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The Billionaire Alpha's Hidden Luna

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Blurb

Emily Hart's life is a disaster.She can't see without her glasses, constantly trips over her own feet, works three exhausting jobs, and is drowning in hospital bills for her chronically ill mother.The last thing she expects is to catch the attention of Ryan Blackwood—the billionaire CEO every woman wants and the powerful Alpha of the largest hidden wolf pack in the world.Ryan has wealth, power, private islands, and a reputation as a heartbreaker.But he has spent years searching for one thing money can never buy:His mate.When a desperate decision brings Emily into his life, Ryan's wolf instantly recognizes her as the woman fate chose for him.There's only one problem.Emily has no idea werewolves exist.As their friendship blossoms into something deeper, jealous exes, dangerous enemies, rogue wolves, and long-buried secrets threaten to tear them apart. And when Emily discovers the shocking truth about her own past, she must embrace the destiny hidden inside her before it's too late.Can a clumsy literature student become the Luna of the world's most powerful Alpha?Or will the secrets surrounding her destroy everything before their story truly begins?A heartwarming, hilarious, and emotional romance filled with fated mates, family, found love, and a billionaire Alpha who would burn the world to protect his hidden Luna.

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CHAPTER ONE: The Girl Who Couldn't See
The first thing Emily Hart did that morning was walk into a glass door. Not because she was distracted. Not because she was texting. Not because she was particularly stupid. Simply because she couldn't see. Well, she could see. Just not very well. Without her thick, oversized glasses, the world became a blurry watercolor painting made by an artist who absolutely hated details. The impact wasn't even that hard, but it was enough to make her stumble backward on the concrete sidewalk. A few high-society customers standing outside the downtown café turned their heads, watching her with mild amusement. Emily quickly adjusted the heavy frames on the bridge of her nose, cleared her throat, and pretended nothing had happened. "Good morning to me," she muttered under her breath, pulling her worn canvas jacket tighter against the chilly morning air. The city was already wide awake. Sleek, expensive cars filled the gridlocked streets. People rushed along the sidewalks, carrying designer briefcases and drinking artisanal coffees. Everybody seemed to have somewhere important to be. Everybody except Emily. Emily felt as though she spent most of her life running on a treadmill, sprinting at full speed without ever reaching a real finish line. She pushed through the glass door—much more carefully this time—and entered the bustling coffee shop. The rich, heavy scent of freshly roasted coffee beans and sweet hazelnut syrup immediately surrounded her, coating her tongue. Behind the counter, her coworker Jake looked up from the espresso machine. His grin appeared instantly. That specific grin always meant trouble. "What happened?" he asked, wiping down the steam wand. Emily narrowed her eyes behind her thick lenses. "What makes you think something happened?" "Because your forehead is bright red, Em." She let out a heavy, defeated sigh. "Glass door." Jake burst out laughing, the sound cutting through the morning chatter of the cafe. "Again?" "Please don't laugh." "That's the third time this month!" "It was invisible, Jake." "It was glass." "Exactly. It's an occupational hazard." Jake laughed harder, shaking his head. Emily grabbed her dark green apron from the staff hook and tied it securely around her slim waist. Sometimes she genuinely wondered why she was friends with him. Most of the time, she blamed Stockholm Syndrome. The morning rush began almost immediately. Customers poured into the café in a never-ending wave. Orders stacked up on the digital screen. Coffee machines hissed violently, releasing plumes of hot white steam. People complained about the wait times. People flirted over the counter. People demanded impossible, ridiculous modifications to their five-dollar drinks. Emily smiled through all of it, her customer-service mask firmly in place. She needed this job. Actually, she needed every single job she had. Tuition wasn't cheap. Rent wasn't cheap. Food wasn't cheap. And neither were hospital bills. Especially hospital bills. The thought of her mother immediately settled heavily on Emily's chest, squeezing the air right out of her lungs. Three years ago, moving from her quiet, isolated small hometown