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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.
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Chapter 2

Three nights of sleepless investigation had left my eyes burning and my hands trembling as I navigated the pack's secure server. What had started as a desperate search for evidence of Caelen's affairs had led me down a much darker rabbit hole.

I'd initially been looking for patrol schedules, hoping to cross-reference his supposed duties with the times I'd caught traces of unfamiliar scents on his clothes. But a mistyped command had brought up archived council meeting minutes instead—files I'd never seen before, despite supposedly being part of a mated pair that shared everything.

My breath caught as I scrolled through a document dated two years ago. There, in neat council formatting, was a proposal titled "Border Defense Optimization Strategy." I recognized every word, every tactical detail, every innovative approach—because I had written it.

But Caelen's name was listed as the author.

My fingers flew across the keyboard, searching deeper. Another document surfaced: "Conflict Resolution Protocol for Inter-Pack Disputes." Again, my work. Again, his name. The council commendation attached praised "Beta Caelen Draxen's exceptional strategic thinking and innovative approach to pack security."

I remembered that night two years ago when I'd stayed up until dawn perfecting that border strategy, fueled by nothing but coffee and the desperate hope that maybe, finally, someone would recognize my potential. When I'd shown it to Caelen, he'd kissed my forehead and called it brilliant, promising to help me present it to the council.

"The timing isn't right," he'd said. "Let me handle the politics. You know how they are about Omegas making suggestions."

I'd trusted him. God help me, I'd actually felt grateful.

The screen blurred as tears of rage filled my eyes. Document after document revealed the same pattern—my ideas, my strategies, my sleepless nights of research, all credited to him. He hadn't just stolen my body's faithfulness; he'd stolen my mind's work, my career, my future.

Aria stirred restlessly within me, her fury matching my own. She'd always known something was wrong, had always bristled when Caelen received praise for accomplishments that felt hollow. Now I understood why.

I printed everything. Every stolen proposal, every false commendation, every lie that had built his reputation while keeping me in the shadows. The printer's mechanical whir seemed deafening in the quiet house, each page a nail in the coffin of my marriage.

By the time Caelen returned home the next evening, I had the evidence spread across our dining table like a war map. He walked in with that easy confidence that had once made my heart flutter, his Beta aura radiating the authority he'd stolen from me.

"Lyra," he said, his voice carrying that patronizing tone I'd somehow convinced myself was affection. "I hope you've had time to think about—"

He stopped mid-sentence when he saw the papers.

I stood behind the table, my hands flat against its surface to keep them from shaking. "The Border Defense Optimization Strategy," I said quietly. "The one that earned you a commendation from Alpha Alex. The one that got you promoted to Senior Beta."

Caelen's eyes flicked over the documents, and something shifted in his expression. The mask of concern he'd worn since yesterday began to slip.

"The Conflict Resolution Protocol," I continued, my voice growing stronger. "The Inter-Pack Communication Framework. The Resource Allocation Matrix." I slammed my palm against each document as I named them. "All mine, Caelen. Every single one."

For a moment, he said nothing. Then, slowly, his lips curved into a smile that made my blood run cold.

"Oh, my naive little Omega," he said, and his voice was nothing like the man I'd thought I'd married. It was smooth, calculating, cruel. "Did you really think you were clever enough to have come up with those ideas on your own?"

The words hit me like a physical blow. "I have the original files. The timestamps. The—"

"The what?" He laughed, a sound devoid of warmth. "The word of an Omega against a Beta? Against the wolf who's been protecting this pack while you played house?"

He moved around the table with predatory grace, and I forced myself not to step back. "You want to know the truth, Lyra? You were never as smart as you thought you were. Those ideas? They were good, I'll give you that. But they needed refinement. Polish. The kind of strategic thinking that only comes with real leadership experience."

"You stole them," I whispered.

"I improved them," he corrected. "I made them worthy of the council's attention. Do you think they would have listened to some nobody Omega with delusions of grandeur? I gave your little thoughts the credibility they needed."

The casual cruelty in his voice was worse than any physical blow. This wasn't the heat of anger or the desperation of being caught. This was cold, calculated contempt that had been hiding beneath his charming facade for years.

"And the affairs?" I asked. "Were those improvements too?"

His smile widened. "Those were rewards. For all the hard work of managing an ungrateful mate who couldn't see how good she had it."

I felt something break inside me—not my heart, that had shattered days ago—but something deeper. The last vestige of the naive wolf who'd believed in love and partnership and shared dreams.

"I want a divorce," I said.

Caelen's laughter filled the room. "Oh, sweetheart. You really don't understand how this works, do you?"

He leaned against the table, his posture casual but his eyes sharp as a blade. "See, while you've been playing detective, I've been having conversations. Important conversations with important people. About my poor, unstable mate who's been acting erratically lately. About how she's become so obsessed with rank and recognition that she's been neglecting our daughter."

My blood turned to ice. "What are you talking about?"

"Elder Kaelen is very concerned about Sylvi's welfare," he continued conversationally. "Apparently, there have been reports of you leaving her alone while you pursue these... fantasies of yours. Of emotional outbursts. Of an Omega who's forgotten her place and her priorities."

"That's not true," I breathed.

"Isn't it?" He tilted his head. "Who's going to believe you, Lyra? The loyal Beta who's served this pack faithfully for years, or the hysterical Omega who's clearly having a breakdown?"

The trap. I could see it now, perfectly constructed, months in the making. Every time he'd encouraged me to "pursue my interests" while he watched Sylvi. Every time he'd suggested I needed "space to think" when I'd questioned his absences. He'd been building a case against me, painting me as the unstable, neglectful mother.

"If you try to divorce me," he said, his voice dropping to a whisper that somehow carried more menace than any shout, "I will destroy you. I will take Sylvi, and I will make sure everyone knows exactly what kind of mother you really are. I'll reject you publicly, strip you of what little status you have as my mate, and you'll spend the rest of your miserable life as the lowest-ranking wolf in this pack."

He straightened up, adjusting his shirt with casual precision. "Or you can be a good little Omega, accept that this is how things are, and we can continue our happy family charade. Your choice."

The dining room fell silent except for the sound of my ragged breathing. Caelen watched me with the patience of a predator who knew his prey was cornered, and for the first time in my life, I truly understood what it meant to be powerless.

But as I stared into his cold, triumphant eyes, I felt something else stirring beneath the fear and rage. Something calculating and patient and utterly ruthless.

If he wanted to play games of power and manipulation, then I would learn the rules.

And I would learn to win.

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