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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.
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Chapter 5

Liv POV

I stood by the kitchen window, watching the man who called himself "Martin."

He was chopping wood in the yard. Despite his gaunt, hollowed frame, the axe rose and fell with a rhythmic, lethal precision. He didn't move like a servant. He moved like a warrior whose muscles remembered the cadence of war, even if his mind remained fractured.

My inner wolf was a chaotic mess of contradictions. One moment she wanted to tear out his throat for daring to be near us; the next, she wanted to close the distance and rub against him. It was confusing, maddening, and utterly exhausting.

"Why did you hire him?" I asked Jennings, who was meticulously organizing the pantry behind me.

"We needed the help," Jennings said, his face carefully neutral. "And... he has a sorrow about him. You know the Hayes pack has always offered sanctuary to the broken."

"He smells dangerous," I muttered, my eyes narrowing.

"He smells like regret," Jennings corrected softly.

I walked out onto the porch. Finn was playing in the yard, pushing a toy truck through the dirt.

Martin stopped chopping. He froze, the axe hovering mid-air, his gaze locking onto my son.

The look on his face... it was raw, devastating hunger. Not the hunger of a predator stalking prey, but the hunger of a starving man gazing upon a feast he knows he cannot touch. His hand trembled on the haft of the axe.

"Back to work, Martin," I called out sharply.

He flinched violently and immediately swung the axe down. *Thwack.*

That evening, Martin brought dinner to the main house. It was a simple stew.

I took a single bite. The flavor exploded across my tongue—rosemary, thyme, and a distinct, velvety hint of red wine.

The spoon clattered from my numb fingers.

It tasted exactly like the stew we used to eat at the university, back when Michael was just a Beta and I was helping him study. It was a time capsule. It was his mother's recipe.

I stared at the closed kitchen door, my heart hammering against my ribs. *Who are you playing at, Michael?*

The fragile peace shattered the following afternoon.

I was in the study with Jennings, reviewing security protocols. Finn was in the kitchen, trying to retrieve a cookie jar from the high shelf.

I heard a sickening crash. Then, a scream.

"Finn!"

I bolted from the room, adrenaline flooding my veins.

I skidded into the kitchen. The ceramic jar lay shattered on the floor. Finn was sitting amidst the shards, crying, clutching his knee. There was a small ribbon of blood.

But I wasn't the first one there.

Martin was on his knees. He had scooped Finn up into his arms, ignoring the glass biting into his own skin.

"Shh, shh," Martin was whispering, rocking him with desperate tenderness. "It's okay, little warrior. It's just a scratch. Pain makes us strong."

In his panic, he was leaking pheromones.

Usually, a strange Alpha's scent would terrify a child. It is aggressive, dominating—a threat to be feared.

But Martin’s scent—though masked by dirt and sweat—wrapped around Finn like a warm, protective blanket.

And Finn... Finn stopped crying.

He sniffed Martin’s neck, instinct taking over. His little hands grabbed Martin’s ragged shirt. He let out a small, contented sigh and buried his face in the man's chest.

*Family,* Finn’s young wolf projected. *Safe.*

The sight hit me like a physical blow. The undeniable biological connection. The blood calling to blood.

Rage, hot and blinding, flooded my vision.

"Get away from him!" I screamed.

I didn't walk. I lunged.

I ripped Finn out of Martin’s arms, clutching my son tight against my chest, shielding him from the man who had abandoned us.

"Get back!" I snarled. My eyes flashed white.

Martin fell back, scrambling on the floor. He looked terrified, but not for himself. He was looking at Finn with absolute devastation.

"I... I just wanted to help," he stammered.

"Don't you touch him," I hissed, my voice dripping with venom. "Don't you ever touch him."

Jennings appeared in the doorway. He looked from Martin to me, then to Finn. The realization settled in his eyes. He knew. He had to know.

"Take Finn to his room, Jennings," I ordered, my voice trembling with suppressed violence.

"Mama?" Finn asked, looking confused. "The sad man is nice."

"Go, Finn."

Jennings took Finn gently and led him away.

The room fell silent. The only sound was my heavy breathing and the relentless ticking of the clock.

I turned to Martin. He was still on the floor, his head bowed in submission.

"Stand up," I commanded.

He stood slowly. He wouldn't meet my eyes.

I walked up to him. I could smell it now. Beneath the grime, beneath the disguise. The forest. The rain. The scent that used to be my home.

"Did you think I wouldn't know?" I whispered, my voice breaking. "Did you think a mother wouldn't recognize the monster who tried to destroy her?"

He flinched as if struck.

"Look at me!" I shouted.

He lifted his head. Those familiar blue eyes were filled with tears.

"Drop the mask, Michael."

He closed his eyes. He took a deep, shuddering breath.

His posture changed. The servile slouch vanished. His shoulders squared. He seemed to grow three inches instantly. The air in the room grew heavy with Alpha power—suppressed, broken, but undeniably there.

He opened his eyes.

"Hello, Liv," Michael said.

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