to this massive, roaring city had felt like the beginning of a beautiful dream. She had earned a full partial scholarship into one of the country's most prestigious universities. Her mother had cried tears of absolute joy when she received the acceptance letter. Not sad tears. Proud tears. Emily still remembered the warmth of her mother's embrace that afternoon, the scent of lavender and rain clinging to her clothes. "You deserve this, sweetheart," her mother had whispered, her frail hands smoothing down Emily's hair. "You've worked so hard. Never look back." At the time, everything had seemed entirely possible. Then, the illness appeared out of nowhere. A strange, aggressive cellular degradation that baffled the human doctors. And suddenly, every dream, every assignment, and every plan Emily had ever made revolved entirely around hospital appointments, astronomical medication costs, and stacks of past-due red bills. Life had become a constant, terrifying balancing act on a razor-thin wire. One single wrong move, one forgotten shift, and everything she loved would collapse into ashes. "Emily." She blinked, snapping out of the dark trance. Jake was staring at her, his eyebrows raised. "Hm?" "You're daydreaming again," Jake pointed out, nodding toward the counter. "The customer asked for extra caramel." "Oh." "You gave him ketchup." Emily froze. Her eyes dropped to the plastic bottle in her hand. Sure enough. Bright red, organic tomato ketchup. The businessman standing across the counter looked completely horrified, staring at the red sludge dripping into his vanilla latte. Heat, hot and furious, flooded Emily’s cheeks. "Oh my God." The customer blinked, looked at her red face, and suddenly started laughing. Thankfully. Because Emily might actually have died of pure embarrassment right there on the linoleum floor. Very appreciated. "I'm so sorry, sir! Let me remake that immediately," she stammered. "It's okay," the man replied with a genuine smile, waving his hand. "Honestly, I was a little curious about the flavor profile." That made several people in line chuckle. Emily buried her face in her hands for a split second, wishing the earth would open a massive crack beneath her feet. That would be appreciated. Very appreciated. By the time her six-hour shift finally ended, Emily's feet ached with a deep, throbbing pain. She checked her phone while walking quickly toward the university campus for her afternoon lectures. Three missed calls. All of them from St. Jude’s Medical Wing. Her stomach immediately tightened into a hard, painful knot. The polite customer-service smile vanished from her face, replaced by a cold dread. Fear was something Emily had become deeply familiar with over the last two years. It didn't scream; it lived quietly beneath her skin. Waiting. Growing. Threatening to swallow her whole. Every single unexpected phone call from an unknown or saved hospital number felt like a potential disaster. Emily quickly called the number back, her breath fogging in the crisp air. The line connected after two rings. "Hello? This is Emily Hart." The nurse on the desk recognized her voice immediately. "Miss Hart." Emily slowed her steps on the campus quad, her heart executing a heavy thud against her ribs. "Is my mom okay?" There was a pause on the other end of the line. Not a long one. But long enough. Long enough to make a cold panic begin clawing ruthlessly at her chest. "She's stable for now, Miss Hart." Emily closed her eyes, releasing a long, shuddering breath she hadn't realized she was holding. Stable. Stable was good. Stable meant her heart was beating. Stable meant she still had time. But then the nurse continued, her tone dropping into a grave register. "However, the primary physician wants to discuss some new, aggressive treatment options with you." Emily's stomach dropped into an absolute abyss. "What kind of treatment options? Is the medication not working?" "Miss Hart..." The heavy, clinical sympathy in the nurse's voice terrified her. Somehow, professional sympathy always felt ten times worse than direct bad news. "The doctor will explain everything tomorrow morning. Please ensure you come in before noon." Emily stopped walking completely. Students moved in a blurred rush around her. The city noise continued to roar in the distance. But suddenly, everything felt incredibly distant. Muted. Like she was trapped underwater in a dark, silent ocean. "Tomorrow?" Emily whispered. "Yes. Take care, Miss Hart." The call ended with a soft click. Emily stared at the black screen of her phone for a long, frozen moment. Then, she slowly slipped it back into her canvas bag, forcing her legs to start moving again. Because what else could she