Follow
Chapters
Share
The Alpha's Secret Heir and the Vanished Luna Novel Cover

The Alpha's Secret Heir and the Vanished Luna

I was pregnant with the Alpha’s heir, yet Michael refused to Mark me, calling my concerns "hormonal" while he paraded another woman, Serena, as his future Luna. The betrayal cut deep, but the breaking point came at the pack celebration. Serena slapped me across the face in front of everyone, and instead of defending his pregnant mate, Michael looked bored and ordered me to stop making a scene. That night, I didn't just leave; I ripped the mate bond out of my own mind. The pain was blinding, but necessary. With my mother's help, I faked my death—and the death of our unborn child—to escape his toxic hold. For four years, I raised my son, Finn, on a hidden island, safe from the politics that nearly destroyed me. I thought I was free, until a ragged, broken man washed up on my shore. It was Michael. He wasn't the arrogant King anymore; he was a beggar who had spent years mourning a ghost. When he saw Finn, he fell to his knees, weeping at the sight of the boy who had his golden eyes. "Is he mine?" he begged. "He is mine," I told him coldly. "You lost him the day you chose her." I prepared to send him away, but then the alarms rang. Serena had found us, leading a rogue army to slaughter my son for dark magic. Michael looked at me, his eyes clearing for the first time in years. "I will be your shield," he vowed. He ran straight into the silver blades, taking the death blow meant for our child. As he died in my arms, I finally forgave him. Now, I stand over his grave not as a victim, but as the Alpha Luna who will rule the world he left behind.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

Liv POV

Consciousness returned in waves, carrying the sharp, sterile sting of antiseptic layered over the soothing scent of dried lavender.

I knew that scent instantly. It was the private wing of the Hayes Pack clinic. My childhood home.

"She’s coming back to us," a soft voice murmured, thick with relief.

My lashes fluttered, heavy as lead, before I forced my eyes open. My mother, Elizabeth, hovered above me. Her face was pale, etched with new lines of exhaustion, but her gaze was fierce—a steel trap snapping shut.

"Mom," I croaked. My throat felt like it had been scrubbed with sandpaper. Panic spiked in my chest, sharp and sudden. "The baby?"

"Alive," she answered instantly, her grip tightening on my hand to ground me. "Weak, but fighting. He is alive."

Air rushed out of my lungs, a sob trapped in the exhale.

"But Liv," she continued, her voice shifting from maternal warmth to something colder, harder. "We cannot let Michael know."

I struggled to sit up, wincing as a dull ache radiated through my core. "He felt the bond snap, Mom. He knows I left."

"He knows you left," Elizabeth corrected, her eyes locking onto mine. "He does not know you survived the rejection."

She reached for a pitcher and poured a glass of water, the ice clinking softly in the silence.

"The stress... the physical trauma... it triggered a dormant aspect of your heritage, Liv. Your *Inner Wolf* forced a violent, partial shift to shield the fetus. It saved him, but the energy drain nearly killed you both."

She handed me the glass, her expression unyielding.

"We are going to tell him you died."

I froze, the glass halfway to my lips. "Died?"

"Think, Olivia. If he knows there is a child—an Alpha heir born of his blood—he will tear the world apart to claim it. He will drag you back to that cage and lock the door. Is that what you want?"

"No," I whispered. The phantom sting of Serena’s slap and the memory of Michael’s cold, indifferent stare burned behind my eyelids. "Never again."

"Then we kill Liv, the weak mate of the Thorn Alpha," my mother declared, her voice ringing with finality. "And we let the White Wolf rise."

*White Wolf.*

I looked down at my hands. The skin seemed to glow with a faint, pearlescent sheen, as if moonlight were trapped beneath the surface. I could feel a new power humming in my veins—pure, ancient, and terrifyingly regal. It wasn’t just a wolf. It was royalty.

"Jennings!" my mother called out, not looking away from me.

The heavy oak door creaked open. Jennings, our family’s steward for three decades, stepped inside. He was an older Beta, gray-haired and stoic, with eyes that had seen too much.

