11 The Dawn Of Parting
The house was quiet again. Too quiet.
The children finally slept, though their dreams would carry the weight of what they overheard. I had stayed by their bedsides until their breathing evened out, my wolf pressing against theirs through the bond, soothing them with every scrap of calm I could muster.
But when I stepped back into the main room, Ronan and Jax were waiting. Both tense. Both silent. The fire had burned down to embers, throwing shadows across their faces.
For a long moment, none of us spoke.
Then Ronan broke the silence. His voice was low, rough, heavy with something deeper than anger. โI canโt let you walk into Crescent Hill alone. If you go, I go.โ
The words hit me like a blow.
โNo,โ I said sharply. โYouโre Alpha now. Both of you. The pack needs you here.โ
Jax let out a harsh laugh, but there was no humor in it. โAnd what about you? Youโre Luna, Lyra. You think the pack doesnโt need you?โ
โTheyโll need me more if Crescent Hill makes good on their threat,โ I shot back. โIf the Goddess is right, if my bloodline ties me to whatever is happening there, then I have to see it myself. But you โ you two are the anchors of this pack. You canโt abandon them for me.โ
Ronanโs fists clenched at his sides, the muscle in his jaw ticking. โYou are not something we abandon. Youโre everything.โ
I swallowed hard, forcing the words past the lump in my throat. โAnd because I am everything, I canโt let you risk it all just to follow me into their ruins. Someone has to hold this pack together if things go wrong. Thatโs you.โ
Silence pressed down again. Heavy. Suffocating.
Then Jax stepped forward, his eyes burning like wildfire. โFine. But one thing is non-negotiable. You donโt go alone.โ
โJaxโโ
โNo.โ His voice was firm, absolute. โIf Ronan or I canโt come, then youโll take two of our strongest. Men we trust with our lives. Warriors who will guard you like their own Luna.โ
The words struck against my instincts like steel. My wolf bristled, baring her teeth. โI donโt need bodyguards. I can take care of myself.โ
Ronanโs voice came quieter now, but no less firm. โItโs not about whether you can. Itโs about whether we can live with the thought of you out there without protection.โ
I turned away, pacing, my heart pounding. Every part of me wanted to reject it to stand on my own, to prove Crescent Hill couldnโt touch me anymore. But when I looked back at them, when I saw the raw fear in Ronanโs eyes, the restless desperation in Jaxโs, the refusal to bend because they loved me too muchโฆ
I broke.
My shoulders sagged. โTwo,โ I whispered. โTwo of your strongest. No more.โ
Jax exhaled sharply, some of the tension bleeding out of him. Ronanโs gaze softened, though the weight in his eyes didnโt fade.
โTwo,โ I repeated, firmer this time. โBut I choose who they are.โ
Ronan nodded slowly. โFair.โ
Jaxโs hand brushed mine, rough and warm, a silent promise. โThatโs all we ask. Donโt make us watch you walk into danger with nothing at your back.โ
I swallowed hard, blinking against the sting in my eyes. โI wonโt. Not anymore.โ
The three of us stood there in the quiet, the embers painting our faces in gold and shadow. Not shouting. Not tearing each other apart. Just clinging to the fragile balance between fear and love.
And for the first time since the council, I felt it settle in me: not peace, not certainty, but something close.
Resolve.
I woke to the sound of small feet pattering across the wooden floor.
โMama?โ Calebโs whisper came first, though his volume never matched his intent. โAre you awake?โ
I cracked one eye open. Three faces hovered at the edge of the bed Caleb grinning mischievously, Rowan frowning in serious imitation of his father, and Elira clutching her blanket like a little queen holding court.
โYes,โ I said, my voice still thick with sleep.
โGood.โ Caleb scrambled onto the mattress without hesitation, followed by Rowan. Elira climbed more carefully, settling on my other side. Within seconds, I was trapped between warm limbs and sleepy giggles.
Their closeness untied the knots inside me. For a few precious minutes, I just held them, burying my face in their hair, breathing them in. This is why, my wolf whispered. This is why you fight. Why you risk.
By the time Ronan and Jax appeared in the doorway, both already dressed, the bed had turned into a battlefield of blankets and laughter.
Jax leaned against the frame, smirking. โShould I be jealous that my mateโs attention is stolen by three little wolves before breakfast?โ
โToo late,โ Ronan murmured, but there was warmth in his voice as his gaze softened on the children.
โCome on,โ I said, wrangling the twins back into order. โLetโs get ready for the day. The pack wonโt wait just because their Lunaโs in a pile of blankets.โ
Later that morning, duty returned.
We gathered in the council hall again, but this time it wasnโt for arguments. It was for decisions.
Ronan stood to my left, Jax to my right, both radiating a quiet, hard steadiness. Across from us, warriors lined up the strongest of the pack, each waiting to hear who I would choose to accompany me to Crescent Hill.
Becca and Jason were present too, though Iโd already promised them they would remain here, watching over the pack in my absence. Their loyalty burned bright, but I couldnโt risk thinning the command structure while I was gone.
I walked the line slowly, meeting each gaze. My wolf stirred, sensing strength, loyalty, intent.
Kaelen steady, sharp-eyed, loyal to the marrow. He had proven himself a dozen times over, both in the field and at my side.
Mira fierce, fast, as stubborn as I was. She had been the one to bring word of Crescent Hillโs first movements. Her loyalty was beyond question.
I stopped before them, my decision made. โKaelen. Mira. You will walk with me into Crescent Hill.โ
Their bows were deep, their voices firm in unison. โYes, Luna.โ
The weight of the choice settled heavy, but steady, in my chest. These were not just guards. They were my shields, chosen by me, trusted with my life.
Ronanโs hand brushed mine, subtle but grounding. Jax gave a sharp nod, his approval grudging but clear.
The council accepted the choice, the warriors straightened, and the preparations began in earnest.
But as I left the hall, my childrenโs laughter still echoed in my ears. A reminder of what I was carrying with me not just duty, not just answers.
But the heart of everything I was fighting for.
The hours that followed felt like walking with two hearts one beating with purpose, the other dragging heavy with dread.
In the councilโs storehouse, I packed what I would need: simple clothes that traveled well, herbs for healing, parchments, a dagger Ronan pressed into my hand without a word. Each item felt like a stone dropped into a river steady ripples spreading, carrying me closer to the path I couldnโt turn from.
Jax prowled the shelves, tossing extra supplies into the satchel Iโd already organized. โYouโre not traveling light. Forget that. Weโre not letting Crescent Hill see you as some fragile Luna. Youโll walk in prepared, like a wolf who knows exactly what sheโs worth.โ
โPrepared, not weighed down,โ I murmured, pulling half of what he shoved in back out. He huffed, but didnโt argue.
Ronan oversaw quietly, his eyes sharp, his hand always brushing mine when I paused too long. โEvery piece matters. Not just what you carry โ but the way you carry yourself.โ
Their faith steadied me, even as the knot in my chest pulled tighter.
Back at the den, I found the children waiting.
Rowan stood stiffly by the hearth, trying too hard to be strong, while Caleb hovered restlessly, his emotions written all over his face. Elira sat cross-legged on the rug, her blanket clutched around her shoulders, eyes sharp and far too knowing for her age.
โYouโre leaving.โ Rowanโs voice was flat. Not a question.
I crouched down, reaching for his hand. โNot forever. Just for a little while.โ
โWhy?โ His voice cracked, and for the first time I saw the child beneath the little warrior he tried to be.
โBecause there are questions only I can answer,โ I said softly. โBut I swear, Rowan, I will come back.โ
He nodded, but his fingers squeezed mine hard enough to hurt.
Caleb threw himself against me next, burying his face in my side. โI donโt want you to go. They already hurt you once.โ His words muffled, shaking.
I stroked his hair. โThey canโt hurt me anymore. Not with the bond I carry. Not with you three waiting for me here.โ
Elira hadnโt moved. She just stared at me, her eyes sharp as blades. โYouโre lying.โ
The words struck harder than any blow.
โEliraโโ
โYouโre scared.โ Her small chin lifted, so much like mine. โYou always smile when youโre scared. But I can see it.โ
I swallowed hard, my heart twisting. Slowly, I crossed to her, kneeling so we were eye level. โYes,โ I admitted. โI am scared. But being brave doesnโt mean never being afraid. It means going forward even when you are. And I promise you โ I will be brave enough to come back to you.โ
Her eyes filled, but she nodded once, solemn as a queen.
That night, as I set the satchel by the door, Ronan and Jax stood on either side of me.
โWeโre ready,โ Jax said.
I looked back toward the childrenโs room, their soft breathing carrying through the door.
โNo,โ I whispered. โBut I will be.โ
The first light of dawn crept through the trees, silver and soft, painting the world in fragile quiet.
I hadnโt slept. My satchel waited by the door, packed and ready. Kaelen and Mira stood outside already, their silhouettes steady against the mist.
But before I could step through that door, I had to face the hardest part.
The children.
Rowan sat on his bed with his arms crossed, fighting tears with a soldierโs frown. Caleb clung to my waist the moment I stepped in, his small body shaking against mine. Elira stood by the window, watching the sky as though searching for answers among the fading stars.
โIโll be back,โ I said, gathering them all into my arms at once, breathing them in as if I could carry their scent with me into Crescent Hill. โNo matter how far I go, Iโll come back.โ
โYou swear?โ Rowanโs voice cracked.
โOn the bond,โ I whispered, pressing my forehead to his.
Caleb hiccupped, trying to be brave. โBring something back. Proof youโre okay.โ
โIโll bring back more than proof,โ I said, brushing his hair back. โIโll bring back answers.โ
Elira finally turned, her eyes sharp but wet. She didnโt run to me. Instead, she spoke with the calm of someone far older than her years. โDonโt let them break you again, Mama. Promise.โ
My chest caved. I crossed the room and knelt, holding her face in my hands. โNever. Not while I have all of you waiting for me.โ
Her small hands gripped mine, and she whispered, โThen weโll wait.โ
I kissed each of them, lingering far too long, then forced myself to rise. If I didnโt leave now, I never would.
Outside, the pack had gathered in silence. No chants. No speeches. Just rows of wolves and humans alike, watching their Luna walk toward a path none of them wished her to take.
Alpha Kane stood at the front, his old eyes heavy with pride and sorrow. โGo with strength, child,โ he said.
Kaelen and Mira fell into step behind me, their faces carved from stone. Ronan and Jax flanked me on either side, their presence steady, their silence screaming louder than words.
We walked together until the trees thinned, until the northern border stretched before us like a scar across the earth.
And there they were.
Crescent Hill.
Five wolves, camped at the edge, their gazes lifting as we approached. Recognition flickered across their faces when they saw me โ shock, disbelief, something darker.
My heart pounded, but I kept my chin high.
At the invisible line, Kaelen and Mira stopped. Ronan and Jax stopped, too. But I kept walking until I could feel the weight of the boundary humming beneath my feet.
โLyra,โ Ronanโs voice broke low behind me, raw with everything he hadnโt said.
I turned.
For one breath, I just looked at them. My mates. My anchors. My everything.
Then I stepped back into their arms, pulled close between them.
The kiss came without thought, without care for who watched. Jaxโs lips claimed mine first, fierce and desperate, while Ronanโs hand cradled the back of my neck before his mouth covered mine too slower, deeper, but no less consuming.
The world blurred, leaving only them, their bond burning through me like fire and lightning.
When I pulled away, breathless, I touched both their faces. โIโll come back.โ
โYouโd better,โ Jax rasped, his voice breaking.
โOr Crescent Hill wonโt live to regret it,โ Ronan said darkly.
I smiled faintly, though my heart cracked. And then I turned.
One step. Then another.
Kaelen and Mira fell in beside me as I crossed the line.
Crescent Hillโs wolves rose to meet me, their eyes sharp, their silence heavy.
And I walked straight into the camp of the pack that once left me to die.
12 Faces From The Ashes
Crossing that line felt like walking into old wounds.
The Crescent Hill camp was small, just five wolves but their presence was enough to choke the air. I didnโt need to ask who they were. My bones remembered before my eyes did.
Alaric, the Beta who had once sneered every time I failed a training drill. His mate Selene, sharp-eyed, her words always carrying venom disguised as pity. Torin, the scarred enforcer who had been the first to shove me into the dirt during trials. Lirae, a healer who had turned her face away when I begged for help after being cast out.
And at their center โ Marek.
My old Alpha.
His presence was unchanged: tall, commanding, his posture heavy with the authority of one who had never known doubt. Yet his hair carried more grey than I remembered, and his eyesโฆ his eyes flicked across me with something I had never seen there before. Not disdain. Not outright loathing. Something quieter.
Recognition.
โLyra.โ His voice carried across the clearing, deep and certain.
I didnโt flinch. Not anymore.
โAlpha Marek.โ I forced the words out steady, my chin lifted. โI didnโt expect to see you again. Not after you left me to the wolves.โ
A ripple passed through them. Seleneโs lips tightened. Alaric shifted his weight, uncomfortable.
Marek held my gaze. โAnd yet here you stand. Not just alive but Luna.โ
The word cracked the air like a whip. Behind me, Kaelen and Mira stiffened, ready for violence. But I raised a hand, keeping them steady.
โYes,โ I said softly, but firmly. โLuna. Of a pack that saw worth where you saw only weakness.โ
Selene scoffed, her eyes narrowing. โYou were an omega, Lyra. You think wearing the title of Luna erases what you are?โ
I stepped closer, closing the space between us until I could feel their unease. โIt doesnโt erase it. It proves it. I was omega, and they still chose me. I bled and clawed my way into a place you told me Iโd never reach. And now, the bond in my chest speaks louder than your scorn ever did.โ
Torin growled low, but Marek silenced him with a flick of his hand. His gaze never left mine.
โYouโre stronger than I imagined,โ he admitted quietly. โPerhaps stronger than we deserve.โ
The words stunned me more than I wanted to show. Marek had never admitted fault in his life not to me, not to anyone.
โWhy are you here?โ I asked, my voice sharper. โWhy drag yourselves into my territory, into my life, after years of silence?โ
Alaric shifted uneasily before answering. โBecause Crescent Hill is dying. Our bonds fracture, wolves turn on wolves. The land sickens. The Goddess has turned her face from us.โ
Seleneโs voice snapped through the air. โWe need you, Lyra. The outcast. The one we threw away. You are tied to Crescent Hill whether you want it or not through your blood.โ
My wolf bristled at that. Through my mother.
I swallowed, keeping my mask firm. โAnd what if I donโt want to save you? What if I want to watch Crescent Hill burn the way it watched me?โ
Silence fell. Heavy. Thick.
