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Rejected Luna Rises Novel Cover

Rejected Luna Rises

I stood in the crowded pack hall, my heart pounding against my ribs as Robert's eyes fluttered open for the first time in ten years. A decade of waiting, hoping, praying to the Moon Goddess—all for this moment. My fingers trembled as I gripped his hand, watching the recognition slowly bloom in his gaze. "He's awake!" someone shouted, and the hall erupted in cheers. Robert's body tensed beneath the sheets, muscles contracting in that familiar way I'd memorized over thirty years of marriage. The shift was coming. After ten long years, his wolf was returning. "Everyone back," I commanded, my voice hoarse from disuse. The pack members—who had long since stopped listening to me as their Luna—surprisingly obeyed, creating space around the bed. I stepped back too, watching as my mate's body contorted, bones cracking, skin stretching.
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Chapter 3

I hadn't even finished packing my personal items when the sealed missive arrived. The envelope bore the official Silver Ridge Pack insignia—a howling wolf against a silver moon—the same symbol I'd worn proudly on my finger for thirty years. Now it felt like a brand of betrayal.

The young Delta who delivered it couldn't meet my eyes. "From the Alpha Council, Luna—I mean, Mrs. Williams," he stammered, already stripping me of my title.

I took the envelope with steady hands. "Thank you, Jason."

He hesitated. "My mother... she wanted me to tell you that not everyone agrees with what's happening."

A small kindness in a storm of cruelty. I offered him a smile that felt foreign on my face. "Tell her I appreciate that."

After he left, I broke the seal and unfolded the thick parchment. The formal language couldn't disguise the naked aggression behind it:

*Margaret Williams is hereby summoned to appear before the Silver Ridge Pack Council in three days' time to contest her status, rights, and privileges following her rejection of the mate bond with Alpha Robert Williams...*

I read the document twice, my Luna wolf growling at the audacity. They were moving quickly—too quickly. The whispers had already reached me: Robert wanted me not just demoted but expelled. A clean break. A complete erasure of thirty years of devotion.

"They think I'll just roll over and accept this," I whispered to the empty room.

My phone vibrated with an incoming text from Patricia: *Have you received it yet?*

*Yes. Three days.*

Her response was immediate: *Come tonight. We don't have much time.*

I glanced at the few possessions I'd managed to collect—photo albums, journals, a small wooden box of keepsakes. Things that mattered only to me. I'd need to leave them behind for now. What I needed most couldn't be packed in a suitcase.

---

The moon hung low and full as I slipped out of the pack house. I'd chosen midnight deliberately—Michael and Jessica would be at the northern borders for the monthly territory patrol, and Robert would be deep in his rejuvenation therapy with Amber.

David Chen was waiting at the edge of our property with a horse—not his own, but one belonging to his mate. Smart. It wouldn't carry his scent so prominently.

"You didn't have to do this," I said softly.

His expression was grim. "I've served this pack for twenty-five years. What they're doing isn't just wrong—it's dangerous. A pack without honor won't stand for long."

I mounted the horse with practiced ease. "They'll know you helped me."

"Let them." His jaw tightened. "The Moonstone borders are three hours' ride north through the old forest path. Patricia's Beta will meet you at the crossing."

I nodded, gathering the reins. "Thank you, David."

"Good luck, Luna," he said, using my title deliberately. "Many of us still remember who kept this pack alive for ten years."

I turned the horse toward the forest and didn't look back.

The night air was crisp with early autumn, carrying scents my human nose couldn't fully appreciate. But as I rode deeper into the wilderness, something extraordinary happened. My Luna wolf, dormant for so long, began to stir more powerfully within me. She lifted her head, scenting the freedom of unclaimed territory, the promise of something new. Each hoofbeat seemed to echo her growing strength.

For the first time in a decade, I felt the urge to shift—to run on four legs instead of riding on horseback. The sensation was so foreign it almost made me gasp. I'd suppressed my wolf for so long, convincing myself it was necessary to care for Robert. Now she was awakening, stretching like a prisoner seeing sunlight after years in darkness.

*Soon*, I promised her. *Soon we'll run again.*

As we crossed into unfamiliar territory, the scents changed. New pack markers, different trees, unfamiliar game trails. My wolf growled in warning at some smells, perked with interest at others. I realized with a start that this was the first time I'd left Silver Ridge territory in over twelve years.

The borders of the Moonstone Pack loomed ahead, marked by ancient standing stones gleaming silver in the moonlight. A figure waited there—tall, proud, and radiating power even from this distance.

Patricia's Beta, ready to escort me to the one person who might help me salvage what remained of my life.

---

Patricia Chen's home wasn't just a house—it was a statement. While our pack house had been built for function and tradition, hers was a perfect blend of ancient werewolf heritage and modern luxury. Carved wooden pillars supported soaring ceilings, while floor-to-ceiling windows offered views of mountains I hadn't seen in decades.

"Maggie," Patricia said, descending the grand staircase. Unlike the tentative, pitying looks I'd grown accustomed to, her gaze held nothing but respect and determination.

That's when it happened—my carefully constructed walls crumbled. For the first time since Robert's betrayal, I wept. Not the quiet tears I'd allowed myself in private, but deep, body-shaking sobs that echoed through Patricia's grand entrance hall.

She didn't offer empty platitudes. She simply held me, her Luna strength flowing into me like a transfusion.

"They think they've won," I managed between sobs.

"They haven't even begun to fight," Patricia replied, steel in her voice. She led me to her study, where ancient books lay open on a massive desk. "Do you know why Alphas fear Lunas who know pack law?"

I shook my head, wiping away tears.

"Because the oldest laws weren't written by Alphas." She tapped a yellowed page. "They were written by the Moon Goddess herself, to protect her daughters."

She turned the book toward me, her finger underlining a passage written in ancient werewolf script:

*When a Luna who has served faithfully is cast aside, her rights to territory, resources, and pack protection remain inviolate. What she has built, none may take. What she has earned, none may claim. Her power is her own, blessed by the moon and bound by no Alpha's will.*

"We have three days," Patricia said, pulling out Robert's medical logs and a stack of healer testimonies I recognized. "And we're going to make them regret every second of the last ten years."

My tears had dried. In their place, something new was forming—not just anger or determination, but a power I'd forgotten I possessed.

My Luna wolf howled within me, and for the first time in a decade, I let her voice rise unrestrained.

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