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Rejected Luna's Justice Novel Cover

Rejected Luna's Justice

I stared at the ornate grandfather clock in my family's estate, watching the hands tick away what felt like the final moments of my life. Three days since my mother's funeral. Three days since the pack that once revered us had begun to whisper behind cupped hands about the Luna's daughter who wasn't good enough to keep her mate. Three days of suffocating silence in rooms that once echoed with my mother's laughter. The midday sun streamed through the windows, casting long shadows across the hardwood floors. It should have been warm, comforting even, but I felt nothing but cold emptiness. My wolf, Cinnamon, had been eerily quiet since that night—the night I found Rachel and Leo tangled together in his bed, their betrayal as naked as their bodies. The knock at the door came like thunder—three authoritative raps that seemed to vibrate through the entire house. I didn't move. The pack had sent their condolences days ago, hollow words from people who now pitied me.
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Chapter 2

The ceremony had been simple, devoid of the traditional pack celebration I'd once dreamed of. Just Marcus, myself, the pack elders, and the cold winter moon as witness. I'd felt his teeth at my neck, the sharp pain of the marking, and then... nothing. No overwhelming rush of completion, no flood of emotion through a mate bond. Just a whisper of connection, like a door left slightly ajar rather than flung open.

I told myself it was enough.

Three months into my new life as Luna of the Blackwood Pack, I found myself spending most evenings in the pack archives. The vast room in the basement of the pack house had become my sanctuary—cool stone walls lined with ancient wooden shelves, the scent of aging paper and leather bindings a comfort to my restless mind.

'You don't have to reorganize everything, you know,' Marcus had said when he first found me there, his massive frame silhouetted in the doorway. 'The previous Luna never bothered.'

'I need something to do,' I'd replied simply, not meeting his eyes. What I didn't say: *I need somewhere to hide*.

Tonight, the single candle on my desk cast dancing shadows across the ledgers spread before me. Outside, snow fell silently, blanketing the territory in pristine white. I ran my fingers over the pack's financial records, finding strange comfort in the neat columns of numbers and names.

'Still at it?'

I startled, nearly knocking over my candle. Marcus stood watching me, his expression unreadable in the dim light. He kept his distance, as he always did—close enough to fulfill the appearance of a mated pair, yet far enough that we rarely touched beyond necessity.

'I find it calming,' I admitted.

He nodded, a small gesture of understanding. 'Don't stay too late. It's cold down here.'

His concern seemed genuine, which only confused me more. In our months together, Marcus had been... unexpectedly gentle. He never pushed for more intimacy than I offered, never used his Alpha tone with me, never made me feel like the broken, discarded she-wolf I'd been when he found me.

Yet something remained off, like a note played slightly out of key. Cinnamon sensed it too, her presence restless beneath my skin.

'Goodnight, Luna,' he said, the title still strange on his lips.

'Goodnight, Alpha,' I responded automatically.

After he left, I extinguished my candle and made my way upstairs, questions swirling in my mind like the snowflakes beyond our windows.

---

Winter gave way to spring, the snow melting to reveal new growth across the territory. The pack's annual spring run arrived with the first full moon of the season, a celebration of renewal and strength.

I stood at the edge of the clearing, already stripped down to my shift dress, watching as pack members transformed around me. The air filled with excited yips and howls as wolves greeted the night, their fur gleaming silver in the moonlight.

Marcus shifted first, as was tradition. His wolf was magnificent—jet black with piercing gold eyes, massive even for an Alpha. He threw his head back in a commanding howl that sent shivers down my spine.

I closed my eyes, letting my own shift take me. The familiar sensation of bones reshaping, muscles stretching, fur sprouting across my skin washed over me. When I opened my eyes, I saw the world through Cinnamon's heightened senses, every scent and sound intensified.

The pack parted as I padded forward, acknowledging their Luna with respectful dips of their heads. I approached Marcus's wolf, expecting the customary greeting between mates—a nuzzle, a playful bump, some acknowledgment of our bond.

Instead, his golden eyes met mine briefly before he turned away, leading the pack toward the forest without waiting for me. The rejection, however subtle, stung like a physical blow.

Cinnamon whined softly in our shared consciousness. *Wrong*, she seemed to say. *Something wrong*.

I pushed the thought away, falling into formation behind him as we raced through the trees. The joy of running should have been enough—the wind in my fur, the earth beneath my paws, the symphony of scents filling my nostrils. Yet I couldn't shake the hollow feeling in my chest when Marcus's wolf deliberately avoided mine throughout the night, keeping other pack members between us at all times.

*He's just respecting your space*, I told myself. *He knows you're still healing*.

But Cinnamon knew better, and deep down, so did I.

---

The spring council meeting brought Alphas from neighboring territories to our pack house. I sat beside Marcus at the head of the long table, playing my role as Luna with practiced grace. Five months of careful observation had taught me how to smile at the right moments, when to speak and when to remain silent.

As Marcus discussed border patrols with Alpha Donovan from the east, I noticed Beta Elias slip into the room through a side door. His eyes met Marcus's in a silent exchange before he approached, bending to whisper something in my mate's ear.

Marcus's expression didn't change, but I caught the subtle tensing of his shoulders. Elias slid a sealed scroll across the table, which Marcus quickly covered with his hand before tucking it inside his jacket.

Curiosity flared within me—the first genuine emotion I'd felt in weeks. What could be so important that it couldn't wait until after the council meeting? Why the secrecy?

I opened my mouth to ask, then closed it again. The old Claire might have questioned her mate directly, trusted in their bond enough to demand answers. But that Claire died the night she found her best friend in her mate's arms.

This new Claire, the one who survived, knew better than to risk what little security she'd found.

So I smiled and turned back to the visiting Luna beside me, ignoring the warning growl from Cinnamon that echoed through my mind.

*Danger*, she seemed to say. *Secrets*.

But secrets were safer than truth. I'd learned that lesson all too well.

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