Marek stepped forward, closer than the others dared. His voice lowered, almost to a plea. โThen it will burn. And my last legacy will be knowing we cast aside the only wolf who could have saved us.โ
For a heartbeat, I couldnโt breathe. The fire of my hatred warred with the ache of truth. My matesโ faces flashed in my mind Ronanโs steady strength, Jaxโs wild devotion, my childrenโs laughter.
I straightened, forcing the storm inside me into steel. โThen you will tell me everything. From the moment you threw me out to the moment you crawled here. No lies. No excuses.โ
Marek inclined his head slowly. โThen listen, Luna. And judge for yourself.โ
The circle tightened, the old ghosts leaning closer. And I braced myself to hear the truth from the pack that had once left me to die.
The clearing felt colder now, as if the dawn itself had recoiled from what was about to be said. Marek stood before me, shoulders heavy, eyes older than I remembered. For the first time in my life, he looked less like an Alpha and more like a man weighed down by choices.
โCrescent Hill is broken,โ he began. His voice carried no roar, no iron command just weary truth.
Alaric stepped closer, his jaw tight. โOur warriors fight amongst themselves. Bonds that once held us together unravel. Wolves wake in the night unable to shift. Families turn on each other. Itโs as if the Goddess herself has abandoned us.โ
Seleneโs mouth pressed thin. โWe have lost more in the past two years than in the last decade. Territory, lives, faith. The rot isnโt just in the land. Itโs in our blood.โ
I listened, my arms crossed, my wolf pacing inside me. They spoke of collapse, of suffering but not once did they speak of the suffering they had left me to.
โWhy tell me this?โ I asked coldly. โWhy crawl here now, when you spat on my name then?โ
Marekโs eyes darkened. โBecause your name is the only one left that the Goddess still answers.โ
The words struck me like a blow.
โWhat are you talking about?โ I snapped.
He hesitated. And in that hesitation, I knew. My stomach turned to stone, my heart pounding loud enough for Kaelen and Mira to hear.
โItโs your mother,โ Marek said at last.
The ground shifted beneath me.
โShe lives.โ His words cracked the air. โAll these years, she has been here, bound to Crescent Hill. Silenced by secrets even I barely understood. The day you were cast out, Lyra, she did not speak not because she would not, but because she could not.โ
I shook my head, breath faltering. โNo. Sheโฆ she abandoned me. She turned her back while you threw me away.โ
Seleneโs voice cut sharp. โThatโs what we let you believe. Easier to cast out an omega no one would defend than to reveal the truth that could tear the pack apart.โ
โTruth?โ My voice cracked, anger rising hot. โTell me the truth then. Now.โ
Marek took a step closer, lowering his voice. โYour mother carried blood older than Crescent Hill. Blood tied to the first Luna line, long before any of us ruled. A blessing or a curse. Her power was meant to strengthen us, but when you were born, that bloodline shifted. Itโฆ anchored itself in you.โ
My knees almost buckled. Kaelenโs hand twitched near his blade, Miraโs growl rumbled low, but I forced myself to stand tall.
โYou mean to tell me,โ I whispered, โthat you cast me out not because I was weak but because you were afraid of me?โ
Marekโs silence was answer enough.
I laughed, sharp and broken. โYou left me to die because I carried too much power, not too little. You called me worthless because you were terrified of what I was.โ
Torin growled, guilt flickering in his eyes. โIt was not our choice alone. The elders feared you. They said your presence would tear Crescent Hill apart.โ
โAnd look at you now.โ My voice rose, trembling with fury. โTorn apart anyway. Broken. Dying. And now you come to me with your tails tucked, begging for help from the girl you left bleeding in the dirt?โ
Selene flinched. Alaric dropped his gaze.
Marek, however, stood steady. โYes. Because the Goddess has made it clear. Only you can restore what is broken. Only you can heal Crescent Hill or let it crumble into dust.โ
My wolf snarled inside me, claws raking at my chest. They abandoned us. They left us to starve. And now they beg.
But beneath the rage, another truth pressed against me: my mother. Alive. Silenced. Still bound to this cursed pack.
I forced myself to meet Marekโs gaze. โIf sheโs alive, then I will see her. With my own eyes. Not a word more until I do.โ
For the first time, Marek inclined his head to me not as a cast-out omega. Not even as a rival. But as Luna.
โThen you will see her,โ he said quietly. โBut know this, Lyra. Seeing her will not heal the wound. It will only cut it deeper.โ
I steadied my breath, steel hardening in my chest. โThen let it cut. Iโd rather bleed from truth than live in your lies any longer.โ
The clearing fell silent. The wolves of Crescent Hill stared at me as though seeing me for the first time. Not as the girl they had thrown away. But as the Luna they could no longer deny.
And as the bond in my chest pulsed, fierce and unyielding, I knew this was only the beginning.
The decision was made with little ceremony. Marek gave a sharp command to his wolves, and within minutes, Crescent Hill was ready to move. Kaelen and Mira glanced at me once, waiting for my word, but I nodded. We had no choice but to follow.
โWe shift,โ Marek said, his tone heavy with authority. โThe journey is long, and speed is everything.โ
I met his eyes, and for a heartbeat, neither of us looked away. In the past, I would have lowered my gaze, head bowed, shoulders curled in submission. But not now.
โFine,โ I said evenly. โLetโs run.โ
My wolf surged forward inside me, eager, wild. The shift came smoothly, fur erupting, bones lengthening, paws striking the earth. When the world steadied again, I stood on four legs, my coat gleaming silver in the dawn light. Power thrummed in my muscles, the bond with Ronan and Jax burning bright even though they werenโt here beside me.
Kaelen and Mira shifted behind me, their wolves falling naturally at my flank. Crescent Hill shifted too, their forms familiar and foreign all at once Alaricโs dark brown bulk, Seleneโs sleek white frame, Torinโs scarred black form.
And Marek.
He towered in his wolf shape, a massive grey beast with eyes like flint. His presence radiated power the same power that once crushed me beneath its weight.
But now?
Now, I was not behind him.
I was beside him.
His paws struck the dirt in long, commanding strides, but mine matched him, step for step, my head held high, my fur rippling with the strength of the bond that pulsed through me. I felt the way his gaze flicked toward me, quick, measuring, unsettled.
He thought I would trail. He thought I would falter. He still doesnโt understand who Iโve become.
We ran.
The forest blurred around us, branches whipping past, the ground thundering beneath our paws. The Crescent wolves stretched themselves thin, struggling to keep pace with their Alpha. But I didnโt struggle. If anything, my wolf surged faster, stronger, brushing against the edges of Marekโs stride, daring him to push harder.
A growl rumbled low in his chest not at me, but at the truth. He knew. If I chose, if I unleashed everything the bond and my bloodline had given me, I could outrun him. Outfight him. Outlast him.
The Alpha of Crescent Hill was no longer the strongest wolf on this path.
And he knew it.
Kaelen and Mira kept their positions behind me, their loyalty unwavering. Alaric and Selene exchanged uneasy glances as they pushed themselves harder. Even Torin, once the enforcer who shoved me into the dirt, faltered when I surged ahead for a moment before deliberately easing back.
It wasnโt about proving I could win. It was about showing them I no longer needed to.
By the time the broken stone walls of Crescent Hillโs territory rose in the distance, the air was thick with unspoken understanding.
I wasnโt their omega anymore.
I was Luna.
And even Marek could feel the truth of it pressing against his fur with every stride.
13 Crossing the Threshold
The forest thinned, the trees giving way to wide hills and crumbling stone walls that marked the edge of Crescent Hillโs territory.
I slowed my stride, paws sinking into the earth as the scents hit me familiar and jagged, like thorns pressed into my lungs. The air smelled of damp stone, old blood, and something weaker now, something hollowed. Once, this border had been guarded by warriors who wouldโve torn apart any who dared to cross. Now, only silence greeted us.
Marek halted just ahead, his massive grey form standing stiff at the boundary. His ears twitched, his tail lifted in that old commanding posture. He glanced at me from the corner of his eye, expecting me to hang back.
But I didnโt.
I stepped forward until my paws brushed the very line where Crescent Hill soil began. My wolf growled low in my chest not from fear, but from the memory of how this ground had once rejected me.
I would not bow to it again.
Kaelen and Mira flanked me close, their golden and brindle coats bristling with loyalty. The Crescent wolves behind us shifted uneasily, their scents sharp with discomfort.
Marekโs gaze lingered on me, and for a moment, neither of us moved. The Alpha who had cast me out. The Luna who had returned not in chains, but in strength.
Finally, he stepped forward, his paws crossing the line. Without hesitation, I matched him stride for stride.
The ground did not swallow me. The spirits did not spit me out.
The soil of Crescent Hill took me back but on my terms.
We crested the ridge, and the old heart of Crescent Hill came into view.
The pack grounds.
Stone huts clustered around the central clearing, their walls cracked and roofs patched with rough timber. Warriors stood scattered, thinner than I remembered, their movements sluggish as they paused to stare. Pups peeked out from doorways, wide-eyed, while elders sat hunched by the fire pits, their faces pale and worn.
And then the whispers began.
โThatโs herโโ
โSheโs alive?โ
โNo, impossibleโโ
โThe omegaโโ
โNot anymoreโฆโ
The words rippled like wildfire. Wolves emerged from every corner, crowding into the clearing, their eyes fixed on me. Some carried disbelief, others open hostility, but more than a fewโฆ more than a few carried something else.
Hope.
I shifted, fur sliding back into skin, bones reshaping until I stood upright. Kaelen and Mira shifted behind me instantly, ready to shield me if needed. The Crescent wolves hesitated, then shifted too.
Marek moved forward first, his form rippling back into the man I remembered tall, broad, still carrying himself like the unshakable Alpha. He raised his voice, deep and commanding.
โCrescent Hill,โ he called. โLook well. The one we cast out has returned.โ
Gasps rippled through the crowd.
Marekโs eyes found mine again. โLyra. Luna of another pack. Daughter of Crescent Hill blood.โ His voice lowered, edged with something I never thought Iโd hear from him. โThe one we once abandonedโฆ and the one who may yet save us.โ
Every stare in that clearing pressed against me like a weight. My wolf snarled inside me, urging me to meet their gazes, not hide from them. So I lifted my chin, squared my shoulders, and let the truth ring clear.
โI didnโt return because you deserve me,โ I said, my voice carrying across the stunned crowd. โI returned because the Goddess willed it โ and because I will no longer let lies define me.โ
Some wolves recoiled, others bristled, but the hope the faint, flickering hope grew louder in their murmurs.
And for the first time in years, Crescent Hill didnโt see me as the omega they cast out.
They saw me as something more.
The whispers didnโt stop.
They followed me as Marek led us deeper into Crescent Hillโs heart, murmurs trailing like shadows at my back. Pups clung to their mothers, elders craned their necks, warriors bristled but didnโt step forward.
Once, their stares had cut me down to nothing. Now they fueled the fire under my skin.
The grounds themselves had changed. The once-proud training yard was half-collapsed, weeds breaking through the dirt. The old water well sat cracked and dry. Stone huts leaned into one another as though even the walls had grown tired. Crescent Hill hadnโt just weakened it was withering.
And yetโฆ my chest ached.
Every corner held a memory.
There, the steps where I had been shoved into the mud, laughter ringing around me while I scrambled to my feet. There, the healerโs hut where Iโd once begged for herbs for a wound no one else cared to treat. There, the great hall where I had been told, coldly and without hesitation, that I was no longer pack.
Kaelen brushed close to my side as we walked, his golden eyes scanning the crowd. โThey look at you like they donโt know whether to bow or bare their teeth.โ
โThey donโt,โ I murmured, my voice tight. โBecause theyโve never had to face the truth of what they did.โ
Miraโs voice was low but steady. โThen let them choke on it now. Youโre Luna. Not theirs, but Luna all the same.โ
I nodded, though the ache didnโt fade.
We passed a cluster of young wolves barely older than pups trying to spar in the training yard. Their movements were sloppy, their stances weak. When one of them noticed me watching, he froze, eyes wide. The others followed his gaze, their practice faltering as they stared.
โSheโs the one,โ one whispered.
โThe outcast?โ another asked.
โNoโฆ sheโs different.โ
I didnโt stop walking, but I held their eyes long enough to let them see me. Not the omega they thought they knew. The Luna I had become.
The crowd thickened as we neared the great hall, wolves drawn by the scent of change, by the ripple of energy that hummed through the air. Some sneered, unwilling to bend even now. Others hung back, watching with the desperation of wolves clinging to hope.
Marek finally stopped at the base of the stone steps. His voice carried over the gathering.
โShe will see her mother.โ
Gasps rippled again.
My breath caught, sharp and painful. The weight of the hall loomed above me, the same place where I had been sentenced to exile, cast into the cold without a second thought. Now I climbed the steps not as a girl begging to belong, but as a Luna whose very presence unsettled the ground.
At the door, Marekโs hand pressed briefly against the worn wood. His voice lowered, meant only for me.
โPrepare yourself. She is not as you remember.โ
I forced the tremor from my chest, lifting my chin. โNeither am I.โ
And with that, the doors creaked open, the dark hall swallowing us whole.
The doors groaned as they opened, their weight echoing through the hall.
Darkness met me first not just the absence of light, but the kind that clung to stone and memory. Dust hung in the air, stirred by the draft of our entrance. The scent of pine smoke from half-dead torches lined the walls, mixing with something olderโฆ something faintly metallic, like rust and old blood.
My wolf pressed close inside me, her hackles raised. This place remembers us, she whispered. And we remember it.
I stepped forward.
The sound of my boots striking the stone floor was too loud, too sharp. Every step pulled me back to the last time I had walked this hall โ smaller, weaker, head bent as wolves lined the benches and whispered. Every eye judging me. Every mouth spitting words like dirt.
โUseless.โ
โBurden.โ
โOmega.โ
The whispers werenโt real, but they were loud enough in my head that I clenched my fists to silence them.
Kaelen and Mira flanked me, their presence steadying, though I could feel their unease in every step. Marek moved just ahead, his shoulders stiff, his stride too measured a wolf who was bracing for something even he couldnโt control.
The hall stretched on, longer than it had any right to be. Shadows pooled in the corners, flickering light catching on carvings etched into the stone pillars. I had traced those carvings as a child, wishing I belonged to the stories of warriors and Lunas who had come before. Now the same carvings looked brittle, half-erased, like the pack itself.
Halfway down the hall, my chest tightened. My wolf whimpered.
This was the exact spot where they had stood me years ago, where Marekโs voice had rung out, sealing my exile. I could almost see myself there a younger Lyra, trembling, alone, fighting not to cry as the verdict fell.
And now here I was, walking back through that same path not cast out this time, but summoned. Not alone, but guarded.