"The paperwork is prepared, Luna Dowager," Jennings said, his voice low and solemn. He held up a manila file. "Death certificate. Cause of death: uterine rupture and massive internal hemorrhage induced by stress-related rejection."

"And the child?" I asked, my voice trembling.

Jennings bowed his head slightly. "Listed as lost with the mother. I have already dispatched the courier to the Thorn Pack."

I closed my eyes, taking a steadying breath.

"Do it," I said.

*

Three days later, strength had returned enough for me to stand by the window, overlooking the manicured grounds of the estate.

My mother entered the room, the click of her heels sharp against the floorboards. "It is done. The courier delivered the news this morning."

"How did he take it?" I asked, hating the treacherous part of my heart that still cared.

"Jennings has eyes everywhere," she replied coolly. "Michael collapsed in the receiving hall. He has locked himself in his chambers and refuses to emerge. The pack is in chaos."

She paused, a grim satisfaction tightening her lips. "He is refusing to see Serena."

A dark, curling coil of satisfaction settled in my gut. *Good. Let him bleed. Let him drown in it.*

"But grief is not enough," my mother added. She walked to the antique desk and lifted the receiver of the secure line. "I have contacted the Werewolf Council. I have filed formal charges of gross negligence and abuse resulting in the death of a high-ranking female. His trade routes are frozen effective immediately. His offshore accounts are flagged."

My mother was a force of nature. Terrifying, ruthless, and exactly what I needed.

"What about the baby’s scent?" I asked, turning from the window. "If Michael ever gets close... if our paths cross..."

"We have the Ancient Art," she assured me.

From her pocket, she produced a delicate amulet made of twisted silver and raw moonstone. It seemed to pulse with a faint, rhythmic light.

"This will cloak the child’s Alpha aura completely. To the world, he will smell like nothing. Like a Beta, or perhaps even human."

I took the amulet, the metal cool and heavy against my palm.

"I need to go away, Mom. I can’t stay here. If his grief turns to madness, he will come to the Hayes lands looking for answers."

"I know," she said softly. "We have a property. An island off the jagged coast, isolated and forgotten. It is protected by old blood magic. The salt and the tides wash away all scents. You will be safe there."

"An island," I mused. "Isolation."

"Sanctuary," she corrected.

I spent the next week preparing. I felt my body changing rapidly. The White Wolf was knitting me back together, healing the damage faster than any normal shifter could. My senses were sharpening to a razor's edge; I could hear a leaf detach from a branch three rooms away.

One afternoon, I sat in the garden, legs crossed, meditating. I turned my focus inward, reaching for the spark of life within me.

*Hello, little one,* I projected.

And for the first time, I felt a response.

It wasn’t a voice. It was a sensation—a pulse of pure, molten gold. It was strong. Incredibly strong.

*Alpha,* my wolf whispered reverently. *He is a born Alpha.*

"Finn," I said aloud to the wind. "His name is Finn." It meant 'fair.' Justice.

Jennings approached across the lawn, his shadow falling over me. "The boat is ready, My Lady."

I stood up, smoothing my dress. I looked back at the main house, at the life I was leaving behind—the girl who had tried so hard to be enough for a man who didn't see her.

"How is the Thorn Pack?" I asked.

"Starving," Jennings said simply. "Serena is stealing from the storerooms. The Omegas are fleeing in the night. And Michael... Michael is wandering."

"Wandering?"

"He spends his nights running the borderlands, howling for a mate who doesn't answer. They say he is a ghost haunting his own territory."

I felt a twinge of pity, a reflex of my old self, but I crushed it instantly. He had made me a ghost first.

"Let’s go," I said.

I slid into the back of the waiting car. As we drove away, heading toward the coast and the island that would be my fortress, I caught my reflection in the darkened window.

The girl with the soft, pleading eyes was gone. The woman staring back had eyes like polished steel.

"The game isn't over, Michael," I whispered to the glass.

"It is just the beginning."