Chapter One: The Luna Who Loved Too Much
The moon hung low that night, swollen and golden like an ancient eye watching from above. It poured its light through the high windows of the Moonclaw estate, coating the walls in a shimmer that should have felt sacred. But to Rochelle, it felt cold.
She stood alone in the grand ceremonial hall, her bare feet against polished obsidian tiles, listening to the echo of her own breathing. The Luna robes clung to her shoulders, a silken weight threaded with silver runes. They were beautiful, regal. Heavy.
She should have felt powerful. But she didn’t.
She hadn’t for a long time.
Behind her, the double doors creaked open.
“You’re early,” said Morgana, stepping into the room with a sway of hips and the scent of lavender and wolf musk. She wore her ceremonial robes too, though hers were tighter, more form-fitting. Everything about Morgana was sharper than Rochelle. Her laugh, her eyes, her presence.
“I couldn’t sleep,” Rochelle said softly, not turning around.
Morgana padded closer, heels clicking against the tiles like claws. “You haven’t slept well in weeks.”
Rochelle offered a faint smile. “Has everyone noticed?”
Morgana stopped beside her. “Only those who care.”
There was warmth in her voice, but something else lingered beneath it. Something Rochelle had grown too weary to name.
“I dreamed about him again,” Rochelle admitted. “Pearce. He was running through the forest but wouldn’t look back. I kept calling his name.”
Morgana’s lips tightened.
“You think it means something?” Rochelle asked.
“It means he’s always been running,” Morgana said. “You just never stopped chasing.”
The words struck harder than intended, and Morgana’s expression softened. “I’m sorry. That was cruel.”
“No,” Rochelle whispered, “it was honest.”
She looked out the window again, toward the distant silhouette of the trees that framed the Moonclaw lands. Somewhere out there, Pearce was likely patrolling alone, as he often did before rituals. He said it helped him “think.”
What he never explained was what he thought about. Or who.
Their bond had been formed under fire and prophecy. A union demanded by the Elders, blessed by the Moon, and celebrated by the pack. But love? That had never taken root. Rochelle gave and gave, and Pearce simply… received.
He never raised a hand against her. He never spoke cruelly. He never betrayed her, at least not in the ways she could see.
But he was never truly hers.
A knock echoed from the hall’s entrance. A young omega poked his head in nervously. “Luna? The Elder Council requests your presence. Preparations are nearly complete.”
Rochelle nodded and turned to Morgana. “Shall we?”
Morgana linked her arm with hers. “You’ll shine tonight. As you always do.”
Rochelle smiled, though her heart ached. She didn’t want to shine. She wanted to be seen.
The great hall was already filling with members of the pack, seated in concentric circles around the sacred pit of moonstone. Torches blazed along the pillars, their flames dancing like spirits. At the center of the chamber, Elder Thane stood like a monument, tall and gray-bearded, eyes clouded with what many mistook for wisdom.
Rochelle had never quite trusted him.
Pearce entered moments later from the opposite side. His presence was a storm in the calm. He is tall, broad-shouldered, his black hair tied at the nape, his eyes unreadable.
Rochelle’s heart leapt, as it always did.
He didn’t look at her.
The ritual began with chanting, an old language that only the Elders spoke fluently. They called it the “tongue of the Moon.” As the pack joined in, Rochelle stood silently by Pearce’s side, his mate by title, his stranger in truth.
Thane raised his hand, silencing the chamber.
“This night,” he intoned, “marks the third cycle of the Moon since the Prophecy was invoked. Balance has been maintained. Our Alpha and Luna have kept our pack strong, as foretold. Now we ask the Moon to bless us once more.”
Pearce stepped forward, offering his blood into the silver basin at the altar.
Then it was Rochelle’s turn.
She approached the basin with measured grace, slicing her palm with the ceremonial dagger and letting her blood mingle with Pearce’s. The room hummed with power.
Thane brought forth the final cup. A crystal goblet etched with lunar runes. It would carry their combined blood, purified by moonlight, to be consumed by the Luna alone. A sacred symbol of her role as the bridge between the Alpha and the divine.
Morgana stepped forward to hand her the cup.
Their eyes met. Morgana’s smile was soft. Warm.
And empty.
Rochelle took the cup and drank.
The taste was strange. Metallic, as expected… but something else. Bitter. Earthy. Wrong.
Her vision blurred.
The chanting rose again, but the voices stretched, distorted, like echoes through water.
She stumbled. Hands reached out, but her knees buckled. She hit the ground hard, the cup shattering beside her.
Gasps erupted. Someone screamed.
Pearce turned, finally looking at her, not with grief or fury, but confusion. As if he couldn’t quite place who she was.
Rochelle tried to speak, to reach him, but her throat was tight. Her limbs trembled.
Morgana knelt beside her, eyes wide, lips trembling. “What’s happening to her?” she cried.
Rochelle wanted to laugh. To shout. To name it. Poison.
But all she managed was a breath. Her last.
Darkness swallowed her.
But it wasn’t empty.
It was silver. Like mist on a still lake.
A voice drifted through it.
“You were never meant to die this way.”
Rochelle opened her eyes or thought she did. She was suspended in nothing. The world was quiet. Peaceful.
Before her stood a figure cloaked in moonlight. Not flesh. Not spirit. Something in between.
“Who are you?” Rochelle whispered.
“I am she who watches. Who weeps for the forgotten and burns for the broken.”
“The Moon Goddess,” Rochelle breathed.
The figure nodded. “You loved too much, Luna. And they gave you nothing. You died with a heart full of silence. But I will not let that be your ending.”
“I don’t understand…”
The Goddess extended a hand. “You will live again. But not as before. The weak shell they broke will be buried. You will rise in a body forged for fire. And this time, you will not kneel.”
Rochelle hesitated. “And Pearce?”
“You may find him again. But whether you save him or ruin him will be your choice.”
The light around her pulsed.
“Will I remember?” she asked.
“Enough to become who you were always meant to be.”
The silver engulfed her. Her heart slowed.
Then everything shattered.
She awoke to pain. Real pain. Sharp and blinding.
A voice shouted nearby. “She’s alive! Hold her!”
Hands gripped her arms. The scent of blood and fire filled her nose.
Her body felt different. Stronger. Heavier. Her skin was tanned, her fingers calloused.
She was not Rochelle.
Not anymore.
She was something… more.
I will not kneel, she thought.
And in the distance, the moon rose again.