It didnโt erase the pain. But it reshaped it.
At the far end of the hall, a dais rose in shadow. The torches there burned low, casting only enough light to outline a figure seated in the high-backed chair. Too still. Too fragile.
My breath caught. My pulse thundered in my ears.
Marek slowed, his gaze flicking back toward me. His voice carried just enough to reach.
โPrepare yourself.โ
The figure stirred slightly at the sound of his voice, a faint shift of fabric, a hand trembling against the arm of the chair.
My throat went dry.
Mother.
She was here.
Alive.
Not a shadow in a dream. Not a half-whisper from the Goddess. Real.
And in one more step, I would see her face.
The torches crackled weakly, shadows dancing across the dais. My pulse hammered as the figure in the chair shifted, slowly lifting her head.
And then I saw her face.
My breath left me in a single, shattering rush.
She lookedโฆ older, frailer, her skin pale, her once-dark hair streaked with silver. Lines etched around her eyes and mouth, carved deep by years I hadnโt witnessed. But it was her. The curve of her cheekbones, the shape of her mouth all pieces of the woman I had dreamed of a thousand times since exile.
My mother.
Alive.
Her eyes gods, her eyes. They werenโt the sharp green I remembered from my childhood. They were dimmer, clouded, like light struggling to break through fog. And yet when they found me, the faintest spark stirred.
โLyraโฆโ she whispered, the sound barely more than air.
I froze.
Because once, that voice had been my anchor.
A memory burned through me.
I was small then, no more than eight, knees scraped from falling in the training yard where I had no place. The older pups had laughed, shoving me down again when I tried to rise. By the time I stumbled home, my arms shook from holding back tears.
She had been there. My mother. Sitting by the hearth. For once, Marek hadnโt been in the room, and I had crawled into her lap without fear.
Her fingers brushed the dirt from my cheek, gentle but quick, as though afraid someone would see.
โYou must be stronger, Lyra,โ she whispered into my hair. โStronger than they believe you can be.โ
โBut I canโt,โ I had cried. โTheyโll always hate me.โ
Her arms tightened, her voice fierce though quiet. โThen prove them wrong. Prove me right. One day, youโll stand where they cannot touch you.โ
I had clung to those words. For years. Even when she was silent during my exile. Even when I told myself she had abandoned me.
And now here she was, looking at me like the years had never passed, like she still saw the child who needed her strength.
But I wasnโt that child anymore.
I wasnโt the trembling girl who had begged to belong.
I was Luna.
Her lips trembled as though to form another word, but no sound came. Her body sagged against the chair, as though even that brief whisper had stolen what little strength she had.
I took a step forward. My voice cracked, but I forced it steady.
โYouโre alive.โ
Tears shimmered in her eyes and that alone was enough to break the ground under me.
Alive. Silent all these years. Watching me cast out, yet never reaching for me.
Alive.
14 Questions Without Mercy
Marekโs voice broke the silence first.
โShe should not be overwhelmed,โ he said gruffly, glancing at my mother slumped in the chair. โHer strength isnโt what it once was. I will give you time.โ
He turned and signaled toward Kaelen and Mira. โWait outside.โ
They both stiffened. Miraโs eyes narrowed, and Kaelen growled low. โWeโre not leaving her unguarded.โ
My wolf stirred, bristling with pride at their loyalty. But I lifted my hand, holding their gaze. โGo,โ I whispered.
Miraโs jaw tightened. Kaelenโs nostrils flared. But one look one command was enough. They bowed their heads and stepped toward the door, every movement reluctant, until they disappeared beyond the threshold.
The heavy doors shut with a thud.
And suddenly, it was only us.
Me. And the woman I had once prayed would save me.
The silence roared louder than any battle cry.
I took a step closer, my chest burning. โWhy?โ
Her eyes fluttered, her lips parting, but no words came.
My voice sharpened, rising. โWhy did you let them throw me out? Why did you stay silent? You were my mother! You were the only one who everโโ My throat closed, but I forced it open again. โYou told me I had to be stronger, but when they cast me out, you said nothing. Nothing!โ
Tears blurred my vision, but I didnโt stop. The dam had broken, and the flood was unstoppable.
โI bled alone. I starved alone. I built myself from nothing because youโโ I choked on the word, but spat it out. โBecause you abandoned me.โ
Her eyes glistened. Her hands trembled in her lap. When her voice came, it was thin and raw. โIโฆ never abandoned you.โ
โDonโt lie to me!โ I snapped. My wolf snarled, the sound tearing from my chest. โThe day they exiled me, you sat there. You sat there, and you said nothing! You let me go to die!โ
Her body flinched as though struck. She closed her eyes, a tear slipping down her cheek. โI was bound, Lyra.โ
The words rattled against the stone walls.
Bound.
I shook my head, fury and confusion tangling. โBound? By what? By who?โ
Her gaze met mine then, clearer than before, the fog lifting from her eyes. For a fleeting moment, I saw the mother I remembered โ fierce, unyielding, but trapped.
โThere are thingsโฆ you donโt know,โ she whispered. โThings I was never allowed to speak. If I had defied them, if I had stood for you that dayโฆ they would have killed me. And worse โ they would have come for you.โ
Her voice broke on the last word, her tears spilling freely now. โSilence was the only way I could keep you alive.โ
My breath stilled, my anger caught between fire and grief.
Alive. She had kept me alive. But at what cost?
I clenched my fists, trembling. โYou let me think you didnโt care. You let me hate you.โ
โI let you live,โ she whispered. โEven if it meant you would hate me forever.โ
The weight of her words crushed the air from my lungs. My wolf whimpered inside me, torn between rage and longing.
And I stood there, shaking, not knowing whether to fall into her arms or rip them away forever.
My nails bit into my palms, my breath ragged. โBound,โ I repeated, the word twisting like a knife. โWhat does that even mean? Bound by loyalty? By fear? By what?โ
My motherโs hands shook in her lap. For a moment, I thought she wouldnโt answer. Then she lifted her chin, and I saw the old fire in her eyes flicker weak, but still there.
โBy blood,โ she said. โBy oath.โ
The words scraped over me, raw and confusing. โExplain.โ
Her gaze darted toward the door, as if she feared ears beyond the stone. Then her voice lowered to a near whisper. โBefore you were born, I swore an oath to protect Crescent Hillโs Alpha bloodline. It was not a choice it was demanded. My silence, my obedience, my life if necessary. The oath was bound in blood and spirit. If I had spoken against Marek that dayโฆ if I had defied the exileโฆ the bond would have crushed me. And the Goddess herself would have judged you as his enemy.โ
My stomach turned to ice. โSo you stayed silentโฆ because of him.โ
Tears shone in her eyes. โBecause I was chained. Every word, every action weighed against that oath. But I thoughtโฆ I believed that if you lived, you would find your way to where you belonged. And you did.โ
Her voice cracked. โYou found them. You found your pack.โ
Anger surged hot in my veins. โI didnโt need to find them! I needed you! Do you have any idea what it was like to beg the Goddess every night for a sign you hadnโt given up on me? To wonder if I was nothing even to my mother?โ
Her body sagged, broken. โEvery night, I begged too. But my chains were heavier than yours, Lyra. You were cast out. I was trapped inside.โ
The words hit me like a blade. My wolf snarled, restless, unsure whether to pity or despise.
I swallowed hard, forcing the next question past the lump in my throat. โAnd now? Are you still bound?โ
A pause. A tremor ran through her lips. Then she nodded. โYes.โ
The stone walls seemed to close in around me. โSo even now, you canโt be my mother first?โ
Her tears spilled, but she didnโt look away. โEven now, I am your mother. Thatโs why I told Marek to bring you. Because only you, child, can break what binds me.โ
The hall went silent, her words reverberating inside me until I could barely breathe.
Only me.
Bound in blood. Bound in silence.
And now, the weight of freedom pressed onto my shoulders.
My heart hammered. The walls of the hall felt too close, my motherโs eyes too heavy on mine.
โHow?โ My voice cracked, but I forced it louder, fiercer. โHow can I break it? What do I have to do?โ
Her lips trembled, and for a moment she looked away as if even saying the words might scorch her tongue. Then, with a trembling breath, she met my gaze.
โIt was bound through ritual,โ she whispered. โBlood, spirit, and vow sealed together beneath the full moon. To break it, there must be another ritual. But it is no simple thing, Lyra. It is dangerous.โ
My stomach knotted. โDangerous how?โ
Her fingers curled tightly against the arm of the chair. โThe chains were woven through my soul. To shatter them, another soul must take the weight. It cannot vanish it must be carried. Transferred.โ
I froze. My wolf let out a sharp, warning growl inside me. This is no gift. This is a burden.
I shook my head slowly. โSo if I do thisโฆ the chains pass to me?โ
She nodded, her eyes glistening. โYes. You would bear them instead. The silence, the weight, the shadow that has pressed on me all these years. And if the ritual failsโฆโ Her voice broke. โIt could kill you. Or worse, bind you as it did me. Stronger. Irrevocable.โ
My breath caught, the danger sinking in like cold water.
โWhy didnโt you tell me this before?โ
Her tears fell freely now. โBecause I never wanted this fate for you. I endured it so you would not. But the Goddess chose differently. She has brought you here, now, because the chains no longer serve only me. Crescent Hill is unraveling. The bond that ties me to their Alpha bloodline bleeds into you, whether you wish it or not.โ
I staggered back a step, her words burning through me.
The bond. The exile. The Goddessโs cryptic warnings. It all circled back here.
โI donโt understand,โ I whispered. โWhy me?โ
Her voice softened, but it struck like a blade. โBecause you are my daughter. My blood. And because the Goddess made you Luna not only of your pack, but of destiny itself. If you take this on, you wonโt just free meโฆ youโll hold power Crescent Hill has guarded for generations. Power others will kill for.โ
The torches hissed, their flames guttering as if even they listened.
My wolf pressed against me, restless. This choice is fire, Lyra. It will burn. But fire also forges.
I clenched my fists, torn between fury and resolve. โSo my choices are to let you stay boundโฆ or to chain myself instead.โ
Her eyes shimmered with grief. โYes.โ
The hall went still, the weight of the Goddess herself pressing against my chest.
And I realized then whatever I chose, nothing would ever be the same again.
15 The Weight of Choice
Silence filled the hall again, thick and suffocating.
I stood in the center, halfway between my mother and the door, my shadow stretching across the cracked stone like something torn in two.
Her words echoed over and over in my head the chains must be transferredโฆ another soul must carry the weight.
It was madness. Unforgivable, impossible madness.
And yet, the worst part wasโฆ I understood.
I understood because thatโs what mothers did. They carried pain so their children wouldnโt have to.
And thatโs what daughters did, too when the time came, when love demanded something unbearable.
I turned away from her, my hands trembling as I gripped the edge of the long-abandoned table beside me. โYou should have told me sooner.โ
Her voice broke, soft and raw. โAnd what would it have changed? You would have tried to save me back then, and the chains would have killed you. You werenโt ready.โ
โAnd now?โ I whispered.
She hesitated. โNowโฆ you are Luna. You carry strength no Alpha ever could. You carry two bonds the fire of Ronan and the wild heart of Jax. That makes you something even the Goddess herself cannot easily name.โ
Her words should have filled me with pride, but all I felt was fear. My wolf stirred, restless, pacing inside me.
Youโve already bled for two packs, she murmured. How much more can you give?
I swallowed hard. โWhat happens if I donโt do it?โ
My motherโs gaze dropped to her lap, her shoulders shaking. โThen Crescent Hill will fall completely. And when it doesโฆ the bloodline curse will spread. The rot will reach beyond our borders. You, your pack your children theyโll feel it too.โ
A chill raced down my spine. โYouโre saying this curseโโ
โโis tied to us both,โ she finished. โBound through my silence, anchored by your birth. I thought exiling you would sever it. Instead, it only delayed it. The Goddess was merciful once. I doubt sheโll be again.โ
My knees weakened, and I gripped the table harder.
I could see their faces in my mind my childrenโs laughter, their small hands clutching mine that morning, Ronanโs calm strength, Jaxโs wild defiance. Every reason I had to live. Every reason I couldnโt let this curse touch them.
I turned to her again, anger flickering even through the tears. โSo it always comes down to sacrifice, doesnโt it? Either I give everything, or someone else burns.โ
Her voice wavered, but she didnโt deny it. โItโs the way of our bloodline. We were never made for peace, Lyra. Only for choices that hurt.โ
For a long moment, I just stared at her.
The woman who had brought me into this world.
The woman who had let me walk out of it alone.
And now, the woman who asked me to step into the fire willingly.
Finally, I exhaled, slow and trembling.
โI donโt know if I can forgive you,โ I said quietly. โBut I do know this โ I canโt watch another pack crumble because of what you couldnโt say.โ
Her eyes widened. โLyra, noโโ
โIโll do it.โ
The words left me like an oath, solid and unshakable. My wolf howled inside, furious and proud all at once.
I stepped closer, stopping before her. โTell me how. Tell me what I need to do to end this once and for all.โ
My mother looked at me, her tears streaking down her pale cheeks, but behind them behind the grief and the shame there was something else.
Hope.
โThen, child,โ she whispered, โyou will need the moonโs full light, the blood of your bondโฆ and the courage to face the Goddess herself.โ
The torches flickered violently, as if the air itself trembled at her words.
And I knew whatever came next, this choice had set it in motion.
There was no turning back now.
The hall doors closed behind me with a heavy, echoing slam.
For a moment, I stood frozen in the corridor, my breath shaking. The torchlight flickered down the walls, painting long shadows that reached like claws across the stone.
My wolf pressed close, silent and watchful. You did what you had to, she whispered. But the cost isnโt done counting yet.
I walked forward, each step heavier than the last until I reached the outer doors. Kaelen and Mira were waiting exactly where Iโd left them tense, alert, their expressions snapping from guarded to concerned the moment they saw me.
โLuna?โ Kaelenโs voice was low, his golden eyes scanning me for wounds. โWhat happened?โ
Mira stepped closer, her tone softer but edged with steel. โYou look like youโve seen a ghost.โ
I let out a bitter laugh that cracked halfway through. โNot a ghost,โ I said quietly. โSomething worse.โ
They exchanged a quick glance. Mira reached out, steadying my arm. โTalk to us.โ
I took a deep breath, trying to steady the whirlwind inside me, but the words still trembled. โMy mother is alive. Sheโs been bound chained to Crescent Hill through an oath she made before I was born. The curse thatโs killing this packโฆ itโs tied to her. To me.โ
Kaelen stiffened. โBound? What do you mean bound?โ
โItโs not a metaphor.โ I met his gaze. โItโs a blood-oath woven through her soul. To break it, I have to take it from her risk my own life to carry the chains sheโs borne all these years.โ
Miraโs eyes widened, disbelief flickering into fury. โAbsolutely not. You canโt. There has to be another way.โ
I shook my head. โThere isnโt. If I donโt, this place dies. And the curse will spread. My pack wonโt be safe. My children wonโt be safe.โ
Kaelen growled low, his voice sharp. โThen let Crescent Hill fall. They deserve it.โ
โMaybe they do,โ I whispered. โBut my family doesnโt.โ
The silence that followed was raw, scraping. The weight of my choice hung between us like smoke.
