
Rejected Luna Fights Back
Chapter 3
The mahogany desk between Jonathan and me felt like an ocean, its polished surface reflecting the afternoon light streaming through his office windows. I sat rigidly in the leather chair across from him, my hands folded in my lap to hide their trembling as we discussed the one thing that mattered most—Meadow's future.
"She stays with me during school weeks," Jonathan said, not looking up from the custody documents spread before him. His pen scratched across the paper with mechanical precision. "Weekends can be negotiated based on pack obligations."
"Pack obligations?" My voice came out sharper than intended. "She's six years old, Jonathan. She needs stability, not a schedule that revolves around your political convenience."
His jaw tightened, but he still didn't meet my eyes. "As Alpha, I have responsibilities. Meadow needs to understand that the pack comes first. It always has."
"The way it came first when you chose Lena over your own daughter's mother?" The words slipped out before I could stop them, hanging in the air like a challenge.
Finally, Jonathan looked up, his eyes flashing with that familiar anger. "Don't start, Grace. We've been over this. Lena is carrying the future of this pack. A son. An heir who can actually—"
The office door burst open with such force that it slammed against the wall. Lena stumbled in, one hand pressed dramatically to her lower back, the other clutching her small bump. Her face was pale, her breathing labored in a way that immediately commanded attention.
"Jonathan!" she gasped, tears streaming down her cheeks. "Something's wrong. The baby—I think something's happening to the baby!"
Jonathan shot to his feet so fast his chair rolled backward, hitting the wall. "What? What's wrong?" He was around the desk in seconds, his hands hovering over Lena's trembling form.
"Cramping," she whispered, her voice breaking on the word. "Sharp pains, and I'm bleeding a little. Please, I'm so scared. What if we lose him?"
I watched from my chair as Jonathan's entire world narrowed to the woman in his arms. His face went white with panic, his hands shaking as he guided her toward the door. "We need to get you to the pack healer immediately. Everything's going to be fine, I promise."
"Jonathan," I said quietly, not moving from my seat. "We weren't finished discussing—"
"Later, Grace." He didn't even glance back at me. "This is more important."
More important. The words hit like a physical blow, confirming what I'd known but tried to deny. Meadow and I would always be secondary, always the ones pushed aside when Lena's needs arose. I sat alone in his office for several minutes after they left, staring at the half-finished custody papers scattered across his desk, understanding with crystal clarity that my daughter and I were fighting for scraps of attention from a man who had already made his priorities clear.
The law office of Mitchell & Associates occupied the second floor of a modest building in the neutral territory between pack lands. I'd never imagined I'd need a lawyer who specialized in werewolf family law, but here I was, sitting across from Patricia Mitchell, a sharp-eyed woman in her fifties who had built her career on helping wolves navigate the complex intersection of pack politics and personal rights.
"As a rejected Luna, you have more protections than many wolves realize," Patricia explained, her fingers dancing across her tablet as she pulled up relevant statutes. "The Werewolf Council established these laws specifically to prevent Alphas from using their power to trap mates in abusive situations."
I leaned forward, hope flickering in my chest for the first time in weeks. "What kind of protections?"
"Financial support, for one. Jonathan is required to provide for both you and Meadow until she reaches adulthood, regardless of your rejected status. The amount is calculated based on pack assets and his Alpha income." Patricia's smile was encouraging. "It's quite substantial for a pack of Shadowmoon's size."
"And custody?"
"Here's where it gets interesting." Patricia turned her tablet toward me, showing a section of pack law I'd never seen before. "An Alpha cannot prevent a rejected mate from leaving pack territory with their children unless he can prove she's unfit or poses a danger to the child. Given your spotless record as Luna and Meadow's clear attachment to you, Jonathan has no legal grounds to stop you from relocating."
The words washed over me like cool water on burned skin. Freedom. Real, legal freedom to take my daughter somewhere safe, somewhere we could start over without the constant reminder of Jonathan's betrayal.
"There's more," Patricia continued. "If you choose to relocate to another pack's territory, that pack's Alpha can offer you sanctuary. It's an old law, rarely invoked, but it exists specifically for situations like yours."
I walked out of that office with documents that felt like weapons—legal protections I'd never known existed, rights that Jonathan couldn't simply alpha-command away. For the first time since the rejection ceremony, I felt like I had options beyond simply surviving.
The elementary school pickup line moved with its usual chaotic rhythm, parents chatting in clusters while children spilled out of the building in waves of backpacks and laughter. I stood slightly apart from the other mothers, my rejection still too fresh for comfortable social interaction.
"Grace." Sarah Martinez approached hesitantly, her usual warm smile replaced by careful sympathy. "How are you holding up?"
Before I could answer, I caught the whispered conversation happening just behind us.
"—heard she actually went through with the rejection ceremony—"
"—can't believe Jonathan would humiliate her like that in public—"
"—poor little Meadow, caught in the middle of all this drama—"
The words stung, but what hurt more was the mixture of pity and judgment in their voices, as if my pain was entertainment for their afternoon gossip. I kept my expression neutral, my training as Luna serving me well even in exile.
Meadow appeared in the doorway, her backpack sliding off one shoulder as she scanned the crowd for me. When our eyes met, her face lit up with the pure joy only children possess, and she ran toward me with arms outstretched.
"Mommy!" She crashed into my legs, her small arms wrapping around my waist. "I missed you today."
"I missed you too, baby." I smoothed her dark hair, so much like my own, and felt my heart clench at the innocence in her eyes.
As we walked toward the car, Meadow's chatter filled the space between us—stories about art class and playground games and the sandwich I'd packed for lunch. But as I buckled her seatbelt, her voice grew smaller.
"Mommy?" She twisted in her car seat to look at me. "Why do the other kids keep saying Daddy doesn't love us anymore?"
The question hit like a punch to the stomach. I closed my eyes for a moment, gathering the strength to navigate this conversation without destroying her world entirely.
"Your daddy loves you very much, sweetheart," I said carefully, choosing each word like stepping stones across dangerous water. "But sometimes grown-ups make choices that hurt the people they love, even when they don't mean to."
"Is that why you don't live together anymore?"
I met her eyes in the rearview mirror, seeing Jonathan's stubborn chin and my own questioning gaze reflected back at me. "Sometimes when people can't agree on important things, it's better for everyone if they live apart for a while. But that doesn't change how much we both love you."
Meadow was quiet for a long moment, processing this with the serious concentration she brought to difficult puzzles. "Will Daddy still come to my school play?"
The hope in her voice nearly broke me. "I don't know, baby. But I'll be there, and that's a promise."
As I drove us home through the familiar streets of Shadowmoon territory, I realized that every conversation, every legal document, every whispered comment was leading me toward the same inevitable conclusion. Meadow and I deserved more than being afterthoughts in Jonathan's life. We deserved to be someone's first choice, not their consolation prize.
The question was no longer whether we would leave, but where we would go.
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