
Reborn as the Lycan Queen: Luna of fate ruin
Chapter 7
The final step of the ceremony loomed before me like a knife poised above my head. Every eye in the Moon Temple was fixed on me, every whisper, every breath, every heartbeat amplified by the vast silence around us.
The Moon Priest’s voice carried through the hall, calm and unwavering, yet I could feel its weight like a physical hand pressing down on my chest. “Aria Blackmoor, step forward and place your hand over your mate’s heart to seal the bond.”
The words echoed in my ears, a reminder of everything I had endured. Three years of patient suffering, quiet obedience, and blind hope all led to this moment. But I was not the same girl who had once believed in love and honor. That girl had died on a cliff, betrayed by the people she trusted most. That girl had been broken. I had returned, reborn, stronger, and with clarity sharper than any blade.
My wolf stirred within me, low and cautious, a warning I had learned to respect. It remembered the fear, the pain, the helplessness of my last death. It reminded me that this moment, so steeped in tradition, had once ended everything. I took a slow, steadying breath, pressing my hands to my sides and grounding myself. My heartbeat was loud in my ears, not from fear, but from the fire that had awakened within me. I would not be afraid this time.
I stepped forward, feeling the polished marble beneath my feet, each step deliberate and controlled. The Moon Priest’s gaze was heavy, expecting obedience, expecting the ceremonial bond to be sealed. Around me, the pack members watched with polite attentiveness, their faces expectant, waiting for me to perform the ritual as tradition demanded. Their silence pressed on me like a weight, but I let it wash over me without yielding.
When I finally reached Asha, my future that had been stolen from me stood before me as a man I no longer recognized. His face was the same—tall, proud, perfectly sculpted—but his eyes held none of the warmth a mate should. They held entitlement, arrogance, and the cold satisfaction of someone who believed themselves untouchable. I looked at him fully, seeing the truth beneath the mask.
He had never loved me. He had never chosen me. He had only waited for the perfect moment to betray me completely.
Memories surged in my mind, not in panic but in precise, sharp clarity. I remembered the guest room, Ruth’s cruel smile, Asha’s words that confirmed I had never been his mate. I remembered the betrayal that had ended my first life, the cliff that had taken me to the edge of death.
And now, here I was, standing at the same moment that tradition demanded I submit, that the Moon Temple demanded I perform, and I realized something profound: this was no longer about them. This was about me.
I could feel the temple itself responding to the tension. The air was heavy, cold, and charged with an energy that made my skin tingle. The moonlight pouring through the high windows felt sharp and silver against my cheeks. It illuminated the faces of the elders, who watched me with unease I had not noticed before. Even the ceremonial magic seemed unsettled, the faint hum of the bonds flickering, as if it sensed my will would not bend.
The priest gestured toward Asha, and I felt the expectation of the ritual pressing down like a mountain. Tradition dictated that I step forward, that I submit my hand, that I accept the mate I had been forced into. But I had learned the hard way that submission was not safe. Submission was death. Submission was the false hope that had once cost me everything. And I refused it.
I stepped back instead. Slowly, deliberately, I moved my feet away from the altar, away from Asha, away from the life that had been stolen from me. Every eye in the hall followed my movement, disbelief rippling across every face. Gasps filled the air, soft at first, then louder, like a wave crashing over the quiet hall.
Candles flickered violently, some going out entirely, as if the magic of the temple itself recoiled at my defiance. The Moon Priest faltered, eyes widening behind his silver mask, his voice breaking as he attempted to continue the incantation.
I raised my head and met the eyes of the elders. I could see shock, confusion, even fear. They had expected obedience, tradition, and the smooth flow of the ceremony. Instead, they were faced with my refusal. Ruth froze, her false smile cracking ever so slightly, a small but satisfying fracture in her facade. Lady Malvera’s calm, unflinching eyes flickered with something I had never seen before—hesitation.