Miraโs expression broke first anger melting into worry. โYou have to tell Ronan and Jax. Theyโll lose their minds if you do this without them.โ
โI know.โ My voice was soft, almost a whisper. โBut I canโt risk them storming Crescent Hill before the ritualโs ready. I need one of you to go back. Tell them everything.โ
Miraโs brows drew together, her throat tightening. โYouโre not seriousโโ
โI am.โ I forced myself to meet her gaze. โYouโre faster than Kaelen. You know how to find them through the forest trails. Tell them Iโm safe, but that I have to stay until this is done.โ
Kaelenโs hands curled into fists. โAnd what about me?โ
โYou stay,โ I said firmly. โIf something goes wrong, Iโll need someone at my back. Someone I trust.โ
He looked like he wanted to argue, but one look at me stopped him. His shoulders dropped, resignation settling into his stance. โUnderstood, Luna.โ
Mira still didnโt move. โIf they find out I left you hereโโ
โTheyโll come,โ I interrupted. โAnd maybe thatโs exactly what the Goddess wants. But right now, I need you to go. Please.โ
The word please cracked the steel in my voice, and that was what finally broke Miraโs resistance.
She nodded once, her jaw set. โIโll move fast. Youโll see them soon.โ
Before she turned, she clasped my forearm tight, grounding. โDonโt you dare die before I get back.โ
A small, tired smile tugged at my lips. โIโll try not to.โ
And then she shifted, fur rippling into sleek grey as she darted into the trees, vanishing into the forestโs silver mist.
Kaelen stood beside me in silence, his stance protective, the unspoken vow between us stronger than any words.
I looked back toward the hall toward the shadows that held my mother, the curse, and the fate Iโd just chosen.
My chest ached. My wolf pressed against me again. You canโt run from whatโs coming.
โI know,โ I whispered to the night. โBut maybe this time, Iโll face it on my own terms.โ
The wind stirred through the broken walls, carrying Miraโs scent until it faded. And in the quiet that followed, the moonโs pale light slipped through the clouds cold, silver, and waiting.
The countdown to the ritual had begun.
16 The Answer Beneath the Moon
By nightfall, Crescent Hill was awake.
Torches flared across the grounds, their light flickering against old stone walls. The scent of burning pine clung to the air, mingled with something sharper fear. The pack had gathered, every wolf in Crescent Hill drawn to the call.
The whispers were louder than ever now, restless currents rippling through the crowd. I felt them the moment I stepped into the clearing dozens of eyes, hundreds of memories, all fixed on me.
The outcast.
The Luna.
The one whoโd come back to end or save them.
Kaelen stayed close, his golden eyes sweeping the edges of the crowd. His tension bled into me through the bond of loyalty steady, protective, but wary.
Marek stood at the center of the gathering circle, tall and severe, his grey hair catching the torchlight. The weight of command still hung on him like a second skin, but there was something hollow beneath it now. A shadow of the Alpha he once was.
When his gaze found mine, the murmurs fell away.
โCrescent Hill stands on the edge,โ he said, his voice carrying across the crowd. โThe rot that eats our roots cannot be fought with claws or teeth. It must be undone by the one tied to it by blood and by fate.โ
His words sent another wave of whispers rolling through the pack. Some wolves looked at me with desperate hope. Others glared, eyes burning with the same hatred theyโd once hurled at me years ago.
I drew in a breath, letting the night air fill my lungs. The moon was rising above the trees, full and blindingly bright. My wolf stirred, restless beneath my skin aware, alert, waiting.
Marek turned toward me fully now, his voice low but sharp. โLyra. The pack waits for your answer. Will you take the burden your mother has carried? Will you stand as Crescent Hillโs last chance for redemption?โ
Every head turned toward me. The firelight shimmered in their eyes like a thousand tiny suns.
I took a slow step forward. The earth was cool beneath my feet, the bond with Ronan and Jax humming faintly in my chest distant but alive. I could almost feel their emotions bleeding through the bond from miles away: worry, anger, love.
I lifted my chin.
โI didnโt come here to save Crescent Hill,โ I said quietly, my voice cutting through the night air. โI came here to face what was buried the truth, the pain, and the bloodline that nearly destroyed me. But if the Goddess chose me for this, if ending your curse means saving my childrenโs future, then I will do it.โ
A ripple moved through the pack gasps, soft howls, murmured disbelief.
Marekโs expression tightened. โYou understand what that means?โ
โI do.โ
He took a step closer. โIf you take on your motherโs oath, the chains may not break cleanly. You may not come back from it whole if at all.โ
My heart pounded, but I didnโt look away. โIโve broken worse chains before.โ
A stunned silence followed. Even Marek seemed taken aback for a heartbeat.
Then I raised my voice, stronger now, letting it carry. โYou all turned your backs when I was cast out. You watched me fall and never looked back. But I rose. I found strength beyond your borders. I built a life you couldnโt destroy. And now, I stand here not for your forgiveness, but for justice.โ
A hush rippled through the crowd. The firelight danced off my skin, and for a moment, even the wind stilled.
โIโll bear your curse,โ I finished, my voice steady. โBut know this โ when this is done, Crescent Hill will answer to me, not the ghosts that broke it.โ
For a moment, no one breathed.
Then Marek inclined his head not as Alpha to omega, not as judge to condemned, but as one leader to another. โThen at moonrise, we begin.โ
The crowd broke into a low chorus of sound whispers, growls, disbelief, prayers. Some wolves fell to their knees. Others turned away.
Kaelen stepped closer, his voice barely audible. โYou just changed everything.โ
I stared up at the moon white, vast, watching. My wolf hummed beneath my skin, power simmering like molten silver.
โNo,โ I whispered. โI just set it right.โ
And as the fires burned higher and the pack scattered to prepare for the ritual, I stood at the heart of Crescent Hill the place that had once broken me knowing that before this night ended, it might break me again.
The night grew heavier as the fires around Crescent Hill burned brighter.
I could hear the pack moving low voices, shifting feet, the clatter of ritual stones being carried to the hilltop where it would happen. The air was thick with fear and something else reverence, maybe. Or dread.
Kaelen and I had been given a small chamber to wait until the moon reached its height. It was cold, windowless, the only light coming from a single torch in the corner.
He leaned against the wall, arms crossed, silent for once. His gaze flicked toward me as I sat on the edge of the bed, wrapping the leather bracers tighter around my wrists not armor, not really. Just something to hold on to.
โYou donโt have to do this alone,โ he said finally, his voice rough but quiet.
I gave a small, tired smile. โIโve never really done anything else.โ
He frowned. โYou shouldnโt talk like that. Youโve got people now. A pack that would tear the world apart for you.โ
My throat tightened. โI know.โ
He hesitated, then asked softly, โThen why not let them help?โ
I paused, staring down at my hands. The answer came slowly. โBecause if something happens tonightโฆ if this curse takes me down with itโฆ Iโd rather they remember me strong.โ
Kaelenโs jaw flexed. He didnโt argue, but the silence between us said enough.
Outside, the drumbeat began low and steady, echoing across the stone walls. The call of ritual. The sound sent a shiver down my spine.
My wolf stirred, pressing closer to my heartbeat. Theyโre calling you to the moon, Lyra. To what you were always meant to be.
The door creaked open then, and I looked up sharply.
My mother stood in the doorway, her frail form half-lit by torchlight. She looked smaller now, wrapped in dark robes, her silver hair glinting like frost.
โLyra,โ she said softly.
Kaelen bowed his head, stepping aside, his respect quiet and solemn.
She moved closer, her eyes shimmering with both pride and pain. โThe circle is ready. The pack gathers.โ
I rose, my legs steady even though my heart wasnโt. โThen itโs time.โ
She reached out, her hand trembling as it touched my cheek. โIf I could take this from you, I would.โ
โI know,โ I whispered. โBut itโs mine now.โ
Her lips pressed into a sad smile. โYou sound just like your father.โ
The words caught me off guard. My father. A name never spoken in Crescent Hill. I opened my mouth to ask but she shook her head, eyes glistening. โAnother time, child. Tonight belongs to endings.โ
And before I could speak again, she turned and walked into the darkness beyond the door.
Kaelen glanced at me, his eyes steady. โLuna?โ
โLetโs finish this,โ I said, the tremor in my voice quickly buried by resolve.
And together, we stepped out into the cold night where the Goddess waited.
The night grew heavier as the fires around Crescent Hill burned brighter.
I could hear the pack moving low voices, shifting feet, the clatter of ritual stones being carried to the hilltop where it would happen. The air was thick with fear and something else reverence, maybe. Or dread.
Kaelen and I had been given a small chamber to wait until the moon reached its height. It was cold, windowless, the only light coming from a single torch in the corner.
He leaned against the wall, arms crossed, silent for once. His gaze flicked toward me as I sat on the edge of the bed, wrapping the leather bracers tighter around my wrists not armor, not really. Just something to hold on to.
โYou donโt have to do this alone,โ he said finally, his voice rough but quiet.
I gave a small, tired smile. โIโve never really done anything else.โ
He frowned. โYou shouldnโt talk like that. Youโve got people now. A pack that would tear the world apart for you.โ
My throat tightened. โI know.โ
He hesitated, then asked softly, โThen why not let them help?โ
I paused, staring down at my hands. The answer came slowly. โBecause if something happens tonightโฆ if this curse takes me down with itโฆ Iโd rather they remember me strong.โ
Kaelenโs jaw flexed. He didnโt argue, but the silence between us said enough.
Outside, the drumbeat began low and steady, echoing across the stone walls. The call of ritual. The sound sent a shiver down my spine.
My wolf stirred, pressing closer to my heartbeat. Theyโre calling you to the moon, Lyra. To what you were always meant to be.
The door creaked open then, and I looked up sharply.
My mother stood in the doorway, her frail form half-lit by torchlight. She looked smaller now, wrapped in dark robes, her silver hair glinting like frost.
โLyra,โ she said softly.
Kaelen bowed his head, stepping aside, his respect quiet and solemn.
She moved closer, her eyes shimmering with both pride and pain. โThe circle is ready. The pack gathers.โ
I rose, my legs steady even though my heart wasnโt. โThen itโs time.โ
She reached out, her hand trembling as it touched my cheek. โIf I could take this from you, I would.โ
โI know,โ I whispered. โBut itโs mine now.โ
Her lips pressed into a sad smile. โYou sound just like your father.โ
The words caught me off guard. My father. A name never spoken in Crescent Hill. I opened my mouth to ask but she shook her head, eyes glistening. โAnother time, child. Tonight belongs to endings.โ
And before I could speak again, she turned and walked into the darkness beyond the door.
Kaelen glanced at me, his eyes steady. โLuna?โ
โLetโs finish this,โ I said, the tremor in my voice quickly buried by resolve.
And together, we stepped out into the cold night where the Goddess waited.
The ritual grounds were nothing like I remembered.
When I had last seen Crescent Hillโs sacred circle, Iโd been a child hiding behind a fallen log, too afraid to step onto the stones. Back then, the moonlight had seemed like mercy silver and soft. Tonight, it burned like judgment.
The entire pack had gathered in a wide crescent around the stone altar at the center of the clearing. The air shimmered with heat from the torches lining the perimeter, every flame swaying in rhythm with the deep, pulsing drums.
Marek stood near the altar, his head bowed, hands clasped behind his back. To his right, my mother waited pale, trembling, her eyes locked on mine.
Kaelen took his place just behind me, the silent shadow to my rising storm. His hand rested lightly on the hilt of his dagger not as a threat, but as a promise.
When I stepped into the circle, the crowd went silent.
Every gaze turned toward me. The omega whoโd become a Luna. The exile who had come back not as a beggar, but as reckoning.
The moon hung directly above us now, white and vast. It painted my skin in silver light, and I could feel it the pull, the weight, the ancient bond between flesh and fate.
Marekโs voice carried over the clearing, deep and solemn. โWe gather beneath the Goddess to witness the breaking of a chain bound in blood and silence. May the moon see truth in her heart.โ
He turned toward me. โLyra of Crescent Hill. Do you come freely to bear this burden?โ
My heart pounded so hard I thought it might break through my chest. My wolf pressed forward, fierce and ready.
โI do,โ I said.
The torches flared, their flames snapping higher. The drums stopped. Even the air seemed to hold its breath.
My mother stepped forward, cutting her palm with a blade of silver. โThen let blood call to blood,โ she whispered. Her crimson drops hit the altar stone, hissing on contact.
The smell of it sharp, metallic, alive made my head swim.
โYour turn,โ Marek said.
Kaelen handed me his dagger without a word. The blade was cold against my palm.
I raised it, looked at the moon, and pressed it to my skin. Pain bloomed bright and quick and my blood joined hers on the stone.
The moment it touched, the world changed.
The torches flared blue. The ground shuddered. A current of raw energy tore through me like lightning, hurling my senses wide open. I could feel everything the heartbeat of the forest, the pulse of every wolf watching, the weight of the Goddessโs gaze pressing against my soul.
My mother gasped, collapsing to her knees. โSheโs taking it the chains are unravelingโโ
Then I screamed.
Not from pain from the surge. Power, wild and ancient, flooded through my veins, heavy and bright and wrong all at once. My wolf howled, her voice merging with mine. The mark of Luna flared along my skin, burning white-hot.
Through the haze, I heard Marek shouting something orders, prayers, I couldnโt tell.
Then, chaos.
A howl ripped through the night not mine, not Kaelenโs distant but thunderous. The sound of paws pounding the earth, branches cracking.
Kaelenโs head snapped toward the tree line. โSomeoneโs coming.โ
Before anyone could move, a grey wolf burst through the shadows, collapsing mid-run, fur giving way to flesh. Mira.
She shifted fully, breathless, covered in dirt and leaves. โTheyโre coming!โ she shouted hoarsely. โRonan and Jax โ theyโre almost here!โ
The crowd broke into murmurs, fear flashing across every face.
