His amber eyes flash with irritation. "We know our own land, Stella. The borders need checking after weather like this." Caleb doesn't even look at me as he zips up his coat.
My Mate Used My Wealth to Court His Omega Mistress Novel Cover
8.2
The soft chime of the Moonveil Medical Clinic's front desk barely registered as I sorted through the morning's patient files. My hands moved with practiced efficiency, arranging the folders by severity and specialty—a ritual that had become as natural as breathing over my seven years as Pack Healer. The scent of antiseptic and healing herbs filled the air, a comforting familiarity that had always centered me. I looked up at the sound of hesitant footsteps, my eyes finding Kylie Hudson standing near the entrance. My mentee's usual confidence seemed muted today, replaced by an unusual nervousness that made her fidget with the hem of her shirt. Her scent carried a strange mix of excitement and anxiety. 'Healer Fox,' she began, her voice softer than usual. 'I wanted to thank you personally for everything you've done for me. I know I'm just an Omega, but your mentorship has meant the world.' I set down the file I'd been reviewing and gave her my full attention. 'Kylie, you don't need to thank me.
Rejected by Alpha Mate Novel Cover
7.8
The summons came while I was organizing training schedules for the pack warriors. A formal mind-link from Alexander—not the warm, intimate connection we usually shared, but something colder, more official. *Lily, come to the inner chamber immediately.* I felt my wolf, Emma, stir uneasily within me. *Something's wrong*, she whined. *It's fine*, I assured her, though my hands trembled slightly as I set down my pen. *He's probably just stressed about the border negotiations.* As I hurried through the sprawling halls of the Silver Moon Pack house, I smoothed down my simple blue dress—the one Alexander once said brought out my eyes. Six years I'd been by his side, acting as his Luna in all but official marking. Six years of building my life around him, around us. The massive oak doors to the inner chamber loomed before me. I knocked softly, then entered when I heard his deep voice command, "Enter." Alexander stood by the window, his broad shoulders silhouetted against the afternoon light.