I took a deep breath, my wolf coiling within me like a living thing, ready to defend, ready to strike if needed. I drew on the anger, the betrayal, the fire of my first death and my rebirth. My voice rang out, steady, strong, unwavering. “I reject you, Asha Moonveil. You are not my mate.”
The words landed like a hammer.
The temple seemed to shudder at them. Gasps turned into murmurs of outrage, whispers of disbelief rippling through the assembled pack. The ritual magic shattered mid-chant, the energy that bound the ceremony breaking apart in response to my will. Candles extinguished with a hiss of smoke. The Moon Priest stepped back, clutching his staff as though it were a shield against the audacity of my choice.
Asha’s face changed, his shock melting into something far more dangerous. I had expected anger, but not this raw, burning fury. His jaw tightened, and he stepped forward, towering over me, his presence radiating humiliation and rage. “You dare?” he spat, voice low and dangerous. “You ungrateful, disobedient bitch…”
He struck me across the face. Pain flared sharply, fire and humiliation blooming across my cheek. Blood trickled to the corner of my mouth. The taste of copper filled my senses. I staggered, but I did not fall. I would not give him the satisfaction of seeing me collapse. My eyes met his, unflinching, and I felt the Moon Goddess’s presence like a cool wind against the heat of my fury.
The hall trembled faintly under the force of the moment, the power of defiance and destiny colliding with the rigid weight of tradition. Asha raised his hand again, ready to strike, his eyes flashing with the desperate violence of a man who believed himself untouchable. Around us, the elders whispered urgently among themselves, torn between enforcing the old laws and fearing the omen-filled temple.
The pack members froze in place, some turning away, some leaning forward in anticipation, none daring to intervene.
I could feel my wolf growl within me, low and warning, a vibration that resonated in my bones. I felt the power of the moon above, silver and cold, whispering strength and clarity.
This moment was not just about me rejecting a false mate. It was about claiming myself. It was about sending a message to everyone who had ever tried to control me. I would no longer be a pawn in their game.
Asha lunged at me again, his fury burning hot and reckless, pride and rage colliding like clashing steel. His eyes were wild, unrecognizable, as if he had been swallowed whole by something cruel.
“You ungrateful bitch,” he snarled. “You are nothing without me.”
His words struck like lAshaes, meant to break me, but I didn't come this far to be broken by him. He wanted to remind me of a power he believed he still held. He reached for me again, his voice rising, desperate and commanding.
“You can’t reject me. You will come back and complete the ritual—right now.”
Something inside me snapped.
“No,” I shouted, my voice shaking but unyielding. “I rejected you because I don’t want you as my mate.”
The air seemed to still. Then his mouth twisted into something ugly—something wounded and vicious.
“No one else will ever accept you after today,” Asha spat, his ego bleeding through every word. “You’re ruined.”
I lift my chin.
“I would rather go rogue,” I said, my voice steady, burning with resolve, “than spend a single breath bound to you.”
“I reject you, Asha moonveil.”
The words echoed—final, irreversible.
“I reject you, Asha moonveil.”
Tears blurred my vision, but I screamed it again, pouring every ounce of pain, betrayal, and freedom into it.
“I reject you, Asha moonveil!”.
Time slowed, each heartbeat a drumbeat of defiance. The memory of my death, the betrayal, the hopelessness of that night, all came back, but instead of paralyzing me, it fueled me.
I let my gaze sweep over the room, taking in the crowd. I saw disbelief, shock, fear, even a hint of admiration in some eyes. I saw Ruth’s smile falter, replaced by a flash of genuine fear. I saw Lady Malvera’s eyes tighten with concern, her calculated mask cracking ever so slightly. I knew then that the ripples of my choice would spread far beyond this hall. My rejection had become a weapon, sharp and precise.
I lifted my chin, feeling the weight of every tradition, every expectation, every glance pressing on me. And I realized something. I was not alone.
My wolf was here, my strength was here, and for the first time, I was completely, utterly, myself. Nothing—no betrayal, no ritual, no pack elder—could dictate my fate.
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