
Rejected Luna's New Dawn
Chapter 3
Days passed in a blur of quiet humiliation. Each morning, I woke to find Natasha already in the kitchen, preparing breakfast for the pack as if she were Luna. The first time I found her arranging flowers in the great hall—my weekly ritual—I nearly lost my composure.
"These arrangements are lovely, Luna Olivia," she said with practiced deference, "but I thought perhaps a more traditional style might better honor the pack's heritage."
She'd already replaced my wildflower bouquets with formal arrangements of moonflowers and wolf's bane—Margaret's preferences, not mine.
"The pack seemed to appreciate my less traditional approach for the past decade," I replied, my voice steady despite Lyra's growls vibrating through my chest.
Natasha lowered her eyes. "Of course, Luna. I meant no disrespect."
But the flowers remained changed, and by evening, Margaret was complimenting the "refreshing return to proper pack traditions."
Little by little, Natasha inserted herself into every aspect of pack life. When the monthly pack run approached—an event I had organized since becoming Luna—I arrived at the clearing to find Natasha already there, Leo balanced on her hip as she directed pack members with surprising authority.
"Alpha Ryan thought I might help ease your burden," she explained when she caught my stunned expression. "With your... condition... he worried the exertion might be too much."
My "condition"—my barrenness—had never hindered me before, but suddenly it was being wielded as a weapon against me.
I watched from the sidelines as Natasha ran beside Ryan, their son giggling between them, the perfect family portrait. Several pack members cast sympathetic glances my way, while others seemed taken with Natasha's energetic presence. By the run's end, she was teaching the younger pups traditional pack howling patterns—duties reserved for the Luna.
"She certainly has a way with the little ones," Healer Elara murmured beside me, her eyes sharp with concern. "Almost as if she's been trained for this."
"Or rehearsing," I replied quietly.
At night, the betrayal cut deeper. Ryan began returning to our quarters later and later, always with the same excuse: "Alliance negotiations with the northern packs. Nothing to worry about."
But our mate bond—once a warm, constant presence—now felt stretched and frayed. When he slipped into bed beside me, I could smell forest pine and night air on his skin, not the sterile conference rooms he claimed to occupy.
Lyra whimpered within me, *He's lying. Again.*
"Where were you really?" I asked one night, my back to him as he settled into bed well past midnight.
"I told you, alliance meetings. They're running long these days." His voice carried that slight edge it always did when he was being dishonest.
"You smell like the forest, not a meeting room."
He stiffened beside me. "We walked the territory lines. Standard procedure."
Another lie. Our bond might be weakening, but it still carried enough truth for me to feel the deception.
The next night, when Ryan announced another "late meeting," I waited until he left before following. I kept my distance, tracking him not by sight but through our damaged bond, feeling the pull even as it pained me.
He drove past the pack borders, beyond our territory, to where the neutral lands bordered rogue territory. A small cabin stood nestled among the pines, warm light spilling from its windows into the darkness.
I crouched in the shadows, my heart hammering as Ryan parked and approached the door. It opened before he could knock, and Natasha stood framed in the doorway, Leo on her hip. The boy squealed with delight, reaching for Ryan.
"Daddy! You came!"
Ryan scooped him up, pressing a kiss to his forehead before stepping inside. Through the window, I watched as they moved around the cabin with the easy familiarity of a routine long established. Ryan produced a small wooden wolf from his pocket—a carving he'd made—and presented it to Leo, who accepted it with gleeful abandon.
They looked like a family. They were a family.
As Ryan pulled Natasha into his arms, pressing his lips to hers with a passion I hadn't felt from him in years, the last thread of denial snapped within me. This wasn't a recent transgression or a moment of weakness. This was a second life, carefully constructed alongside the one he shared with me.
Lyra howled in anguish, the sound echoing through my mind as I stumbled backward into the darkness. *We've been replaced.*
Not just betrayed. Replaced.
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