
Rejected Omega: Rising As The True Luna
For three years, I was the lowest Omega in the Blackwood Pack, hopelessly devoted to my Fated Mate, Alpha Kaelen.
But when I was mauled by rogues and bleeding out in the freezing forest, I desperately begged him for help through our mate link. He crushed his wolf’s instincts to save me and sent back a chilling thought before severing our connection completely.
"She is a mistake. Silence."
He didn't just leave me to die. The next morning, he dragged me before the entire pack, publicly rejected me, and let his people strip me of my clothes and dignity. They threw me out of the territory with nothing but a scratchy burlap sack, expecting the deadly wilderness to claim my life by nightfall.
I thought my life was over, until I stumbled upon a hidden sanctuary in the woods and uncovered a horrific truth. I wasn't just a worthless Omega. I was the last surviving Matron Luna of the legendary Mooncrest Pack—a powerful pack that Kaelen's own father had brutally massacred decades ago out of pure jealousy.
He thought he had discarded a piece of trash, entirely unaware of the blood feud between our families. He didn't know he had just set me free.
Now, with my ancient powers awakening and my lost people gathering by my side, I am going to make the Alpha who threw me away pay for every drop of blood his family spilled.
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Chapter 1
Elara Vance's POV:
A sharp, burning pain tore at my shoulder. I stumbled, my boot caught on a tree root, and I fell heavily to the ground. The forest floor rushed towards me, a chaotic mess of damp earth and decaying leaves. The metallic stench of my own blood filled my nostrils, mingling with the smells of pine and damp earth.
The movement was instinctive, a roll to dodge, ingrained in my bones long before I knew what Omega was. It saved me from a broken bone, but did nothing to alleviate the burning pain spreading from the wound in my shoulder. Two figures loomed in the oppressive darkness of the northern Blackwood forest, their massive silhouettes illuminated by a sliver of moonlight. Wolves. Filthy, insane, ruthless.
“*Heal. Get up. Run!*” My inner wolf spirit, Lyra, whimpered in my mind, her panic contrasting sharply with my own rapid breathing. But beneath her fear lay a deeper, more primal impulse. “*Call him. Call our mate!*”
I don't want to. The thought pierced my heart like glass. For three years, I've been his shadow, a burden he didn't need, a destined companion he refused to acknowledge. But Leila was right. I'm bleeding out. My strength is failing me. I'm going to die here.
I closed my eyes, pushed away the pain and humiliation, and gathered my remaining strength. I reached out and projected my consciousness across miles, seeking the soul to which the goddess was connected to me. I made the connection.
It connected instantly. A shock, like lightning, pierced through me. Suddenly, I was no longer just in a cold, dark forest. I was also in some warm place. I could smell the faint, comforting scent of cedarwood in his office, and the powerful, intoxicating Alpha aura of Kaelen Blackwood herself. He was safe. He was comfortable. And I was dying.
Hope, fragile and desperate, trembled in my chest. "*Karen, save me!*" I screamed through the connection, my mental voice hoarse with fear. "*The wolves...on the northern border!*"
The warmth I felt from his connection was suddenly tainted by a chilling annoyance. I could almost see him, sitting at his enormous desk, his stormy gray eyes narrowed. I knew that on that desk lay a silver-framed photograph of Seraphina Thorne, his first love, the one he had lost, the one he would never let go of. My desperate plea was nothing more than an unwelcome interruption in his grief.
His inner wolf spirit, Fenrir, howled deep within his mind. I could feel the beast's restlessness, its primal need to protect its mate. "*Go to her! She's ours!"
But Karen's will was iron. He suppressed his wolfish instincts with a cold thought, a thought that resonated in the bond between us, a thought originally directed only at himself, but which I heard clearly, as if he were shouting it out: "*She is not our mate. She was a mistake.*"
Then, his voice, like a cold blade, came hurtling towards me in my mind. One word.
"*Shut up.*"
A wall suddenly descended between us. A solid, insurmountable barrier of pure will. He was severing the connection. My hope was shattered.
