Follow
Chapters
Share
Rejected Luna Fights Back Novel Cover

Rejected Luna Fights Back

The grand ballroom of Shadowmoon Pack's estate sparkled under crystal chandeliers, filled with the most influential Alphas and Lunas from across the region. I stood beside Jonathan on the elevated platform, my hands clasped in front of me, forcing my spine straight despite the weight of six years pressing down on my shoulders. The annual Inter-Pack Alliance gathering was always a display of power and prestige, but tonight felt different. The tension radiating from Jonathan made my skin crawl, and the way his eyes kept drifting to where Lena stood among the crowd sent ice through my veins. My emerald silk gown, chosen specifically to represent Shadowmoon Pack's colors, felt like a costume now. The Luna pendant at my throat—my mother's pendant—seemed to burn against my skin as I watched Jonathan's jaw clench and unclench. Whatever he was planning, my wolf was already retreating deep within me, sensing the coming storm. "Distinguished guests," Jonathan's voice boomed across the ballroom, commanding immediate silence. "Tonight marks not only our continued alliance but a significant announcement for Shadowmoon Pack's future." My heart hammered against my ribs. No.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

Dawn came too soon and not soon enough. I stood in the ceremonial circle behind the pack house, surrounded by the stone markers our ancestors had placed centuries ago for moments like this. The morning mist clung to the ground like ghostly fingers, and the air carried the scent of dew and impending change.

Elder Marcus Thompson stood across from me, his weathered face grave as he held the ancient ceremonial blade. Beta Williams flanked him, along with three other pack elders who had served Shadowmoon for decades. Their expressions ranged from shocked to sympathetic, but all carried the weight of witnessing something that should never have been necessary.

Jonathan stood to my left, his face a mask of disbelief and growing panic. Even now, after everything, he couldn't believe I would actually go through with it.

"Grace, stop this madness," he hissed under his breath. "You're making a mistake you can't undo."

I kept my eyes fixed on Elder Thompson, my mother's pendant warm against my throat. "I know exactly what I'm doing."

The elder raised the ceremonial blade, its silver surface catching the first rays of sunlight. "Luna Grace Jacobs, you have called for the ancient rite of mate bond severance. This ceremony, once completed, cannot be undone by mortal means. Do you understand the gravity of your choice?"

"I do." My voice carried across the circle, steady and clear.

"Then speak the words that will free you."

I drew in a breath that felt like it contained all the pain of the last six years, then released it along with the chains that had bound me. "I, Grace Jacobs, Luna of the Shadowmoon Pack, reject you, Jonathan Reed, Alpha of the Shadowmoon Pack, as my mate and sever our bond blessed by the Moon Goddess."

The words hit like lightning. Pain exploded through my chest, radiating outward until every nerve ending screamed in agony. The mate bond didn't just break—it tore, ripping away pieces of my soul I thought I'd need to survive. I dropped to my knees, gasping as waves of anguish crashed over me.

But Jonathan's scream cut through my own pain. He collapsed beside me, his hands clawing at his chest as if he could physically hold our bond together. "No! Grace, no, take it back! Take it back!"

The elders stepped forward, their faces solemn as they witnessed the ancient magic doing its work. Silver light flickered between Jonathan and me for a moment, then snapped like a broken chain, leaving us both gasping on the sacred ground.

"It is done," Elder Thompson announced. "The Moon Goddess has heard and accepted the rejection. Grace Jacobs, you are no longer bound to Jonathan Reed."

I struggled to my feet, my legs shaking but holding. The pain was already beginning to fade, replaced by something I hadn't felt in years—freedom. My wolf stirred within me, no longer cowering but lifting her head with cautious hope.

Jonathan remained on his knees, staring at me with wild eyes. "You can't do this. I'm your Alpha. I command you to reverse this!"

"You have no power over me anymore." The words came out stronger than I felt. "Your commands mean nothing to a wolf who is no longer yours."

By noon, the entire pack knew. I could feel their stares as I walked through the pack house, gathering my belongings and Meadow's things. Some watched with pity, others with curiosity, but a surprising number nodded with what looked like approval.

Beta Williams appeared at my door as I folded clothes into suitcases. "Luna—Grace," he corrected himself. "I wanted you to know that not everyone agrees with the Alpha's choices. If you need anything..."

"Thank you, Marcus." I touched his arm briefly. "But I need to do this myself."

Jonathan found me in Meadow's room as I packed her favorite books. He stood in the doorway, looking haggard and desperate in a way I'd never seen before.

"Grace, please. We can work this out. I'll send Lena away, I'll—"

"Stop." I didn't look up from the children's books in my hands. "It's too late for promises, Jonathan. You made your choice when you humiliated me in front of the entire alliance. You made it every time you chose her bed over mine, every time you dismissed our daughter, every time you treated our bond like it was disposable."

"But the pack needs stability. They need to see us united."

I finally met his eyes, and he flinched at whatever he saw there. "The pack will survive. They always do. But I won't survive another day pretending that what we had was love."

That afternoon, I was in the kitchen preparing Meadow's lunch when Lena appeared in the doorway. Her pregnancy was more visible now, her hand resting possessively on the small bump as she surveyed me with cold satisfaction.

"Well, well. The rejected Luna, playing house one last time." Her voice dripped with false sympathy. "How does it feel, Grace? Knowing that Jonathan will forget you ever existed once our son is born?"

I continued cutting Meadow's sandwich, my movements deliberate and calm. "Is there something you need, Lena?"

"Just wanted to make sure you understand your place now." She stepped closer, her scent—artificial roses and ambition—making my stomach turn. "You're nothing. A discarded toy. And that bastard daughter of yours? She'll never inherit anything from the Reed bloodline. My son will be the true heir, the only one that matters."