Marekโs expression hardened. โIf they interrupt the ritualโโ
โTheyโll destroy it,โ my mother gasped, clutching her chest. โThe energy will turn on herโโ
Kaelen looked at me, torn. โLuna, what do we do?โ
The moonlight pulsed around me, alive and wild. My wolf pushed forward, her voice low and steady inside my mind.
If they cross this circle, youโll burn. But if they donโtโฆ theyโll think they lost you.
I lifted my chin, heart thundering, power sparking at my fingertips.
โThen we finish it,โ I said. โBefore they reach me.โ
The pack recoiled, but the moon didnโt wait. It rose higher, hungrier, and its light bathed the stones in blinding silver.
Somewhere in the distance, I heard them two roars splitting the forest, echoing through my bond like thunder.
Ronan.
Jax.
My mates were coming.
And if I didnโt finish this now the moon would take me before they ever reached me.
17 The Bond That Burns
Ronan Pov
The forest was a blur. Branches whipped past, air tearing through my lungs, dirt flying under my paws. Every stride hit the ground like thunder. The bond was roaring in my chest, screaming her name Lyra, Lyra, Lyraโ
Beside me, Jax ran like a beast unchained. His black fur gleamed with sweat, his snarl sharp enough to split the night. Even without words, I could feel what pulsed through him: rage, fear, desperation. The three of us were bound too tightly for anything to hide.
But the bond felt wrong. Twisted.
Every few heartbeats, pain jolted through it flashes of Lyraโs voice, of something pulling at her, draining her. The mark on my neck burned hotter than fire.
Ronanโ her voice cracked across the link, faint and shaking. Donโt comeโ
I nearly stumbled mid-stride. Donโt come? My wolf snarled inside me, furious.
Weโre already here, I growled back through the bond, my voice all instinct, all command. You donโt face this alone.
Jaxโs mind brushed against mine, sharp as broken glass. Sheโs hurt.
Worse than hurt, I answered. Somethingโs wrong. I can feel the moon twisting through her bond.
He didnโt reply โ just ran faster. I could feel his fury like a living flame beside me. Every muscle in his body radiated one thought: If they touched her, if they made her scream, heโd tear Crescent Hill apart stone by stone.
We broke through a thicket, the trees thinning into mist. The smell hit us first pine, smoke, and blood. Lyraโs blood.
The ground itself seemed to shake with the rhythm of drums, a sound that made my hackles rise. Not a celebration. A ritual.
Sheโs in the circle, Jax snarled, voice trembling with barely leashed rage. Theyโve got her in a circle, Ronan.
I didnโt need to see it to know he was right. The pull of the bond drew us like a magnet, dragging us up the slope toward the hilltop clearing. The closer we came, the louder her heartbeat became in my head โ faint, strained, but still there.
โShift!โ I barked, forcing my body to change mid-run. My paws gave way to hands, claws to fists. I didnโt stop moving.
The shift tore at my muscles, but I didnโt care. I needed to reach her as me.
Jax landed beside me seconds later, half-shifted, his eyes glowing gold and his teeth still sharp from the change. โTheyโre dead if sheโs bleeding.โ
โTheyโre dead if sheโs scared.โ
The trees broke. We saw them.
A sea of wolves stood in a wide circle, torches blazing. Crescent Hill โ every last one of them. The air shimmered with moonlight so bright it turned the clearing silver.
And at the center of it โ Lyra.
She stood before the stone altar, her head thrown back, hair wild, the mark of her Luna power burning white across her skin. She looked both divine and broken, her body trembling as raw energy pulsed through her veins.
Beside her, an older woman knelt her mother, I realized hands pressed to the stone, lips moving in a prayer that sounded more like a plea. Marek stood just behind, his expression stone-hard, watching like a judge instead of a man.
Something in me snapped.
I didnโt think. I roared.
โLYRA!โ
The entire pack turned toward us as we broke through the line of trees. The circle of wolves bristled, some shifting to stand between us and her, others backing away as our aura hit them two Alphas, half-shifted and out for blood.
Jaxโs snarl was pure violence. โMove!โ
No one did.
So he did it for them.
He lunged, his claws slashing through the first two wolves that tried to block his path. They hit the ground hard, yelping, but he didnโt even glance back. I was right behind him, the bond between us and Lyra like a beacon cutting through the chaos.
Marek shouted something, but I couldnโt hear him over the pounding in my head. Every step closer made the air heavier, charged with energy it stung against my skin, sharp and electric.
And then I saw it the faint shimmer around her body, a circle of light carved into the earth. A barrier.
The realization hit like ice. The ritual was already active. If we crossed that barrier, if we disrupted the flowโ
Jax didnโt care. He tried anyway.
He hit the invisible wall like lightning striking stone. The energy flared, throwing him back several feet. He landed hard, the smell of burnt skin in the air.
โJax!โ I shouted, grabbing his arm and pulling him upright.
He snarled, his eyes blazing. โSheโs dying in there!โ
โI know!โ I snapped, trying to think, to breathe. My wolf was clawing at my chest, desperate to reach her. The mark burned hotter, the pain nearly unbearable. โBut if we break itโโ
A scream cut through the air.
Lyra.
Every muscle in my body locked. The sound wasnโt fear it was agony. The kind that ripped through every thread of the bond.
โRonan!โ she cried, voice breaking. โDonโtโ!โ
Her words drowned under the rush of power bursting from the altar. The ground split with a crack, blinding white light spilling from the center.
I roared, half in fury, half in helplessness. The energy licked at the edge of the circle, sparking off the stones. Crescent Hillโs wolves stumbled back, some collapsing to their knees under the pressure.
And still Marek stood there, unmoving, watching her suffer.
That was it.
The Alpha in me took over.
I let the shift tear through me again fur, bone, power and I hit the barrier head-on. Pain exploded through me, but this time, I didnโt stop. I pushed harder, claws digging into the dirt, muscles trembling. The barrier screamed against me, burning through fur and flesh alike.
Then something gave way.
A fracture. A break. A hole just big enough for the bond to reach through.
Through it, I felt her her heartbeat, weak but alive. Her wolf howling in pain and defiance. Her thoughts barely a whisper: I have to finish it.
Jax dragged himself up beside me, blood streaking his shoulder. โWeโre not letting her die for them.โ
โI know,โ I growled. โBut sheโs not dying yet. Sheโs fighting.โ
We both turned toward the circle again. Lyraโs body arched, the light wrapping around her like chains of fire. Her mother sobbed from the ground, chanting words I didnโt understand.
โRonanโโ Jaxโs voice broke. โIf she doesnโt make itโโ
โShe will.โ
โHow do you know?โ
โBecause she promised sheโd always come back to us.โ
The air thickened again. The moonโs glow pulsed brighter.
And then, through the chaos, her voice came faint but clear, threaded through the bond like a breath against my soul.
Hold on to me.
The bond flared, bright and blinding. I reached for it with everything I had, pouring strength through it, feeding her power, love, fury โ anything that might reach her.
And for the first time since the forest began to burn, I felt her pull back.
The bond tightened.
And the circle the barrier began to crack.
Not breaking yet. But bending.
For the first time tonight, hope broke through the rage.
โSheโs fighting back,โ I said hoarsely.
Jaxโs grin was wild, blood-streaked. โThatโs our Luna.โ
We braced ourselves, claws in the dirt, as the ritual roared louder than thunder โbecause if Lyra was fighting, then so were we.
And by the time this moon set, Crescent Hill would learn what it meant to stand against the bond we shared.
18 The Price of Blood and Moonlight
Lyra Pov
The world was nothing but light.
Silver. Burning. Endless.
It poured through me like molten glass, searing through every bone, every thought. My body arched, my scream swallowed by the roar of power that cracked through the air.
The circle was no longer just stone and earth. It had become alive โ breathing, pulsing, trembling with ancient force. Threads of light wound around me like chains, digging into my skin, binding me to the altar as the ritual pulled deeper.
I could feel my motherโs energy flickering beside me โ her spirit fraying like torn fabric, the curse trying to return to her. But the Goddess wouldnโt allow it. The ritualโs design had only one destination.
Me.
This was the ritualโs true nature.
It wasnโt meant to destroy the curse.
It was meant to absorb it.
To take centuries of silence, pain, and corruption โ and fuse them into one vessel strong enough to contain it.
The oath that had once enslaved my mother to Crescent Hillโs Alpha bloodline would now live inside me.
Not to cage me. But to let me rewrite it.
I had to become what they feared โ the balance between the Lunaโs mercy and the Alphaโs wrath.
The Goddessโs voice whispered faintly through the storm:
You bear what was broken. You mend what was severed. But every healing must bleed.
I gasped, falling to my knees. Blood dripped from my palm where Iโd cut it, joining my motherโs on the altar. The stones drank it greedily, glowing brighter with every drop.
My wolf howled inside me โ not in pain, but in fury. This isnโt binding you, Lyra. Itโs crowning you. Take it.
I tried to rise. The chains of light tightened. The pressure made my vision blur.
And then I felt it โ two sharp pulses at the edge of my soul.
Ronan. Jax.
Their presence hit me like thunder breaking through the storm.
Through the chaos, I saw them โ outside the circle, bodies bent and trembling against the barrier. Their roars filled the clearing, raw and desperate. Every push from them cracked the barrier further, sending sparks flying through the air.
No, I thought weakly. If they break it, theyโll die.
The power was too unstable now. If they forced their way in, it would rip them apart before they reached me.
But thenโฆ the bond.
It pulsed again.
And suddenly I could feel them inside me โ their strength, their fury, their love. It poured through the bond like wildfire, burning through every shadow.
Jaxโs wild heart, fierce and untamed.
Ronanโs steady flame, unwavering and strong.
They werenโt breaking through the circle. They were breaking through me.
The ritualโs chains shuddered. The light faltered, then shifted โ the blinding white giving way to deep silver. It no longer felt like pain. It felt like balance.
The curse inside me screamed as I took hold of it โ not resisting anymore, but owning it. I saw flashes of Crescent Hillโs past: wolves clawing at each other under a blood moon, oaths written in blood, my mother kneeling before an altar just like this one.
Her voice echoed beside me now, small but steady. โTake it, my child. Make it yours.โ
My hands lifted, trembling, as the light wrapped around my wrists like bracelets of fire.
โIโm not your prisoner,โ I whispered into the air. โIโm your Luna.โ
The chains shattered.
The explosion of power threw everyone back โ even Marek, even my mother. The sky itself seemed to split open.
I fell forward, my palms slamming into the ground, breath ripped from my lungs. For a heartbeat, I saw nothing. Then slowly, the light dimmed, the world reshaping around me.
The clearing was in ruins. The torches had gone out. Wolves lay scattered, stunned, staring at me with wide eyes.
The altar was cracked down the middle. My mother knelt nearby, tears streaming down her face.
And Iโฆ I was still alive.
The mark on my skin โ the one that had always burned with Luna fire โ now glowed faintly with a new pattern: crescent lines etched in blood-red silver.
The curse was gone from the land. But it wasnโt gone from me.
I could feel it โ humming beneath my heartbeat, coiled but calm. Mine to control. Mine to bear.
My strength faltered, the exhaustion hitting like a tidal wave. The last thing I saw before darkness took me was the moon โ full and watching โ and two dark shapes breaking through the smoke.
Ronan and Jax.
Their roars tore through the clearing. Their scent wrapped around me like home.
And then, finally, everything went still.
At first, I thought I was dead.
There was no sound. No pain. Only white.
An endless sea of it soft, glowing, alive.
When I breathed, it felt like the air itself shimmered. My body didnโt ache anymore. The burning in my veins was gone. But my heartโฆ it was heavy. I could still feel the faint pull of my bond to Ronan and Jax somewhere far away, like a heartbeat through water.
Then a voice came not from the air, but from everywhere at once.
โYou always rush into fire, my child.โ
I turned.
And there she was.
The Moon Goddess.
She looked nothing like Iโd imagined her from the stories.
Not a cold deity of marble perfection, but a woman of shifting light โ her skin pale as dawn, her hair a river of silver and shadow, her eyes deep enough to hold the stars.
Her presence made my knees weaken, but not from fear. It wasโฆ familiarity.
Like I had known her all my life, even when I didnโt believe she was real.
โWhere am I?โ My voice sounded small in the vast whiteness. โAm Iโ?โ
โAlive,โ she said gently, walking closer, her bare feet leaving trails of light with every step. โFor now. Though you walked closer to the edge than most ever do.โ
I swallowed hard. โWhat was that ritual? What did I do?โ
She smiled faintly sad and proud all at once. โYou completed what began long before you were born. The curse of Crescent Hill was never simply a punishment. It was an oath twisted, corrupted, and passed down through your bloodline.โ
I frowned, confusion still thick. โBut why me? Why was my mother bound by it?โ
The Goddessโs expression softened. โCenturies ago, when Crescent Hill was young, its first Luna sought power to protect her wolves. She came to me, begging for strength beyond mortal measure. I granted it but warned her that such strength must always be balanced. For every oath of protection, a price of silence was owed.โ
โThe Luna accepted,โ the Goddess continued, her voice echoing faintly in the light. โHer line became my chosen guardians of balance. But as generations passed, the Alphas of Crescent Hill grew greedy. They forced their Lunas to swear the oath again and again not to protect the pack, but to bind it in obedience. The sacred vow became a chain. Your mother was the last to bear it.โ
I stared at her, my chest tight. โSo thatโs why she couldnโt stop my exile. She wasnโt weak she was trapped.โ
โBound in silence,โ the Goddess murmured. โEvery word she might have spoken against them would have turned the curse upon her and upon you.โ
Tears burned my eyes. โAnd the ritualโฆ?โ
โWas the only way to end it.โ Her gaze pierced me now luminous and sharp as moonlight on a blade. โBut such chains cannot be destroyed, only transferred. They must be carried by one who can rewrite them.โ
โMe,โ I whispered.
She nodded once. โYou were not chosen because you were the strongest, Lyra. You were chosen because you endure. You feel every wound, every slight, every injustice and instead of letting them harden you, you let them forge you. That is what makes a true Luna.โ
I pressed a trembling hand to my chest. โSo what am I now? What did I become?โ
Her smile deepened, the light brightening behind her. โThe first Luna to carry both Alpha blood and the sacred vow. You hold the curse not as a prisoner, but as its master. You can bend it, reshape it even end it, if you learn how.โ
โEnd it?โ
โWhen you decide no pack shall ever again suffer under silence.โ
The meaning hit me slowly. She wasnโt just talking about Crescent Hill.
She was talking about all packs all wolves still ruled by fear, rank, and dominance.
โI donโt want to be a goddess,โ I said quietly. โI just want peace.โ
Her laughter was soft, warm. โPeace isnโt born from gods, my child. Itโs born from wolves who refuse to kneel.โ
The white around us began to fade then, turning to silver mist. I felt the pull of my body again the faint ache, the rhythm of my heart.