“No, Karen, please!” I pleaded, mentally scratching at the fading connection. “They’ll kill me!”
The tearing sound that followed wasn't physical, but it was the most agonizing thing I had ever experienced. It was the sound of my soul being ripped in two. And then… nothing. The connection was severed. The warmth, the scent of cedar, the presence of my partner—everything vanished. Only the cold forest and the painful reality of his abandonment remained.
The pain of his rejection was a thousand times more intense than the claws tearing my flesh. A light within me flickered, then went out.
One of the wolves let out a low, guttural laugh. He approached silently, his yellow eyes gleaming with malice. "Looks like your Alpha doesn't want you, little thing."
Despair threatened to overwhelm me, but some deeper, wilder instinct took over. As the wolf pounced, I grabbed a handful of wet mud and flung it directly into his eyes. He howled and scratched his face.
That was my chance. I struggled to my feet, ignoring the violent protests of my shoulders, and ran. I plunged headlong into the depths of the forest in a wild, panicked escape. Blood loss made the trees sway in my vision, but I knew that if I stopped, I would die. I remembered how, three years ago, when I first met him, Leila had sung joyfully in my mind, "Mine!" Now, all I felt was an emptiness, an echoing void.
The heavy thud of their claws grew closer. The stench of decay and malice was suffocating. The wolf I'd smeared with mud was the first to recover, its furious howl nearly shattering my eardrums. The other wolf flanked me, its steps as swift as death itself measuring my grave.
The tree root tripped me again. My knees slammed into the ground, my body lurching forward, the last breaths forced out of my lungs. This time, I had no strength left to get up. I could even feel the wolf's breath behind me—hot, savory, carrying the scent of rotting flesh, spraying onto the back of my bare neck. A chill of death shot up my spine, every bone screaming at me to resist, but my body wouldn't obey.
“It’s over.” Lyra’s voice wasn’t the kind of terrified sob I’d heard before, but a calm despair. She was curled up deep within her consciousness, like a child waiting to be struck.
The wolf's claws gripped my shoulder, the very shoulder where the wound was still bleeding. A sharp pain, like a red-hot iron bar, pierced my nerves, and I let out a hoarse scream. It flipped me over, making me lie on my back, black saliva dripping onto my face. Its other companion stood three paces away, head tilted, the malice in its yellow eyes almost tangible, a cruel smile spreading across its lips.
“Omega,” the wolf pinning me down said in a deep voice, sticky like melting asphalt. “Your Alpha doesn’t want you, so your blood should at least be of some use.”
He lowered his head, his gaping maw snapping at my throat—
Just then, a gray shadow burst out from the darkness.
The roar was more deafening than any warning. The wolf that was on top of me was sent flying, tumbling like a discarded rag doll as it crashed into a thick oak tree a dozen paces away. The trunk snapped with a sickening crack, and leaves and broken branches rained down. The wolf let out a short, piercing howl and collapsed at the base of the tree, unable to move for a moment.
My eyes widened, my heart pounding. In the moonlight, I saw a massive figure blocking my way—not a wolf, but a half-wolf. The man was covered in thick, dark gray wolf fur, his shoulders and back muscles bulging like rocks, his claws gleaming coldly in the shadows. He lowered his head slightly, and a low, suppressed growl rolled from deep within his throat. The sound waves pierced my chest, making the blood on my wounds tremble slightly.
They are wolf pack warriors.
No, he wasn't the only one.
The sound of wind cutting through the woods echoed one after another. Five figures emerged from the darkness in succession, like five deadly wedges driven into this bloody battlefield. They spread out in a fan shape, their footsteps silent, their coordination so perfect it was as if they were five limbs split from one person. The moonlight outlined their massive and terrifying silhouettes—each two heads taller than me, radiating a well-trained, suffocating aura of oppression. Their presence seemed to thicken the very air.