The knife in my hand stilled. "Don't talk about my daughter."

"Your daughter is a mistake Jonathan tolerates out of pity. But once he has a real heir, a son, she'll be forgotten just like you." Lena's smile turned vicious. "I'll make sure of it."

You may also like

After My Mate Made My Sister Luna, I Fought Back Novel Cover
8.7
I woke to the sound of my own silence. Five years. Five years since Axl Morrison had marked me as his mate, standing before the entire Shadowclaw Pack and declaring me his Luna. Five years since he'd endured the Alpha's Trial—a brutal beating from his father that left him bleeding but triumphant—just to claim me. And now, on our fifth anniversary, I lay curled on a thin mattress in what had once been a closet. The servants' quarters. My new home. My fingers traced the familiar ache in my throat as I sat up. Not a physical pain, but something deeper—a magical constriction that made my voice box feel like it was wrapped in iron. The Alpha Command had been renewed so many times over the years that it felt permanent, a collar I could never remove.
After My Mate Threw Me to Snakes, I Chose His Rival Novel Cover
9.1
The Alpha King of the South Pack declared me as their future Luna, and my mentor, seeing I had come of age, suggested I choose a mate during the ceremony by drawing from the four arranged mate contracts he had prepared for me. In my past, I had chosen Hugo Carroll, the Beta of the Northern Pack, whom I had adored since childhood. But after our mate bond was formed, I discovered he had a white moonlight—a girl named Norah Franklin, who was an Omega from a distant pack. When she learned Hugo was to be my mate, she was heartbroken and chose to end her life by drowning herself. For years after our marking ceremony, Hugo resented being bound to me, pining for Norah’s gentleness and warmth, convinced I had forced his hand with the mate contract. To punish me, he drugged me when I was at my weakest after giving birth and threw me into a pit of venomous snakes. I was torn apart, my body ravaged by poison, and I died in agony. When I opened my eyes again, I was back at the ceremony, holding the four mate contracts in my hand. This time, I drew the contract of Enzo Ross, the Alpha of the South Pack, whose family, once renowned healers, had fallen into obscurity. But on the day of the ceremony, Hugo lost his mind.
I Signed My Sister's Name on Our Marriage License Novel Cover
7.9
Stella Chen woke up on the morning of her own wedding — five years in the past — with the memory of every betrayal she had yet to survive. Her fiancé Ethan. Her little sister Mia. Twenty years of a marriage that hollowed her out until there was nothing left to bury. This time, she didn't write her own name on the marriage license. She wrote Mia's. Then she bought a one-way train ticket to Harbor City, enrolled in a university two thousand kilometers from everyone who had ever used her, and started over with nothing but the knowledge of how every lie eventually unravels. But the past doesn't stay behind. Ethan comes after her. Mia comes after her. And a man named Gabriel Moore — who once built an empire and grieved her death and never understood why — keeps looking at her like he already knows her from somewhere. He does. He just doesn't know it yet. A second-chance revenge romance about a woman who stopped waiting to be chosen — and chose herself instead.
My Mate Betrayed Me_ I'll Make Him Beg for Death! Novel Cover
8.6
Betrayed, tortured, and brutally killed by the mate who swore to protect her, Omega Lily’s life ends in blood and agony. But fate offers her one last chance—a return to the past, before her world was torn apart. Reborn with the memories of her suffering, Lily is no longer the weak-willed Omega she once was. This time, she will rewrite her destiny. This time, the hunters will become the hunted.
Rejected by Fated Mate Novel Cover
9.0
The scent hit me first—pine and winter frost, with an undertone of something wild that made my dormant wolf stir. I'd been standing alone by the punch bowl at the inter-pack gathering, trying to make myself invisible as usual. As the illegitimate daughter of the Ryan Pack's Beta family, I'd learned that being unnoticed was safer than being ridiculed. Then I saw him. Scott Dixon, future Alpha of the Dixon Pack, stood across the room in a navy blazer that couldn't hide his broad shoulders. His dark hair fell across his forehead in a way that made my fingers twitch with the urge to touch it. But it was his eyes that caught me—deep amber that seemed to see straight through my carefully constructed walls. "You're staring," my late-blooming wolf whispered inside me, her voice tinged with uncharacteristic excitement. "I'm always staring at something," I replied silently, trying to ignore her. "It's what we do when we're invisible." But when Scott's gaze locked with mine across the crowded room, something electric surged between us.
Rejected by the Alpha, Claimed by the King Novel Cover
9.3
The morning air carried the scent of jasmine from the neighboring gardens as I walked toward Mama's flower shop, my weekly ritual as sacred as Sunday prayer. Every Saturday for the past five years, I'd come here to tend the memorial garden she'd planted behind the building—moonflowers and forget-me-nots that bloomed in defiance of the city's concrete embrace. But today, the familiar creak of the shop's wooden sign was replaced by the grinding roar of machinery. I stopped dead in my tracks, my heart hammering against my ribs. A massive excavator sat where Mama's prized moonflower bushes should have been, its metal teeth dripping with soil and severed roots. Construction workers in hard hats moved like ants across the property, their voices lost beneath the mechanical symphony of destruction. "No," I whispered, then louder, "No!" I broke into a run, my wolf Aria stirring restlessly beneath my skin, sensing my distress. The shop's front window—where Mama used to display her seasonal arrangements—gaped like a wound, jagged glass scattered across the sidewalk like fallen stars. "Stop!" I screamed at the nearest worker, a burly man operating a smaller machine that was systematically uprooting what remained of the memorial garden. "You have to stop!" He looked up, annoyed, and killed the engine.