The Goddess reached out, brushing her thumb over my cheek. โTheyโre waiting for you, you know. Your mates. Theyโve burned half the forest trying to reach you.โ
I laughed weakly, a tear slipping free. โThat sounds like them.โ
โThen wake, Luna of Two Bonds,โ she whispered. โWake and remind the world that chains break for you, not around you.โ
The light flared once more, and the world fell away.
When I opened my eyes, it was dark again. The smell of smoke and pine filled the air. My head throbbed, my body heavy.
Somewhere close, I heard voices urgent, angry, familiar.
Ronan. Jax.
The world came back to me slowly, as though I were surfacing from the bottom of a lake.
At first there was only warmth two strong hands cupping my face, the scent of pine, smoke, and something wild that could only ever belong to them.
โLyraโฆ open your eyes, please.โ
Ronanโs voice. Rough, broken, commanding and begging all at once.
My lashes fluttered, light stabbing through the haze. The ruined clearing blurred into focus: the cracked altar, the circle of scorched earth, and both of my mates kneeling in the ash beside me.
Jax was the first to move. He caught my hand and pressed it to his lips, eyes squeezed shut as though trying to convince himself I was real. His palm trembled against mine.
โDonโt you everโโ his voice cracked, โโever do that again.โ
I tried to smile but my throat ached. โYouโd have done the same.โ
โYeah,โ he rasped, โbut it wouldโve been me burning, not you.โ
Ronan exhaled through his teeth, the sound half a growl. He was kneeling at my other side, his face streaked with soot, blood drying along his jaw. His usually steady hands were shaking as they brushed the hair from my face.
โDo you have any idea what it felt like?โ he whispered. โFeeling you fade through the bond? Hearing you scream and not being able to reach you?โ
The pain in his voice cut deeper than any ritual wound.
โI had to,โ I murmured. โIf I did nโt take it, the curse wouldโve spreadโโ
โThen let it spread to me,โ he snapped. โNot you.โ
His control broke; he leaned down, forehead pressing to mine. For a heartbeat we just breathed each other in, our bond humming faintly, sluggish but alive. I could feel both of them through it now two heartbeats wrapped around mine, fierce, protective, terrified.
Jax wiped at his face with the back of his hand and muttered, โYou scared the hell out of us, Luna.โ
โI scared myself,โ I admitted, my voice barely a whisper.
Behind them, the Crescent Hill wolves were silent. Some watched from the shadows, others bowed their heads in something like awe or guilt. Marek stood farther back, unreadable, while my mother wept quietly near the altar. But all I could see were the two men in front of me.
Ronan cupped my cheek again. โWhat did you do, Lyra?โ
โThe Goddess came,โ I said softly. โShe told me the truth. The curse wasnโt just a punishment it was an oath twisted by greed. Iโฆ I took it into myself so it can never bind another.โ
Jax stared at me, disbelief and pride colliding in his eyes. โSo youโre telling me you just became the walking seal of Crescent Hillโs damnation?โ
โSomething like that.โ I tried to laugh, but it turned into a cough. โBut itโs mine now. It listens to me, not them.โ
Ronanโs thumb traced the faint new mark glowing along my collarboneโthe silver crescent edged in red. โIt changed you,โ he said quietly.
โI know.โ I met his gaze. โBut Iโm still me. I promise.โ
He closed his eyes, breathing that promise in like oxygen. Then, wordlessly, he pulled me into his arms. The movement hurt, but I didnโt care. His heartbeat thundered against my ear, steady and real.
Jax wrapped around us both, his arm slipping behind my shoulders, his chin resting on top of my head. For a long time, we stayed like thatโthree wolves in a heap of ash and moonlight, clinging to what the ritual hadnโt managed to take.
When Ronan finally spoke, his voice was a low growl. โWeโre getting you home.โ
โI can walk,โ I started, but Jax gave a snort. โSure you can, warrior queen. After dying for a pack that tossed you out?โ He slid an arm beneath my knees before I could protest and lifted me easily. โYouโre riding back.โ
โJaxโโ
โNo arguments,โ Ronan said, already moving to shield us from the gawking crowd. โThe moment we cross that border, Crescent Hill becomes history.โ
As they started down the slope, I looked back once. My mother stood at the edge of the ruined circle, her face streaked with tears but peaceful for the first time in years. She mouthed something I barely caught.
Thank you.
The moonlight caught her hair, turning it to silver fire, and I realized the chains that had bound her were truly gone.
The forest swallowed the clearing behind us. The night smelled of ash and pine and new beginnings.
Jax carried me in silence until we reached the ridge where our land began. Only then did he whisper, voice hoarse, โNext time you plan to rewrite history, give us a warning first.โ
โNext time,โ Ronan added darkly, โwe do it together.โ
I smiled, tired but certain. โThere wonโt be a next time.โ
They didnโt believe me. I could feel it in the bond their fear, their stubborn lovebut for now they let it rest.
Under the paling moon, we crossed the border, heading toward home.
And as exhaustion pulled me back into sleep, I heard their voices one last time one deep and steady, one rough with laughter, both filled with relief.
โWelcome back, Luna.โ
19 Morning After the Moon
When I woke, it was to the soft murmur of voices and sunlight spilling through the curtains. The light was gentle, gold and warm, painting the walls of our packhouse in calm colors. For a long moment, I lay still and simply breathed air that smelled like home. Pine. Soap. Jaxโs leather jacket slung somewhere too close to the bed.
The ache was still there, deep in my bones, but it was a quiet ache no longer the sharp burn of ritual fire. The curseโs hum was muted, resting beneath my heartbeat like a sleeping animal. My body felt human again, but I knew, with some small, frightening certainty, that something inside me had changed forever.
The door creaked.
Jaxโs head poked in first, hair a mess, shirt half-buttoned, eyes wild with the tiredness of a night spent pacing. โSheโs awake,โ he said softly. Then louder, over his shoulder: โRONANโsheโs up!โ
I managed a weak laugh, my voice still rough. โYou sound like you havenโt slept.โ
He crossed the room in three strides and crouched beside the bed, his grin both relieved and scolding. โI havenโt. Not after what you pulled.โ
โI told you,โ I murmured, โit was necessary.โ
โAnd I told you,โ he shot back, โnext time, we vote before you go absorbing ancient blood curses.โ
Before I could reply, Ronan appeared behind him silent, composed, but his eyes told a different story. They were darker than usual, rimmed with exhaustion and fierce love. He moved to the other side of the bed and sat down carefully, his fingers brushing my cheek.
โHow do you feel?โ he asked quietly.
โLike I survived something I wasnโt supposed to,โ I said honestly. โButโฆ lighter. Like the air doesnโt fight to stay in my lungs anymore.โ
He smiled faintly, though his jaw was still tight. โYou scared everyone half to death. Even Alpha Kane came by to check if you were breathing.โ
Jax leaned back in his chair, arms folded. โNot to mention your little army outside.โ
I blinked. โMy what?โ
Before either of them could answer, the door burst open again three small whirlwinds tumbling through.
โMom!โ Calebโs voice was the first, full of relief and panic all at once. Rowan wasnโt far behind, tripping over his own feet in his rush to reach the bed. Elira followed more cautiously, eyes wide but shining.
I barely had time to open my arms before they were all over meโtiny hands, wild hair, warmth pressing into every inch of me. I laughed, though it came out choked, wrapping them all in one trembling embrace.
โItโs okay,โ I whispered into their hair. โIโm here. Iโm okay.โ
โYou were gone so long,โ Elira sniffled. โBecca said you were fighting ghosts.โ
โNot ghosts, little moon,โ I said softly, brushing her cheek. โJust old shadows that needed light.โ
They clung tighter. Jax grinned faintly and stepped back, his eyes glinting with something softer. โTold you sheโd bounce back.โ
Ronanโs hand rested on my shoulder, grounding me. โThe healers said your pulse nearly stopped twice. You shouldnโt even be standing.โ
โIโm not standing,โ I pointed out, smiling tiredly. โBut I will be soon.โ
He huffed a quiet laugh. โStubborn as ever.โ
A knock sounded at the door then. Beccaโs voice came through, calm but urgent. โAlpha Ronan? Luna Lyra? The council is here. They brought a messenger.โ
Jaxโs brow furrowed. โAlready? What now?โ
Becca stepped in, followed by Jason. Between them stood a young Crescent Hill wolf, dirt still clinging to his fur and a parchment clutched in his hand. He looked terrified to be there.
He bowed low, voice shaking. โAlpha Ronan. Luna Lyra. The Crescent Hill packโฆ has sent word. Their Alpha has stepped down. The council has voted unanimously.โ
Ronan frowned. โFor what?โ
The messenger swallowed. โFor Crescent Hill to come under your rule.โ
The words hung in the air. Even the children went still.
My heart stuttered once, then steadied. โTheyโre asking for protection,โ I murmured.
โNo,โ Ronan said softly, meeting my eyes. โTheyโre asking for you.โ
Jax gave a low whistle. โWell, Luna, looks like your old pack finally learned who their Alpha is.โ
For the first time since the ritual, I laughed a sound that felt like sunlight breaking through clouds.
I looked around the room: my children, safe and smiling again; Jax, leaning lazy and proud against the wall; Ronan, steady and strong beside me.
The Goddessโs words echoed faintly in my mind. Peace isnโt born from gods. Itโs born from wolves who refuse to kneel.
โTell Crescent Hill,โ I said quietly, โthat peace begins now.โ
The messenger nodded and left in a rush. Becca and Jason followed, leaving us in warm silence.
Jax flopped onto the bed beside the kids, earning a squeal from Elira. โYou heard your mom. No more curses, no more rituals, no more ancient nonsense. Weโre officially boring again.โ
Ronan smirked. โBoring isnโt the word Iโd use.โ
I met his gaze, and the bond hummed quietly between us, full of things too deep for words.
For the first time in a long time, the air felt safe. The weight of the curse was gone. The pack was whole.
And as the morning sunlight poured over us, I realized the story that had begun with exile had finally found its peace.
The days that followed blurred into a rhythm of recovery and rebuilding. Crescent Hillโs message had rippled through both packs like a storm across calm water.
Some called it a miracle. Others, a reckoning.
I called it responsibility.
By the third morning, I was strong enough to walk the training fields again. The moment I stepped outside, I felt hundreds of eyes turn toward me not with hostility this time, but awe. The young wolves bowed their heads, the elders pressed a hand to their chests.
They didnโt see the omega theyโd once whispered about. They saw their Luna.
I didnโt know how to feel about that proud, grateful, uneasy. Maybe all of it at once.
Jax and Ronan walked beside me, both fully in Alpha mode.
Ronanโs posture was controlled, deliberate the steady authority everyone trusted.
Jax, on the other hand, was swagger and charm, flashing a grin at every wolf who dared make eye contact.
โYouโd think theyโve never seen a Luna before,โ Jax teased under his breath.
โThey havenโt seen one who survived a goddess, absorbed a curse, and still managed to wake up and make breakfast,โ I murmured back.
Ronanโs lips twitched. โDonโt encourage him.โ
โI donโt have to,โ I said. โHe encourages himself.โ
Jax clutched his chest, mock-offended. โYou wound me, love.โ
But behind the teasing, I could feel their vigilance. Every step I took, every breath I drew, they were watching waiting for any sign that the ritual had left something darker behind.
We reached the central courtyard, where both packs ours and Crescent Hillโs โ had gathered. The once-hostile wolves now stood mingled with ours, uncertain but trying. The banners of both territories fluttered side by side in the breeze.
Marek was there, too stripped of title, shoulders heavy with something that looked almost like humility. He approached slowly, stopping a few feet away.
โLuna Lyra,โ he said, his tone careful. โCrescent Hill thanks you for what youโve done. Weโฆ we did not deserve mercy.โ
I studied him for a long moment. The man who had once ordered my exile now couldnโt meet my gaze.
โYouโre right,โ I said quietly. โYou didnโt.โ
He flinched, but I continued.
โMercy isnโt something you earn, Marek. Itโs something youโre given, once. What you do with it determines whether you deserve another.โ
He bowed his head. โThen Iโll make sure Crescent Hill doesnโt waste it.โ
Ronan nodded slightly, stepping forward. โCrescent Hill will remain under our protection, but its leadership will rebuild itself. With Luna Lyraโs guidance.โ
Jax added, โAnd if any of your wolves think about stepping out of line again, theyโll deal with me.โ
The faintest smile tugged at my lips.
Later, after the formalities and the vows, the air softened. The tension between the two packs began to melt not instantly, but enough. Wolves shared food, children chased one another across the grass, laughter returning where growls used to live.
I slipped away from the crowd, wandering toward the river at the edge of the grounds. The same one where my journey had started.
The water sparkled under the afternoon sun. My reflection stared back at me the silver mark on my neck now faint but constant, the symbol of both blessing and burden.
Youโve come far, my wolf murmured. But the story isnโt done.
โI know,โ I whispered. โPeace doesnโt mean the end. It means beginning again.โ
Footsteps rustled behind me. I turned just as Jax came up the slope, grinning, holding a hand out.
โYour audience awaits, Luna.โ
โDo I have to?โ I teased.
โAfraid theyโll start worshipping you?โ he said, smirking. โToo late.โ
Ronan appeared a moment later, his hand resting lightly against my back. โThey need to see you. Both packs. Not as a myth, but as the heart that ties them.โ
I sighed, then nodded. โThen letโs give them what they need.โ
When I stepped back into the courtyard, the crowd quieted. Dozens of faces turned Crescent Hill and our own, old enemies and new family.
I raised my chin, letting my voice carry.
โThis peace wasnโt built on power. It was built on choice on forgiveness, on courage, on the will to stand when everything tries to make you kneel. I wonโt promise a perfect future. But I will promise that no wolf in either pack will ever be silenced again.โ
The response came slowly one wolf howling low and steady, then another, then another, until the air was full of voices. Howls of unity, of loyalty, of rebirth.
Ronanโs arm slid around my waist. Jax caught my hand and squeezed it, his grin sharp and bright.
For the first time, the sound didnโt frighten me. It felt like home.
20 Under One Roof, Under One Moon
Evening came slower than usual, as if the day itself didnโt want to end. The courtyard was still buzzing with small pockets of conversation wolves from both packs sharing food, talking awkwardly but earnestly, trying to piece together something that resembled unity.
But Ronan knew me too well. He caught the way my shoulders tightened, the way my breath shifted how my tired smile dimmed even while I pretended to be fine.