The wolf, sent flying by the impact, struggled to its feet, only to find itself pinned down by two soldiers on either side. One of the soldiers stomped on its hind leg joint, the cracking sound of breaking bones ringing out clearly in the night. The wolf let out an even more piercing howl, but was quickly silenced by a hand gripping its throat, leaving only a muffled, drowning gurgling sound.
The other wolf reacted even faster. It abandoned me and ran, its body darting left and right through the forest, as agile as a snake. But before it had run twenty paces, a warrior appeared out of nowhere in its path, a sweeping blow sending it flying, crashing heavily into a moss-covered boulder. The wolf spat out a mouthful of blood, its body sliding down, leaving a dark mark on the stone. It tried to roll over, but a dark shadow pressed down on it, claws pressed against its throat; with just a little effort, the wolf could easily end its life.
The battle ended even faster than it began.
From the moment my throat was about to be bitten off to the moment the two wolves were subdued on the ground, only a few breaths passed.
Marcus, the wolfpack patrol leader, came over to me and pulled me up, grabbing my intact arm roughly. “It’s you again, Elara,” he muttered, his voice dripping with disdain. “Always causing trouble for Alpha.”
I was too weak to argue, too broken to even try. I collapsed in his arms, letting them half-drag, half-carry me back to the Packhouse. They didn't take me to the suite next to Alpha—the one that should have been ours. They left me on the cold stone steps of the Wolf Pack Doctor's clinic without a word.
The doctor, a weary, older female wolf named Helen, clicked her tongue as she cleaned the deep wound on my shoulder. She worked silently for a long time before finally letting out a heavy sigh.
“Alpha nows you’re hurt,” she said softly, but her words were the final, devastating blow.
"He won't come."
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8.9
Aliana braved a heavy storm, carrying a warm stew for her fiancé, Ivan, just as she always put his needs before her own. This ingrained habit, a survival mechanism from a cold childhood, was about to shatter into a million pieces. Tonight, everything she believed was a lie.
The iron gates of Ivan's private villa flashed red, denying her entry, and a guard mumbled lies. Ignoring him, she pushed past, a strange orchid perfume leading her to Ivan's car, where a tube of crimson lipstick lay on the passenger seat. Through a window, she saw him with another woman and a small child, an image that felt like jagged glass twisting in her heart.
Then his words cut through the storm, cold and cruel:
"Aliana is just a placeholder."
He was marrying her for her multi-billion-dollar patent, a secret deal made with her own parents, who had sold her for a kickback to buy this very house. Her family, her love, her future-all were a calculated lie.
Her inner wolf, usually fierce, fell terrifyingly silent, replaced by a chilling resolve. The burning acid in her throat wasn't just bile; it was the taste of her shattered devotion.
She didn't want his apologies or his guilt. She wanted his ruin, and as Ivan walked in with a fake smile the next morning, Aliana was ready to deliver it.

8.8
The only thing more dangerous than the game is the man guarding the crease.
Lyon Navarro has spent his entire career tearing down the San Diego Stormbreakers. As the city's most ruthless journalist, he's made an art form out of exposing the Alphas' volatile tempers and their scandalous lives off the rink. He's the man they love to hate-until a desperate management team offers him the biggest paycheck of his life to fix their image.
The assignment? Tame the six most notorious werewolves in the league.
But Lyon isn't just dealing with professional athletes; he's stepping into a den of apex predators who have been waiting for him to cross their territory. And they have no intention of playing nice.
Rafael Stone, the team's intense, iron-willed captain, has made one thing clear: if Lyon wants to manage the pack, he's going to have to survive them. But between the locker room tension, the high-stakes pressure of the season, and the way the pack's gazes feel like a physical brand on his skin, Lyon realizes he's no longer just reporting the story-he's the one being hunted.
In a world of adrenaline, cold ice, and raw, lupine desire, Lyon is about to discover that the line between enemy and lover is thinner than a skate blade.
Six Alphas. One PR strategist. And a season that's about to get very, very hot.
