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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 3

I let the silence stretch between us, watching Caelen's triumphant expression as he waited for my response. His words hung in the air like poison—the threat to take Sylvi, to destroy what little reputation I had, to leave me with nothing. The trap was perfect, years in the making, and we both knew it.

Slowly, I sank into the dining room chair, my hands trembling as I covered my face. The tears came easily—not because I was broken, but because I needed him to believe I was.

"Please," I whispered through my fingers, letting my voice crack with just the right amount of desperation. "Please don't leave me. Don't take Sylvi away from me."

I heard him move closer, felt his Beta aura shift from menacing to smugly satisfied. When I looked up at him through tear-blurred eyes, his expression had transformed into something that might have fooled me once—concern mixed with magnanimous forgiveness.

"Oh, sweetheart," he murmured, crouching beside my chair. His hand found my shoulder, the touch that had once comforted me now making my skin crawl. "I don't want to take her away. I just need you to understand how things work."

I nodded frantically, playing the part of the grateful, chastened mate. "I understand. I'm sorry, Caelen. I was just so hurt, so confused. I wasn't thinking clearly."

"Of course you weren't," he said, his voice dripping with condescension disguised as kindness. "It's not your fault, Lyra. Omegas aren't built for this kind of complex thinking. That's why you need me to handle the important decisions."

Each word was a knife to my pride, but I forced myself to nod again, to lean into his touch like a broken thing seeking comfort. "You're right. I need you. Sylvi needs you. I don't know what I was thinking."

His smile was radiant with self-satisfaction. "That's my good girl. See? Everything's better when you remember your place."

He pulled me into his arms, and I buried my face against his chest, hiding the cold calculation that had replaced the tears in my eyes. He smelled like victory and other women's perfume, but I breathed it in like it was salvation itself.

"I love you," I lied against his shirt.

"I know you do," he replied, and the casual arrogance in his voice told me everything I needed to know about how completely he'd bought my performance.

That night, after Caelen had gone to bed with the satisfied air of a man who'd successfully put his disobedient pet back in line, I sat in Sylvi's room watching her sleep. Her dark hair spread across her pillow like mine, her small face peaceful in a way that made my chest ache. She clutched Shadow to her chest, her breathing soft and even.

"I'm going to fix this," I whispered to her sleeping form. "I'm going to make sure no one can ever use you against me again."

Sylvi stirred slightly, her lips curving in the hint of a smile, as if even in sleep she could hear the promise in my voice.

I waited until the house fell completely silent, until I was certain Caelen's breathing had settled into the deep rhythm of sleep. Then I crept to my laptop, settling at the kitchen table where the moonlight streaming through the window provided just enough illumination.

My fingers trembled slightly as I opened a private browser window and began searching. "Advanced Combat Training," I typed first, then "Political Strategy for Pack Dynamics," then "Anonymous Wolf Development Programs."

The third search yielded exactly what I was looking for: The Northern Alliance Training Collective. An elite, cross-pack educational program that promised "Advanced Combat and Political Strategy for Ambitious Wolves." The website was sleek, professional, and most importantly, completely anonymous. Students were identified only by chosen codenames, and all interactions took place through encrypted channels.

I created a new email address—ariawolf2024@securemail.com—and filled out the application under the name "Aria." When it asked for my current rank, I hesitated for only a moment before selecting "Beta." It wasn't technically true, but after seeing how my ideas had been received when filtered through Caelen's rank, I knew the truth would only limit my opportunities.

The program fee was substantial—more than I'd ever spent on myself in my entire life. But I had a secret credit card, one I'd opened years ago during a brief moment of financial independence paranoia. I'd never used it, just made small payments to keep it active. Now, as I entered the numbers, it felt like the best investment I'd ever made.

The confirmation email arrived within minutes: "Welcome to the Northern Alliance Training Collective, Aria. Your first module, 'Psychological Warfare and Pack Dynamics,' will be available in your student portal within 24 hours. Prepare to transform your understanding of power."

I closed the laptop and sat in the darkness for a long moment, feeling something shift inside me. The broken, desperate woman who'd begged Caelen not to leave her was already becoming a memory. In her place was someone harder, sharper, infinitely more dangerous.

The next morning, I woke before dawn and prepared Caelen's coffee exactly how he liked it—strong, with just a hint of honey. I made his favorite breakfast, pressed his shirt, and when he came downstairs, I greeted him with a smile that was equal parts submission and adoration.

"Good morning, darling," I said, standing on my toes to kiss his cheek. "I thought about what you said last night, and you're absolutely right. I've been so foolish."

His chest puffed with pride as he accepted the coffee and the worship in my voice. "I'm glad you're seeing sense, sweetheart. It's much better for everyone when you focus on what you're actually good at."

"Taking care of you and Sylvi," I agreed, my voice soft with manufactured devotion.

"Exactly." He patted my head like I was a well-trained dog, and I leaned into the touch, hiding the ice that was spreading through my veins.

Throughout the day, I played my part perfectly. I deferred to his opinions, laughed at his jokes, and asked his advice on trivial household matters. When he mentioned having to work late again, I simply nodded and offered to pack him dinner.

"You're being so understanding," he said, genuine surprise flickering in his eyes. "I was worried you might still be upset about... well, you know."

"About your affairs?" I asked quietly, then quickly shook my head. "No, I understand now. You have needs that I obviously wasn't meeting. I'll do better."

The satisfaction in his expression was nauseating, but I absorbed it all, filing it away as fuel for what was coming.

That night, after another performance of domestic bliss, I waited until his breathing deepened into sleep. Then I slipped from our bed like a shadow and returned to my laptop.

My first lesson was waiting: "Understanding Power Dynamics: How Perception Shapes Reality in Pack Hierarchies."

As I read through the introduction, my pulse quickened with something that felt like hunger. This wasn't just about learning to fight or manipulate—this was about understanding the very foundations of the system that had kept me trapped.

"Power," the lesson began, "is not about what you can do. It's about what others believe you can do. And belief, dear student, can be manufactured."

I smiled in the darkness, my fingers already moving to take notes. Caelen thought he'd broken me, thought he'd reduced me to a grateful, dependent shell of myself.

I’d make him pay for underestimating me.

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