So he leaned down, brushed his lips to my ear, and murmured, โCome inside. Youโve given enough for one day.โ
Jax didnโt wait for permission; heโd already grabbed my hand and tugged me toward the steps of the packhouse. โIf anyone needs her, they can wait until tomorrow. Or next year.โ
Inside, the noise softened into a comforting hum. The fire crackled. The lamps glowed low. A peace I hadnโt felt since before Crescent Hill first returned settled into my bones.
For the first time in days, the world felt still.
The three of us moved to our room without speaking it wasnโt silence borne from tension, but the kind that settles when everything important has already been said with glances, touches, breaths.
When the door shut behind us, Ronan leaned his back against it and exhaled deeply, like heโd been holding the sky up all day and could finally let it fall. Jax dropped onto the sofa, rubbing his face with both hands before looking up at me.
โYou nearly died,โ he said flatly.
โNo easing into it?โ I raised a brow.
โNope.โ He pointed at me. โYou. Nearly. Died.โ
Ronan added quietly, โAnd we werenโt there.โ
Their emotions werenโt loud they didnโt need to be. They pulsed through the bond, wrapped tight around my ribs. Guilt, anger, relief, love. All tangled in a way I knew too well.
โIt was my choice,โ I said softly. โAnd the Goddess saidโโ
โForget the Goddess.โ
Jax stood, crossing the room with long strides until he was inches from me, eyes stormy but soft at the center. โI donโt care what some celestial deity thinks. If something takes you again curse, goddess, Alpha, fate itself Iโm tearing the world apart to get you back.โ
The words hit like a blow and a balm at once.
Ronan came up behind me then, his warmth grounding me as his hands slid around my waist. โHeโs right,โ he murmured against my shoulder. โWeโre strong, Lyra. But losing youโฆ thatโs the one thing we wouldnโt survive.โ
My breath caught. โIโm here. I came back. Iโll always come back.โ
โYou say that,โ Jax whispered, โbut this scared us in a way nothing else has.โ
I swallowed hard. โI know.โ
Ronan turned me gently to face him. His touch was carefulโso careful it made my heart break.
โToday changed everything,โ he said. โYou carry something ancient now. Something dangerous.โ
โI can control it,โ I said.
โI believe that,โ he replied. โBut belief doesnโt make the fear disappear.โ
His forehead touched mine. Warm. Steady.
โYou donโt have to be strong alone anymore.โ
Jaxโs hand slid into mine. โYou have us. Always.โ
And just like that, something in me cracked open.
The tears came silently not from fear or pain, but from the overwhelming truth of it all. Everything Iโd endured, everything Iโd carried for yearsโฆ it wasnโt mine alone anymore.
They held me through it Ronan behind me, arms firm around my waist; Jax in front of me, thumbs brushing tears from my cheeks and kissing the tracks they left behind.
Time blurred. The emotions didnโt fade; they softened.
Until all that was left was the three of usโquiet, breathing, alive.
Eventually, Jax tugged me gently toward the bed.
โCome here,โ he murmured. โJustโฆ be with us.โ
We fell into a heap the way we always did me in the middle, Ronan curled protectively behind, Jax sprawled warm against my front.
Their breaths synced with mine.
Their hands held me like I might vanish.
Their hearts beat steady against my skin.
In that dim light, wrapped in both of them, I felt something settle in my chest something fierce and peaceful all at once.
A true beginning.
Because after everything exile, war, curses, and gods this was what mattered most.
This was home.
I woke before the sun.
Not because of nightmares, or pain, or the lingering echo of the ritual.
But because of the quiet.
Three warm bodies were tangled around meโRonanโs arm draped over my waist, Jaxโs legs thrown across mine like heโd claimed the whole bed in his sleep, and the faint little wiggle of tiny feet pressed between us.
At some point in the night, the kids had wandered in.
Again.
Rowan had wedged himself between Jax and me, one hand fisted in Jaxโs shirt like he owned him.
Caleb slept half on Ronanโs chest, drooling peacefully.
Elira curled up beside me with her face tucked into my hair like she belonged there.
And she did.
They all did.
I lay there, staring at the sunlight bleeding through the curtains, feeling the slow, steady rhythm of five heartbeats I loved more than the moon itself.
Ronan stirred first.
His fingers brushed my hip, slow and instinctive. Then he blinked awake, noticed the children draped like vines across him, and sighed with a tired smile.
โThey ambushed us again,โ he whispered.
โPack instincts,โ I whispered back. โThey like being close.โ
Jax woke next the dramatic groan gave him away.
He sat up, hair a wild mess, blinking blearily at the boys curled around him.
โI swear,โ he muttered, โthese kids use me as a mattress on purpose.โ
Rowan, still half-asleep, slapped Jaxโs stomach and muttered, โYouโre warm.โ
Then immediately fell back asleep.
Ronan snorted. I muffled a laugh in my pillow.
For a few perfect minutes, the room stayed soft and goldenโthe kind of peace I used to think Iโd never get.
But peace doesnโt last long in a Lunaโs world.
A gentle knock sounded at the door.
Before anyone could move, Becca cracked it open, whispering, โLyra? Sorry to interrupt your adorable cuddle pile, butโฆ Crescent Hill is here.โ
Jax groaned louder. โTell them to go awayโโ
โโJax,โ Ronan warned quietly.
I sat up slowly, brushing hair from my eyes. โItโs fine. They were bound to ask for guidance soon.โ
Ronan reached for my hand. โYou donโt have to rush into work today.โ
โI know,โ I said softly. โBut I need to. For themโฆ and for me.โ
He searched my face, then nodded.
Jax ruffled my hair. โIf they stress you out, Iโm flipping a table.โ
โIโm holding you to that,โ I smirked.
Becca led me downstairs, where Crescent Hillโs temporary council waited in the great room.
They bowed the moment I entered not the stiff, obligatory bow of old Alpha traditions, but something gentler. Hope mixed with guilt.
Marek was among them, standing slightly behind, still stripped of his former arrogance.
โLuna Lyra,โ their new interim spokesperson began, voice steady but nervous. โThank you for seeing us. Crescent Hill wishes to discuss ourโฆ path forward. Leadership. Boundaries. Trade. Andโฆ your role.โ
My role.
A chill touched my spine, but I held steady.
โOf course,โ I said, taking the seat at the long table. โLetโs begin.โ
We spoke for hours about merging hunting borders, shared training regimens, elder care, and the structure of a joint governing council.
It was delicate work.
It was political work.
It was Luna work.
But I didnโt flinch from any of it.
Stillโ
I could feel something brewing beneath their polite requests.
A tension.
A question unspoken.
Something the council kept glancing at Marek for, something he avoided looking at me to say.
When the meeting finally adjourned, Marek approached alone, stopping a respectful distance away.
โLyraโฆโ he began. His voice cracked. โThere is something Crescent Hillโฆ needs to ask of you. But not yet. When the time is right.โ
I studied him carefully. โWhat kind of something?โ
He swallowed hard. โA truth you deserve. One your mother did not tell you. One that affects more than just your past.โ
My pulse stilled.
My wolf lifted her head.
Something cold brushed the bond inside my chest.
Before I could speak, Ronanโs warm hand slid onto my shoulder.
Jax appeared on my other side, arms crossed, protective and already irritated.
โWhatever you have to say,โ Ronan said lowly, โyou say it with us present.โ
Marek nodded. โI understand.โ
But I could feel itโ
Something was coming.
Something bigger than leadership.
Bigger than curses.
Something tied to my bloodlineโฆ and my future.
Ronan squeezed my shoulder.
Jax leaned in and murmured, โWeโve got you, Luna.โ
And as Crescent Hillโs wolves departed for the night, the air felt heavier charged with a new uncertainty that hadnโt existed even hours earlier.
Peace had come.
But so had a new question.
And I had a feeling the answer would change everything.
I let out a breath I hadnโt realized I was holding.
Ronanโs grip on my hand softened.
Jaxโs shoulders relaxed, just barely.
โMarek,โ I said calmly, โwhatever youโre trying to sayโฆ say it clearly. Without fear.โ
This time, he met my eyes without flinching.
โLyra,โ he said softly, โyour mother wasnโt allowed to have a child under the oath. The ritual design forbade it. Butโฆ she did.โ
He swallowed.
โAnd that alone was enough to break Crescent Hillโs rules. Enough to weaken the curse. Enough to make you different.โ
Different.
Not divine.
Not dangerous.
Justโฆ different.
Jax whistled. โSo youโre saying Lyra was already a walking rebellion the moment she was born.โ
A reluctant smile tugged at Marekโs lips. โYes. In the simplest termsโฆ yes.โ
Ronan brushed his thumb over mine, voice low. โSo, she wasnโt supposed to exist. But she did. And that scared you.โ
โIt humbled us,โ Marek corrected quietly. โThe curse began unraveling the day you were bornbecause a Luna under oath shouldnโt have been able to give life. Thatโs why so many wolves whispered about you. It wasnโt your rank. It wasโฆ wonder.โ
Wonder.
Not fear.
Not disgust.
Wonder.
My throat warmed, and I blinked hard.
Marek didnโt move closer. He kept his voice soft. โYour mother believed you would be the one to end what she couldnโt. Not because of prophecy. Not because the Goddess demanded it. But becauseโฆ you were hope born from impossible circumstances.โ
Ronan kissed my knuckles.
Jax muttered, โDamn right.โ
I breathed out slowly. โSo thatโs the great secret? That I wasโฆ unexpected?โ
Marek nodded. โUnexpected. And loved. More than she could show.โ
I didnโt realize how badly I needed to hear that until my chest loosened.
Ronan leaned closer. โYou donโt have to carry any destiny. You already did more than enough.โ
โAnd now we get to live,โ Jax added. โAll of us. Without curses. Without secrets.โ
Marek bowed his head and stepped back. โThatโs all Crescent Hill needed to tell you. The rest is simply gratitude.โ
And then he left the room.
When the door clicked shut, I sagged into Ronan and Jax at onceโone on each side, both grounding me.
โI think,โ I whispered, โIโm tired of being complicated.โ
Ronan chuckled quietly. โThen letโs make the rest simple.โ
Jax wrapped an arm around my waist. โStarting with food. Lots of it.โ
They helped me stand, warm and steady on both sides.
As we walked out of the council room and into the golden-lit hallways of the packhouse, something in the air felt lighter. Final. Peaceful.
Not because destiny had been fulfilled.
Not because power had been awarded.
But because the truth simple, human, honest had finally been spoken.
I was born from something impossible.
But I lived because of love, choice, and strength.
And now, finallyโฆ
The story could end in peace.
21 A Motherโs Heart, Finally Unbound
I found my mother sitting alone in the garden just before sunset.
The stone path was curved around the lavender beds.
The same crooked oak tree leaned toward the sky.
And the same faint scent of moon blooms drifted through the air when the wind shifted.
Her hands were folded in her lap, pale and steady. For the first time, I realized they didnโt shake anymore the curse that once weighed them down was gone.
โLyra,โ she whispered before I even spoke.
She didnโt turn, but her voice trembled with something fragile. โI wondered when youโd come.โ
I stepped forward slowly.
โI needed time,โ I said honestly.
She nodded. โI understand.โ
I sat on the stone bench beside her. For a long moment, neither of us spoke. The silence wasnโt hostile just heavy with years we couldnโt rewrite.
โI know you heard the truth from Marek,โ she said softly. โAbout the oath. About your birth.โ
โI did.โ
She breathed in sharply, then exhaled like sheโd been carrying that breath since the day I was born.
โI never wanted to lie to you.โ
โBut you did,โ I said gently. โFor most of my life.โ
Her shoulders curled inwards. โBecause every time I tried to tell youโฆ the oath tightened. I could feel it constricting my lungs. My voice. My thoughts. I was afraid I would die if I tried to protect you too openly.โ
The confession didnโt make anger spark inside me.
It made something else rise a deep, aching empathy.
โI thought you didnโt care.โ
My voice cracked. โWhen I was exiled, I thought you didnโt fight because I wasnโt worth fighting for.โ
Her breath hitched, and tears spilled instantly.
โLyraโฆโ
She grabbed my hands suddenly, gripping them like she was drowning. โThe day they cast you out was the day I broke. I would have run after you. I would have burned Crescent Hill to the ground. But the oathโโ
She choked on the words.
โIt sealed my voice. I couldnโt speak your name without it crushing my throat.โ
A tremor moved through me.
I had imagined a hundred reasons.
A hundred excuses.
But never the truth.
โI watched you walk away,โ she whispered, โbecause watching you die from the curseโฆ would have destroyed me.โ
Something inside me finally cracked.
I reached out slowly and wrapped my arms around her.
She broke instantly head pressed against my shoulder, fingers fisted in my shirt, tears soaking into my collar.
For a moment, she didnโt feel like the distant, unreachable woman of my childhood.
She felt like a mother.
โMum,โ I murmured, the word strange and new. โItโs over. The oath broke. Youโre free.โ
โI donโt deserve freedom,โ she whispered. โI donโt deserve forgiveness.โ
โYou donโt have to deserve it,โ I said softly. โYou just have to want to build something new.โ
Her breath shook.
โI want to. More than anything.โ
We stayed like that until the sun dipped below the trees.
When she finally pulled back, I saw the woman she mustโve been before Crescent Hill twisted her strong, compassionate, flawed in a human way, not a mythical one.
โWill you come visit?โ I asked. โMy home. Your grandchildren.โ
She covered her mouth with a trembling hand. โI didnโt know if I had the right.โ
โYouโre not the same woman who let them exile me,โ I said softly. โLetโs learn each other again.โ
She nodded, tears falling freely. โIโd like that.โ
The past didnโt disappear.
But for the first time, it didnโt suffocate me either.
We left the garden behind not as strangers, not as ghosts but as two women finally stepping out of the shadow of old chains.
22 Grandmother Blessing
I didnโt tell the kids ahead of time.
Not because I wanted to surprise them but because I needed a moment to steady myself before bringing two parts of my life together that had never been allowed to touch.
My mother walked beside me as we approached the edge of the clearing. The air was warm with late afternoon sun, the trees glowing gold, and in the distance I could already hear themโ
Caleb and Rowan arguing over who could climb the fallen pine faster.
Elira humming to herself as she braided flowers into her wolf-pelt doll.
They were home to me.
My truest home.
My mother slowed when the boys came into view. Her steps faltered. Her breath hitched in her throat like sheโd taken a blow.
โThoseโฆโ she whispered, voice trembling, โโฆare your children?โ
I swallowed, nodding. โYes.โ
She lifted a hand to her mouth, tears forming instantly. โMoon aboveโฆ theyโre beautiful.โ
โTheyโre trouble,โ I corrected softly. โLoud. Wild. Reckless.โ
โAnd perfect,โ she whispered.
My heart pulled tight.