Beyond the Ice is a high-stakes, slow-burn MM hockey werewolf romance. Expect intense power dynamics, sizzling tension, and a pack that doesn't just want to win the cup-they want to claim their man.

7.8
Elie Joyce’s entire life was controlled by Ebert Ewing, a ruthless billionaire who held her sick grandmother's survival and her family's freedom in his hands.
But on a freezing, stormy night, he forced her into a scandalous scrap of red silk and handed her over to a notorious, disgusting predator.
"You aren't an escort. You're just a free gift."
Ebert mocked her, using her as a disposable bargaining chip to secure a corporate funding round.
When the predator humiliated her, forced high-proof vodka down her throat, and violently pinned her to the floor, Ebert simply watched with dead eyes.
And when Ebert finally intervened to brutally beat the man, it wasn't out of mercy.
"She is my property. Even if she is trash that I threw away, a filthy pig like you doesn't get to touch her."
Afterward, he dragged her battered, barefoot body into his car, only to kick her out into the torrential rain, leaving her on the dark streets to die.
Standing in the storm, shivering and bleeding from broken glass, the last shred of Elie's hope shattered.
She had sacrificed her dignity and soul, enduring his violent bites and cruel control, just to keep her family alive.
Why did she have to suffer this endless, twisted humiliation for a psychopath who only saw her as trash?
But she didn't break.
Tearing a strip of his expensive shirt to bandage her bleeding foot, Elie gripped her broken stiletto like a knife.
With her eyes turning cold and calculating, she limped out of the shadows.
She was going to survive, and Ebert Ewing would soon realize she was no longer his obedient prey.

9.3
Born into privilege, Eleanor never imagined her life could shatter in a single night. Then her father disappeared with his mistress, her mother fell from a building and slipped into a coma, and everything she once owned turned to dust.
Determined not to ruin Jonathan's future with her family's disgrace, she ended their relationship and became the bride of a man trapped in a vegetative state.
She believed that was the last time their paths would cross. But two years later, Jonathan pinned her in the dark and whispered, "Long time no see, my sister-in-law."

8.3
EDEN
8.3
Elianila, an AI Architect, is part of an elite team tasked with designing a global system meant to prevent threats, manage disasters, and distribute resources to vulnerable regions. After five years of tireless work with her colleagues, she uncovers disturbing anomalies, code-named, X-variables, that flag individuals according to criteria she never programmed.
As Elianila digs deeper to understand what the X-variables measure and where their origin, she finds herself in direct conflict with the authorities. Soon, the System marks her and her daughter as threats - targets to be eliminated.
With a small band of colleagues and dissidents, Elianila goes on the run, hiding in places beyond the Systems reach. As they evade surveillance, they race against time to warn others, expose the truth, and fight back against the omnipresent authority of the System.

8.7
For eighteen years, I lived as the lowest Omega in the Silver Moon Pack, surviving only because Alpha Gideon took me under his wing.
But the moment his coffin was lowered into the ground, his wife and the new Alpha son immediately turned on me.
"Her presence has brought a curse upon us!"
Luna Lyra pointed a trembling finger at me in the freezing rain, blaming me for Gideon's sudden death.
She stripped me of my pack ties and permanently exiled me into the deadly wilderness with nothing but a wooden toy.
The entire pack watched with cold contempt as I was thrown out like garbage.
To make matters worse, the new Alpha later hunted me down in the woods, threatening to kill me just to steal the only thing Gideon had secretly left behind for me—an ancient, unreadable book.
I didn't understand why they hated me so deeply, or what terrifying secret this blank book held that made my own pack want me dead.
But the moment my foot crossed the pack boundary, an ancient, immense power I never knew I had snapped free inside my veins.
I was no longer their weak Omega.
And when I escaped deeper into the forest and crashed straight into the arms of a wounded Rogue, my destiny completely rewrote itself.
Because he wasn't just a Rogue, but the legendary Northern Alpha King.
And as his glowing golden eyes locked onto mine, our inner wolves roared the exact same word:
"Mate!"