
Reborn as the Lycan Queen: Luna of fate ruin
Chapter 4
The silence of the hallway was a lie. It was a heavy, suffocating velvet that tried to press the air out of my lungs as I stood outside my bedroom door.
In my previous life, I would have stayed in my room, dutifully waiting for the maids to lace me into my corsets, my heart fluttering with the innocent, terrifying excitement of a girl about to become a bride.
I would have prayed to the Moon Goddess to make me a worthy mate.
But that girl was a heap of cooling meat in a pit three years from now.
I needed to move. My body felt electric, every nerve ending firing with the residual shock of the "fire" the Goddess had breathed into my soul.
I needed to see him. I needed to look at Asha Blackmoor before the mask of the "Noble Alpha" was fully fastened for the public. I had to know.
Was our entire marriage a slow decay, or was the foundation itself built on a bed of maggots?
In my first life, the narrative was meticulously crafted by Malvera and Ruth. They had convinced me—and the pack—that Asha’s coldness was my fault.
I was told that his eventual drift toward Ruth was a natural consequence of my "inadequacy," my "barrenness," and my failure to spark his interest. I had spent three years apologizing for being cheated on.
I had spent a thousand nights wondering what I could have done to be more, to be better, to be enough.
The memory of that shame burned worse than the obsidian blade.
I walked down the hallway, my bare feet sinking into the thick, cream-colored carpet. My heart wasn't just beating; it was a war drum, a rhythmic thud that echoed the countdown to a catastrophe.
I didn't head for the grand staircase where the house staff were busy hanging garlands of white roses. Instead, I turned toward the guest wing—the wing where Ruth always stayed, the wing she claimed was "quieter" for her delicate constitution.
As I approached the heavy mahogany door of her suite, the air changed.
The scent of the manor—beeswax and lilies—was replaced by a thick, musky heat that made the hair on my arms stand up.
And then, I heard it.
A muffled, melodic laugh. A low, guttural groan that I recognized with a sickening jolt of recognition. It was the sound Asha made when he was losing control. The rhythmic, steady creaking of a bed frame followed, a sound so domestic and so carnal it felt like a slap.
I stopped. My hand hovered over the gold handle, trembling so violently I had to grip my wrist with my other hand to steady it. A part of me—the old Aria, the one who still wanted to believe in the fairy tale—screamed at me to turn around.
Run, she whispered. Run back to your room, drink the wolfsbane, and pretend you heard nothing. Maybe if you don't see it, it won't be true.
But that girl died in the dark. The woman standing in this hallway was a ghost who had seen the end of the world, and she was looking for a reason to set the beginning of it on fire.
I pushed the door open, just a fraction of an inch.
The room was bathed in a dim, amber light, the curtains drawn tight against the morning sun.
The air was heavy with the smell of sweat and a cloying, expensive perfume that Ruth favored—something with notes of jasmine and rot.
There, on the tangled, expensive sheets of the bed, was the man I was supposed to pledge my soul to in less than three hours.
Asha’s back was toward me, his powerful muscles tensing and rippling under his tan skin as he moved with a feral, singular focus.
He wasn't the "Cold Alpha" here. He was a man driven by a raw, ego-driven lust.
And beneath him, her fingers digging into the meat of his shoulders, was Ruth.
She saw me.
She didn't startle.
She didn't gasp or push him away in a fit of guilt. Instead, she tilted her head back, her eyes meeting mine through the narrow gap in the door. Her expression was one of pure, unadulterated triumph.
She didn't look like a sister caught in a betrayal; she looked like a conqueror.
As I watched, she arched her back, pulling Asha deeper into her, her gaze never leaving mine.
It was a silent communication, a jagged blade of a look that said: See? He was never yours. He was always mine. You are just the placeholder for the crown, but I am the one who holds the King.
Asha didn't even look back. He didn't feel the shift in the room. He didn't feel the soul-shattering gaze of his fated mate standing five feet away.
He was lost in the hollow pleasure of the moment, a man who thought he was so powerful he could rewrite the laws of the Goddess in the dark and still claim her blessing in the light.
I pulled the door shut. I did it slowly, silently, with a precision that surprised me.
I stood in the hallway, my back against the cold wood of the wall, and I waited for the tears.
I waited for the crushing weight of heartbreak to buckle my knees. I waited for the howl of the rejected wolf to tear out of my chest.
But there was nothing.
The tears had been burned out of me in the void. Instead of sorrow, I felt a strange, terrifying sense of relief. It was the relief of a prisoner who realizes the cell door has been unlocked the whole time.
The "bond" I felt for Asha—that warm, magnetic pull in my chest that I had cherished as a gift from the Goddess—wasn't fate. It wasn't a divine connection. It was a leash.
It was a magical tether Malvera had helped weave, likely using the same dark alchemy she used in my tea, to ensure I would be tied to a man who would keep me suppressed.
They weren't just betraying me; they were laughing at me. To them, I was a puppet. I was a tool to be used, a vessel to be emptied, and a sacrifice to be made when I was no longer useful.
They thought they could pull my strings until I snapped, and then simply sweep the pieces into a pit.
I leaned my head against the wall and breathed.
For the first time in two lifetimes, the air felt clear. The lavender-scented fog of the wolfsbane was gone, replaced by the sharp, cold clarity of the Path of Ruin.
I wasn't the victim anymore. I wasn't the "poor, tragic Aria."
I was the witness. And in the world I was about to build, the witness was going to become the judge, the jury, and the executioner.
I looked down at my hands. They were no longer trembling. They were steady—deadly steady. Asha wanted a wedding. Malvera wanted a coronation. Ruth wanted my life.
I would give them all exactly what they deserved, but not in the way they expected. If the Goddess wanted me to be the monster to kill the monsters, I would start by making sure the "Noble Alpha" and his "Radiant Luna" found out exactly how sharp a broken heart can be when it's forged in the fires of hell.
I turned away from the guest wing and walked back toward my room. I didn't need the lace. I didn't need the silk. I needed to prepare.
The "True Luna" was dead. Long live the Queen of Ruin.
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