do? If she stopped moving, if she let herself sit down, she might completely fall apart. And Emily Hart did not have the luxury of falling apart. Not today. Not tomorrow. Not ever. The university library was much quieter. Emily liked that. Books didn't ask difficult questions she couldn't answer. Books didn't look at her with that heavy, suffocating pity. They didn't look at her the way doctors sometimes did as if she were a ghost waiting to happen. She spent several hours shelving returned novels, cataloging research materials, and helping students. It should have been a peaceful shift. Instead, her mind was a chaotic storm. Thinking about bills. Thinking about the hospital. Thinking about her mother’s fading smile. By the time evening arrived and her library shift concluded, a blinding headache had settled firmly behind her eyes. She walked into the staff breakroom to grab her bag, reaching up to adjust her glasses and her fingers met empty air. A familiar, exhausting wave of panic struck her chest. "No. No, no, no." She searched the desk. She dumped her pockets. She aggressively ripped open her backpack, throwing papers everywhere. Nothing. For fifteen terrible, frantic minutes, she searched every square inch of the breakroom. Finally, another student worker walked in, stopped, and pointed a finger directly at Emily's face. Emily slowly raised her hand, her fingers brushing against the plastic frame resting firmly on her nose. Her glasses were right there. Exactly where they had been the entire time. The coworker let out a loud chuckle. Emily groaned, burying her face in her locker. At this point, extreme embarrassment should qualify as a legal personality trait. Near midnight, Emily arrived at her third and final job of the day. The luxury apartment building lobby downtown was nearly empty, illuminated by soft designer lighting. The old security guard greeted her warmly as she walked behind the front reception desk to take over the night shift. Emily offered him a tired smile and settled into the leather chair. The moment she sat, an absolute, crushing exhaustion settled over her body like a heavy lead blanket. Her muscles ached. Her eyes burned behind her lenses. She honestly couldn't remember the last time she'd had a full, uninterrupted night's sleep. The hospital. The university. Three separate jobs. Assignments. Overdue bills. The cycle never ended. It just kept spinning, grinding her down. Still, Emily kept her chin up. She kept going. Because she had to. Because her mother needed her to be strong. Because nobody else was coming to save them from the dark. The thought made her chest ache with a sudden, profound loneliness. Suddenly, her phone began to vibrate violently against the polished wood of the reception desk. The digital screen illuminated the dark lobby, displaying that familiar, terrifying saved number. St. Jude’s Medical Wing. An icy, suffocating fear immediately gripped her throat. She snatched the phone, answering it before the second ring could even finish. "Hello? This is Emily." "Miss Hart?" Something was wrong. She knew it instantly. The nurse's voice sounded completely different from this afternoon. It was too careful. Too gentle. It was the exact kind of voice people used when they were trying desperately not to shatter someone into pieces. Emily stood up from her chair, her knees trembling so hard she had to grip the edge of the desk for support. "What's happened? Is it my mom?" Silence stretched over the line for one agonizing second. Then— "Your mother's condition has severely worsened within the last hour, Miss Hart. Her vitals are crashing." Everything inside Emily went dead cold. The beautiful, expensive lobby blurred into a nauseating smear of light. Her heart began pounding so violently she could hear the blood roaring in her ears. "No..." she whispered, her voice cracking. "No, please..." "We need you to come to the intensive care floor first thing tomorrow morning, Emily. Prepare yourself." Emily couldn't breathe. She couldn't think. She couldn't move. For a long, agonizing moment, the only sound in the dark lobby was the frantic, thunderous rhythm of her own terrified heartbeat. And somewhere far beyond the city limits... Deep within the jagged, pitch-black mountains where the human world ended... A massive, powerful wolf lifted its heavy head beneath the brilliant glow of the full moon. It opened its jaws and let out a long, thunderous, echoing howl that vibrated through the ancient trees. As if it had just sensed the final cracking of a beautiful shield. As if it had just recognized the awakening of a destiny neither of them could ever escape.

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