
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 3
Elara Vance POV:
The warriors’ grips were like iron bands on my arms as they dragged me from the Great Hall. The eyes of the pack followed me, a mixture of scorn and morbid curiosity. My dignity had been publicly shredded, leaving me raw and exposed.
They didn’t take me to the clinic. They hauled me up the stairs to the top floor, to the suite I had occupied for three years. It was adjacent to the Alpha’s own, a constant, painful reminder of the proximity we shared in space but not in spirit. Kaelen had never once spent a night here. The room was a monument to his rejection, filled with the ghosts of my own lonely hopes.
Finnian followed us in, a scroll in his hand. His face was all business. “By order of the Alpha,” he stated, his voice flat, “before your… departure, all items belonging to the Blackwood Pack must be surrendered.”
Two Omega she-wolves I vaguely recognized entered behind him. Their eyes, however, were anything but vague. They were alight with a malicious glee I had seen festering for years. One of them, I realized with a jolt, was Lyra Thorne, Seraphina’s younger sister. She had always looked at me as if I were a stain on her sainted sister’s memory.
Lyra went straight to my closet and began pulling out my dresses. She held up a simple blue one, a favorite of mine, before dropping it to the floor and grinding her heel into the soft fabric.
“This kind of material,” she sneered, her voice dripping with venom. “What’s a lowly Omega like you doing with something so fine?”
My fists clenched at my sides, my nails digging into my palms. I wanted to let Lyra out, to snarl and fight back, but I knew it was pointless. It would only give them more satisfaction. I held my tongue, my silence a thin shield against their cruelty.
Finnian began to read from his list, his voice a monotonous drone. “The suite and all its furnishings are pack property. All clothing provided by the pack, all food rations, the communication crystal…”
As he spoke, the other Omega moved toward me. With a rough tug, she ripped a small silver pendant from my neck. It was a gift Kaelen had given me on my first birthday in the pack, the Blackwood wolf emblem cold and impersonal. He’d given it as his duty, not with affection. I felt no loss as it was taken.
Lyra directed the ransacking with relish, her sharp blue eyes missing nothing. They emptied my drawers, confiscated my books, even took the few coins I had saved. It was a systematic erasure of my existence here.
Finally, they ordered me to strip. I was forced to remove the clothes I wore and put on a rough, scratchy burlap tunic and trousers—the uniform of the lowest-ranking servants.
As I stood there, stripped of everything, Lyra’s eyes fell on my wrist. On the simple, dark, and unadorned bracelet I always wore. It was made of a strange, non-reflective black wood.
“What’s that piece of trash?” she asked, reaching for it.
“It’s nothing,” I said, my voice low and steady, pulling my arm back. “It’s worthless.”
Finnian glanced at it, his expression dismissive. “Leave it. It’s not pack property and looks like a piece of junk.”
My heart, which I thought had stopped feeling, gave a lurch of pure, unadulterated relief. The bracelet was my mother’s. It was the Matron’s Mark, the symbol of leadership for the Mooncrest Pack. It was the only thing I had left of my real life, my real identity. And they had missed it.
Unseen by them, Kaelen watched all of this on a monitor in his office. He had told himself it was a necessary, clean break. A matter of pack discipline. But as he saw Lyra Thorne step on my dress, a low, guttural growl rumbled in his chest. His wolf, Fenrir, was furious. An unfamiliar surge of protective rage washed over him, so potent it made him stand.
He slammed the monitor off, the screen going black. He paced his office, the feeling of wrongness a physical itch under his skin. He told himself it was Lyra’s disrespect for pack property that angered him, not the insult to me. A lie, and a flimsy one at that.
Back in the suite, once everything of value was gone, I was shoved out the door. The suite was no longer mine. I had nowhere to go. The warriors led me down, down, down, past the main floors, past the kitchens, into the damp, musty basement.
This was where the unranked Omegas lived. In a large, crowded dormitory. The air was thick with the smell of sweat, dampness, and despair. As I entered, a wave of whispers and snickers followed me.
“Look, it’s the one who thought she’d be Luna.”
“Guess the Alpha finally got tired of her.”
I ignored them, finding an empty, rickety bunk in the far corner. I pulled the thin, threadbare blanket over my head, trying to block out the world. My shoulder began to bleed again, a dull, wet warmth seeping through the rough burlap. There would be no Pack Doctor for me now. I would have to rely on my own slow, wolf--heightened healing.
In the suffocating darkness, I clutched the wooden bracelet on my wrist. This was all I had now. This, and a newly forged promise I made to myself. Every humiliation, every ounce of pain they had inflicted on me today, I would one day return to them. Tenfold.
Later, Finnian reported to Kaelen. “It is done, Alpha. She has been moved to the Omega quarters.” He paused. “She was calm. She didn’t cry or beg.”
Kaelen, standing by his window, didn’t turn. The news of my composure, my lack of a hysterical breakdown, didn’t bring him the satisfaction he’d expected. Instead, that unsettling, irritating feeling intensified. He had expected tears. He had expected pleading. My quiet acceptance felt like a loss of control he couldn't explain.
Her calmness... it was unsettling.
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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!"