
Rejected Luna's Second Chance
Chapter 3
The morning after the rejection ceremony, I woke to silence where there should have been the usual bustle of pack life. No servants knocked on my door with breakfast. No reports from the night patrol awaited my review. The absence of routine felt like another death.
Emma sat at the edge of her bed, struggling with the leg brace Dr. Chen had fitted her with. Her movements were careful, deliberate, each step a reminder of what Edison's abandonment had cost us both.
"Mom?" Her voice was small, uncertain. "Why is everyone acting so strange?"
Before I could answer, young Marcus Thompson—the Beta's son—burst through our door without knocking. In the old days, such disrespect would have earned him a severe reprimand. Now, he barely glanced my way.
"Emma," he said with cruel satisfaction, "my dad says you're not Alpha blood anymore. Says you're just the crippled daughter of the rejected Luna."
Emma's face crumpled, but Marcus wasn't finished. "He says your mom's not even a real werewolf now. Just a broken reject who couldn't keep her mate."
Rage flared in my chest, but when I stepped forward, Marcus laughed. "You can't tell me what to do anymore. You're nobody."
The words hit like physical blows. I watched him swagger away, knowing that if I tried to discipline him, it would only make things worse for Emma. The power I'd once wielded as Luna had vanished with Edison's rejection, leaving us defenseless against the pack's cruelty.
Over the following days, the disrespect grew bolder. Former friends crossed the street to avoid us. Servants who had once bowed their heads now looked through me as if I were invisible. When I tried to order groceries from the pack's general store, the clerk shook his head.
"Sorry, but Alpha Edison says your credit is suspended. Pack resources are for active members only."
The humiliation burned, but worse was watching Emma endure the constant whispers and pointed stares. During her physical therapy sessions, other young wolves would snicker and make cruel jokes about her limp. She tried to hide it from me, but I saw how she flinched at every cruel word, how she'd started avoiding the common areas where pack children gathered.
Then Edison delivered his cruelest blow yet.
He appeared at our door one evening, Kara clinging to his arm like a parasite. She wore a simple dress, but even casual clothes looked elegant on her perfect figure. The contrast to my worn jeans and faded sweater was painfully obvious.
"Elizabeth," Edison said without preamble, "I need you to create ceremonial robes for Kara's official Luna ceremony. Your embroidery skills are... adequate for the task."
The request hit me like a slap. He wanted me to craft the very garments that would symbolize my replacement, using the talents that had once brought him pride.
"I won't do it," I said quietly.
"You will." His Alpha voice pressed against me, but the mate bond was severed—he had no hold over me anymore. Still, his next words found their mark. "Unless you'd prefer Emma to face even more... difficulties... in her recovery."
The threat was clear. I looked at my daughter, who was pretending to read but listening to every word, and felt my resistance crumble.
"Fine," I whispered.
Kara's smile was triumphant. "Wonderful! I have so many ideas. I'll visit daily to supervise."
And she did. Every morning, Kara would sweep into my sewing room with new demands, new changes, new ways to make the task more humiliating. She'd critique my stitching, suggest "improvements" to techniques I'd perfected over years, and make pointed comments about how "outdated" my methods were.
"Really, Elizabeth," she said one afternoon, examining my work with theatrical disappointment, "I expected better quality from someone with your reputation. Perhaps your skills have... deteriorated... along with everything else."
I kept my head down, focusing on the intricate silver threading that would catch moonlight during the ceremony. Each stitch felt like another piece of my dignity being torn away, but I endured it for Emma's sake.
The breaking point came when I overheard two pack mothers discussing Emma's future.
"Such a shame about the Hall girl," one whispered. "With her disability and her mother's disgrace, she'll never find a mate. Who would want damaged goods?"
"Better to put her out of her misery," the other replied coldly. "She's just a burden now."
That night, I sat in Emma's room and watched her sleep. Her face, so young and innocent, bore the stress lines of someone far older. She deserved better than this—better than a pack that saw her as disposable, better than a father who'd abandoned her, better than a mother who couldn't protect her.
I made my decision in the darkness of that moment. We would leave. Tonight.
Moving quietly, I began packing our essential belongings. Clothes, medications for Emma, the few precious photos from happier times. My grandmother's journal, with its faded entries about the ancient Moonweave Pack territory she'd left me in her will.
Emma woke as I folded her favorite blanket into the suitcase.
"Mom? What are you doing?"
I sat beside her, taking her small hands in mine. "We're leaving, sweetheart. Tonight."
Her eyes filled with tears. "But this is our home."
"No," I said firmly, surprising myself with the strength in my voice. "Home is where we're safe, where we're valued. This place... this isn't home anymore."
She nodded slowly, understanding beyond her years. Together, we finished packing in silence, each item a goodbye to the life we'd known.
As we loaded the car in the pre-dawn darkness, Emma turned back to look at the pack house one last time. "Will we ever come back?"
I followed her gaze to the building where I'd once been Luna, where I'd believed in love and loyalty and the sacred bond between mates. Now it looked cold and foreign, a monument to broken promises.
"No, sweetheart," I said, starting the engine. "We're going somewhere better. Somewhere we belong."
As we drove through the pack gates for the last time, I felt something shift inside me. The pain was still there, the grief still raw, but underneath it all was something new—a spark of determination I hadn't felt since the rejection.
We were heading toward my grandmother's territory, toward the ancient Moonweave Pack lands that had been waiting for us all along. For the first time in weeks, I allowed myself to hope that maybe, just maybe, we could build something better from the ashes of our old life.
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