I signaled gently to the kids. โCome here, pups.โ
Caleb turned firstโalways the quickest.
Rowan followedโalways protective.
Elira looked up last, her little brow furrowing the way Ronan did when he sensed a shift in the air.
They came running, but slowed when they saw the woman beside me.
โMama?โ Rowan asked, stepping closer. โWhoโs that?โ
โMy mother,โ I said quietly. โYour grandmother.โ
The world seemed to freeze.
My mother made a sound Iโd never heard from herโa soft, broken gaspโand knelt down slowly, as though afraid to startle them.
โIโฆโ Her voice cracked. โIโve waited so long to meet you.โ
Caleb tilted his head, sniffing the air, then whispered, โShe smells a bit like Mama.โ
Eliraโs eyes widened. โReally?โ
My mother let out a weak laugh. โI suppose I do.โ
Rowan stepped forward first. Always the brave one.
โAre you staying?โ he asked.
The question hit her like an arrow.
She blinked rapidly, trying to contain the tears.
โIf you want me to,โ she whispered.
Rowan studied her for a long moment, then nodded once and took her hand small fingers curling into hers with quiet acceptance.
My mother broke.
Not loudly.
Not dramatically.
But in a soft, shattering exhale as love finally spilled into the space she had been denied for years.
Caleb didnโt ask permission.
He flung himself into her arms with a whoop.
โHI GRANDMA!โ
She staggered, then laughed through tears, hugging him so tightly I thought she might never let go.
โMyโฆ my darling boy,โ she whispered into his hair. โOh, youโre so warm. Youโre so real.โ
Elira stood back, watching.
She was cautious my little moonflower always needed a moment to feel safe.
I knelt beside her. โItโs okay, baby. You can say hello.โ
Elira looked at my mother with unreadable dark eyes. โDid you love Mama?โ
My mother choked on a sob. โMore than my own life.โ
โDid you protect her?โ
โNo.โ
A whisper of raw honesty.
โI wanted to. I tried. I failed. But I would protect you with everything I have left.โ
Elira held her gaze for a long, serious moment.
Then she stepped forward and placed her flower crown gently into my motherโs hands.
โFor you,โ she said quietly.
My mother burst into tears ugly, shaking, overwhelmed tears as she gathered Elira into her arms.
โOh, sweetheart,โ she whispered. โThank you.โ
I watched them my children, my mother and felt something in my chest loosen for the first time since childhood.
Not everything was fixed.
Not everything was healed.
But something broken had begun to mend.
Rowan tugged on her sleeve. โDo you want to see where we live?โ
Caleb grabbed her other hand. โWe have a HUGE backyard and Jax lets us climb the roofโโ
โNo, he does NOT,โ I snapped.
My mother laughed again real laughter this time. โI would love to see it all.โ
Elira slipped her hand into mine. โMama? Are you happy?โ
I looked at my children.
At my mother wiping her eyes.
At the sunlight filtering through the trees.
โYes,โ I murmured, pulling Elira close. โMore than you know.โ
Together, we walked toward home.
Toward something new.
Something softer.
Something earned.
A family finally allowed to grow.
The celebration was Ronanโs idea, but Jax took full responsibility for making it chaotic.
โIt needs fireworks,โ Jax insisted as he leaned over the long table in the great hall, scribbling plans that looked more like battle strategies than party notes.
โAnd food. Lots of food. And music. Andโโ
โJax,โ Becca sighed, โitโs a unity feast, not a mating ball.โ
Jason snorted. โYet youโre planning it like one.โ
Jax threw a grape at him.
But even with all the teasing, excitement buzzed through the packhouse. For the first time in a long time, Crescent Hill and our pack would gather together not to negotiate, not to apologize, not to heal woundsโฆ
โฆbut to celebrate.
To laugh.
To eat.
To breathe the same air without tension.
And gods, we needed it.
By sunset, the clearing was transformed.
Torches lined the pathways, lanterns hung from branches, and long tables were covered in food brought by wolves from both packs. Roasted meats, forest breads, honey-glazed roots, fruit pies, jugs of moon wineโeverything smelled warm and welcoming.
Even Crescent Hillโs wolves seemedโฆ lighter. Their shoulders werenโt tucked in defensively. Their eyes werenโt wary. They walked among us with something like hope.
My mother watched from a small bench nearby, a soft smile on her lips.
I could see the awe still in her eyes she had never seen me like this.
Not as an omega.
Not as a frightened child.
But as Luna.
A Luna with a family, with love, with a pack that chose me.
The feast began with Ronan stepping forward, his voice calm and steady.
โTonight,โ he said, looking out over both packs, โis for unity. For healing. For remembering that even broken paths can lead to shared ground.โ
Jax added loudly, โAnd for eating until you forget the last twenty years.โ
Everyone laughed, even Marek.
I stepped between my mates, letting the warmth of their hands ground me as I addressed them all.
โWe stand here not as enemies, not as strangers, but as wolves under the same moon.โ
My voice carried easily in the night air.
โWe survived curses, battles, and mistakes. But tonightโฆ we celebrate that we are still here.โ
A soft murmur rippled through the crowd.
โTogether,โ I finished.
Cheers erupted.
Real ones.
Not polite.
Not forced.
Alive.
Music started drums, light flutes, and the hum of voices blending. Wolves danced, some shifted into their wolf forms to run playful circles around the clearing.
Ronan squeezed my waist. โThey listen to you like you were born for this.โ
Jax kissed my cheek. โYou were.โ
I laughed softly. โI was born to be thrown out and figure it out on my own.โ
โAnd you did,โ Ronan murmured. โAnd now they follow.โ
My mother approached shyly, holding a plate piled with honey cakes.
โLyra,โ she said softly, โwould youโฆ like to dance with me?โ
My throat tightened.
Dance?
Like the nights when she used to hum lullabies without words when I was small?
Before everything changed?
I nodded. โIโd like that.โ
She took my hands, and we stepped into the open space.
Her movements were hesitant at first, then smoother as the memories returned to her bones.
โYouโre happy,โ she whispered.
โI am,โ I answered. โFor the first time in my life.โ
โIโm glad,โ she breathed, tears slipping down her cheeks. โIโm so glad.โ
Ronan and Jax watched from nearby, smiling proud, protective, warm.
Becca swooped in at the end of the dance, grabbing my wrist. โLuna! Come join the womenโs circle weโre sharing stories, and youโre needed.โ
Jax tugged my other hand. โNo, sheโs needed at the menโs tableโJasonโs telling lies again.โ
Jason shouted, โTHEYโRE NOT LIESโTHEYโRE EXAGGERATED TRUTHS!โ
I laughed until my sides hurt.
This was peace.
Not perfect.
Not simple.
But real.
As the moon rose high, Crescent Hill wolves joined in a collective howl one of gratitude, not allegiance.
Our pack answered.
The sound blended beautifully, two voices woven under the same sky.
My heart swelled.
Because they werenโt following me out of obligation.
Not out of destiny.
Not out of fear.
They followed because they chose to.
And I chose them.
Hours later, when the feast began to quiet and wolves drifted home or fell asleep in the grass, Ronan took my hand and guided me toward the hill overlooking the clearing.
Jax followed with a blanket slung over his shoulder.
We sat together, watching the glow fade into embers.
โYou did this,โ Ronan murmured.
โWe did this,โ I corrected.
Jax stretched behind me, resting his head in my lap. โThis is only the beginning, Luna.โ
โI hope so,โ I whispered, brushing his hair back.
The night hummed with warmth, laughter lingering like perfume.
And for the first time since everything beganโฆ
I truly believed our world could stay whole.
The house was quiet when we returned.
Not the uneasy quiet of fear or tensionโ
but the warm, heavy quiet that wraps around you after a perfect night.
That quiet you only get when the world outside has settled,
and your heart finallyโฆ finally knows peace.
The moment we closed the front door, Caleb came stumbling down the hallway, half-asleep, hair sticking in every direction.
โMamaโฆ?โ he mumbled, rubbing his eyes.
I knelt down and opened my arms.
He walked straight into them.
Rowan followed, yawning loudly, dragging his blanket behind him like a little wolf cub. Elira peeked from the top of the stairs, eyes shining but sleepy, hugging her moon-pelt doll to her chest.
โWe waited,โ Elira whispered.
My heart softened. โI know. And Iโm glad.โ
Ronan crouched beside me, brushing Eliraโs hair behind her ear.
Jax lifted Rowan into his arms with one fluid motion, nuzzling his cheek.
โYou pups shouldโve been in bed hours ago,โ Jax whispered.
โBut we forgive you.โ
Caleb blinked up at me. โWas the party fun?โ
โIt was more than fun,โ I said softly. โIt was the beginning of something new.โ
He yawned, deeply, the kind that makes your whole body sag. โCan we sleep with you tonight?โ
Ronan smiled, slow and warm. โAll of you? Of course.โ
Elira padded down quietly and slipped her small hand into mine.
โGrandma said sheโs visiting tomorrow,โ she murmured, shy but proud.
I felt my breath hitch.
โShe told you that?โ
Elira nodded. โShe said she wants to read us stories.โ
My throat tightened. Tears pressed behind my eyes.
โShe will,โ I murmured. โI promise.โ
We guided the children into our roomโ
our big, soft bed that had long ago stopped belonging only to adults.
Rowan flopped in the middle. Caleb curled against my side. Elira climbed onto Ronanโs chest like a sleeping kitten.
Jax stretched out behind me, wrapping an arm around my waist. Ronan rested one hand on Eliraโs back, the other finding mine beneath the blankets.
The fire crackled softly in the hearth, washing the room in warm gold.
Outside, the moon hung full and heavy, her light spilling across our floor.
Inside, five heartbeats synced slowly, steadily.
I looked at themโ
my children, my matesโ
and felt the final tether of my past loosen its grip.
No more curses.
No more fear.
No more exile.
Only this.
Only home.
โLyra,โ Ronan murmured softly, half-asleep already.
โMm?โ I whispered.
He squeezed my hand. โYou did it. You brought peace.โ
I smiled, brushing Calebโs hair from his forehead.
โNo,โ I whispered. โWe did.โ
Jax hummed sleepily in agreement, his breath warm against my neck.
โLetโs keep it,โ he murmured. โForever.โ
โWe will,โ I promised.
My wolf pressed against my heart, content and full for the first time in her life.
This is what we fought for, she whispered.
This is where we belong.
Ronanโs breathing deepened. Jaxโs arm tightened around me. The children melted fully into sleep.
I closed my eyes as the moonlight settled over us, soft and silver.
Not as a goddess.
Not as a prophecy.
But as a mother.
A mate.
A Luna of two hearts.
And a wolf who had finally, finally found her place.
โGoodnight,โ I whispered to all of them.
And for onceโฆ
The world whispered back in peace.
23 Epilogue โ Under a Gentle Moon
Years from now, when stories are told around fire pits and young wolves lean forward with wide eyes, they wonโt tell the tale the way it truly happened.๏ปฟ
Theyโll say the Luna of Two Bonds walked into Crescent Hill with fire in her veins.
Theyโll say she faced curses and kings and rose without fear.
Theyโll say she united packs because destiny demanded it.
But the truth?
It wasnโt destiny.
It wasnโt prophecy.
It wasnโt power.
It was love.
Love for two Alphas who saw strength in my scars.
Love for children who made me believe I belonged.
Love for a pack that taught me home wasnโt where you were bornโit was where you were understood.
The forest is quiet tonight.
Ronan and Jax stand at the edge of the cliff, watching as the moon climbs above the treetops. Their silhouettes look carved from shadow and silver, steady as mountains. My boys wrestle in the grass behind them, while Elira sits beside me, weaving tiny moon blooms into a chain.
My mother watches from the porch steps of our homeโour homeโher gaze full, soft, unburdened at last.
Two packs mingle freely below us in the valley, their fires glowing like scattered stars. There are no lines anymore. No borders. Just wolves. Just family.
โLook,โ Elira whispers, pointing upward.
The moon hangs wider tonight, full and pure, bathing everything in pale gold.
โSheโs watching,โ my daughter says.
โWho is?โ I ask gently.
โThe moon,โ she says. Then smiles. โThe goddess. Sheโs smiling.โ
I donโt know if goddesses smile.
But I hope she does.
I step forward until Iโm between Ronan and Jax.
Ronanโs hand slides naturally to my lower back.
Jaxโs fingers link with mine, warm and firm.
Our bond humsโa quiet, steady pulse of devotion.
โEverything okay?โ Jax asks, leaning close.
โYes,โ I breathe. โBetter than okay.โ
Ronan brushes a kiss to my temple. โThe packs are strong. Peace is holding.โ
โAnd youโre glowing,โ Jax teases. โWhich means youโre thinking something very sappy.โ
I laugh softly.
Maybe I am.
Because for the first time in my life, I can feel tomorrow.
Not as something to fear.
Not as something to survive.
But as something to look forward to.
A future where my children will grow without chains.
Where my pack will thrive without fear.
Where Ronan and Jax and I grow old under the same moon that watched over my beginning.
A future where my name is no longer tied to exile, or rank, or cursesโฆ
but to love.
I lift my eyes to the sky.
โThank you,โ I whisperโ
to the moon,
to the goddess,
to the life I once thought Iโd never deserve.
Behind me, the kids laugh.
Jax wraps an arm around my shoulders.
Ronan rests his forehead against mine.
And as the breeze carries the scent of pine and warmth through the night, I close my eyes.
Home.
Peace.
Family.
My story began in loss.
But it endsโ
beautifully, irrevocablyโ
in love.
Author Note
Thank you.
Truly, deeplyโฆ thank you.
When I first wrote the opening lines of this book, I never imagined how far Lyra would go, how much she would grow, or how many of you would choose to follow her journey. You walked with her through exile, heartbreak, courage, love, motherhood, and the fight to build a home of her own. You embraced Ronan and Jax, adored the children, and held your breath through every danger and every moment of tenderness.
Your messages, your reactions, your excitement, and your love for this world kept me going more than you know. On the days I struggled, you reminded me why I started. On the days I doubted myself, you reminded me that stories have power and that this one mattered.
Thank you for giving Lyra a place in your heart.
Thank you for believing in her when her old pack didnโt.
Thank you for cheering for her strength, her softness, and her growth.
This book became something bigger because of you.
As for the futureโฆ who knows?
But whether this is where you stop or whether you follow into the next installment, I want you to know this:
I am grateful for you.
I am proud of this journey.
And I am honoured that you came along for the ride.
From the bottom of my heart thank you for reading.
Thank you for believing.
And thank you for letting this story become a part of your world.
With love and moonlight,
โ Noor
















0 Comments