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Rejected Luna, Rising in Defiance Novel Cover

Rejected Luna, Rising in Defiance

I felt the weight of his stare before I even entered the room. Alexander's private study had always been forbidden territory to me, despite being his Luna for three years. The ancestral tapestries depicting generations of Stone Pack Alphas seemed to judge me as I stepped through the doorway, their woven eyes following my every move. "Sit," Alexander commanded, not bothering to look up from the papers spread across his mahogany desk. I obeyed, settling into the leather chair across from him. The space between us felt like a chasm, though it was merely three feet of polished wood. My fingers twisted the simple silver ring I wore—not his mating ring, but a small comfort from my former pack. "I've called you here to discuss an important matter," he said, his voice devoid of emotion. Finally, he raised his gaze to meet mine, those steel-gray eyes as cold as they'd been since the day we were mated. For a fleeting moment, hope fluttered in my chest.
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Chapter 1

I felt the weight of his stare before I even entered the room. Alexander's private study had always been forbidden territory to me, despite being his Luna for three years. The ancestral tapestries depicting generations of Stone Pack Alphas seemed to judge me as I stepped through the doorway, their woven eyes following my every move.

"Sit," Alexander commanded, not bothering to look up from the papers spread across his mahogany desk.

I obeyed, settling into the leather chair across from him. The space between us felt like a chasm, though it was merely three feet of polished wood. My fingers twisted the simple silver ring I wore—not his mating ring, but a small comfort from my former pack.

"I've called you here to discuss an important matter," he said, his voice devoid of emotion. Finally, he raised his gaze to meet mine, those steel-gray eyes as cold as they'd been since the day we were mated.

For a fleeting moment, hope fluttered in my chest. Perhaps he'd finally noticed the diplomatic crisis I'd quietly resolved last month, or the economic strategy I'd implemented that had doubled the pack's treasury. Maybe, after three years, he was ready to acknowledge my contributions.

"I'm terminating our mate bond," Alexander stated, sliding a document across the desk.

The world stopped. My lungs refused to draw breath as I stared at the official rejection papers, the Stone Pack seal glaring up at me in blood-red wax.

"Victoria is carrying my pup," he continued, watching me with detached curiosity, as if studying an insect pinned to a board. "As you've failed to conceive an heir after three years, this is the logical solution."

My wolf, dormant for so long under the weight of neglect, suddenly roared inside me. *MATE!* she howled, her fury and pain echoing through my mind with such force that I nearly gasped aloud.

"This... this can't be right," I whispered, my voice foreign to my own ears. "The mate bond—"

"Can be rejected," he finished coldly. "And I am rejecting it. Today."

My hands trembled as I picked up the papers, scanning the formal language that would sever the bond that had defined my existence for three years.

"There's one more thing," Alexander added, leaning forward. "The moon energy project will be transferred to Victoria's oversight effective immediately."

At this, something electric surged through me. The project was *mine*—years of research, countless nights of work while Alexander slept, the one thing I had built entirely with my own mind and hands.

"No," I said, the word escaping before I could stop it.

Alexander's eyebrow raised, a flicker of surprise crossing his features before hardening into irritation. "No?"

"The moon energy project is my intellectual property. It's not part of pack assets."

He stood slowly, his imposing frame casting a shadow over me. "Everything you have belongs to the Stone Pack. To me. You came with nothing, Olivia, and you'll leave with nothing."

"I came with my mind," I countered, my voice steadier than I felt. "And my work."

"Your purpose has been fulfilled," he said dismissively. "You were brought here to strengthen alliances, not to play scientist. You're no longer needed."

Something broke inside me then—not my heart, but the chains that had bound my true self. My wolf surged forward, her presence filling me with a strength I'd forgotten I possessed.

Later that evening, I stood at the edge of the Stone family gathering during the pack run feast. The moon hung full and bright above the clearing, illuminating the celebration I no longer belonged in.

"Everyone!" Victoria's voice rang out, cutting through the chatter. She stood beside Alexander, her hand possessively on his arm. "I have wonderful news to share!"

The pack fell silent, all eyes turning to her glowing face.

"I'm carrying the future Alpha of the Stone Pack," she announced, her gaze finding mine across the crowd. "Our bloodline will continue stronger than ever."

Cheers erupted as I stood frozen, the rejection papers burning in my pocket. Eleonora, Alexander's mother, approached me with a champagne flute in hand and venom in her smile.

"Such a pity," she said, loud enough for those nearby to hear. "Three years and not even a hint of a pup. Some females simply aren't meant to be Lunas, are they?"

Laughter rippled through the gathering. I looked to Alexander, a final, desperate hope that he would defend me—defend what we had been, if nothing else.

His eyes met mine across the clearing, and in them, I saw nothing. No regret, no compassion, not even the satisfaction of cruelty. Just... nothing.

And in that moment of absolute silence from the man who was supposed to be my everything, my wolf howled with a clarity I had never known before. This wasn't just rejection—it was liberation.

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