The night the mate mark bloomed, Faye told herself the ache in her chest was just nerves.
The pack gathered beneath the full moon, silver light washing over stone and fur and skin alike. Drums echoed through the clearing—slow, reverent, ancient. This was how it was supposed to feel, she’d been told since she was a child: sacred, overwhelming, right.
So she ignored the way her wolf paced restlessly inside her ribs.
She stood at Alpha Gabriel’s side, close enough that his arm brushed hers, close enough that the heat of him bled into her skin. He was tall, broad-shouldered, every inch the Alpha their pack revered. His dark hair was pulled back at his nape, his posture effortless, commanding. When he lifted his chin, the pack quieted without being told.
Power rolled off him in invisible waves.
Faye swallowed.
When Gabriel looked at her, his mouth curved into a smile that never quite reached his eyes.
“There you are,” he murmured, fingers curling around her wrist—not tight, not painful. Possessive. “Don’t drift.”
“I wasn’t,” she said quickly.
His thumb pressed against the inside of her wrist, right where her pulse fluttered. “Good.”
The drums slowed. The elder stepped forward, her voice rising in a chant older than language. The air thickened, heavy with magic and moonlight. Faye’s skin prickled, heat pooling low in her belly, then climbing—higher, sharper—until she gasped.
The bond snapped into place like a lock turning.
Pain flared at her shoulder. She cried out despite herself, dropping to one knee as fire seared into her flesh. The world narrowed to the burn, the way it felt like something was carving her open and filling the space with something foreign and immovable.
A hand fisted in her hair.
“Easy,” Gabriel said, voice calm, steady. “I’ve got you.”
The mark settled into her skin, throbbing. When the pain ebbed enough for her to breathe again, she lifted trembling fingers to her shoulder.
A crescent moon entwined with a wolf’s claw.
His mark.
The pack erupted—cheers, howls, voices shouting their Alpha’s name. Someone pulled her to her feet, and suddenly Gabriel was in front of her, hands bracketing her face, his forehead resting against hers.
“My mate,” he said, loud enough for the pack to hear.
A cheer rose again.
Faye smiled because she was supposed to.
Inside, her wolf went unnervingly still.
The first rule came that same night.
They were alone in the Alpha’s house, the celebration still roaring outside. The walls muffled the sound, but not the weight of the silence that followed them inside.
Gabriel shut the door and turned the lock.
The click echoed.
Faye hesitated, just for a breath. “Should we—?”
He crossed the room in three strides and kissed her.
It was not rough. Not violent. His mouth was firm, sure, claiming. His hands slid to her hips, holding her in place as if the world beyond his touch no longer existed.
When he pulled back, his eyes glinted amber in the low light.
“There are expectations,” he said. “Now that you’re mine.”
Her smile faltered. “Mine?”
“You’re my mate.” He brushed his thumb over the mark on her shoulder, pressure just shy of pain. “My Luna. That comes with responsibilities.”
She nodded, heart pounding. “Of course. I know that.”
“Good.” His hand dropped, but the weight of it lingered. “Rule one: you don’t contradict me in front of the pack.”
She blinked. “I wouldn’t—”
“You might,” he interrupted smoothly. “You’re spirited. I don’t want that corrected publicly.”
Corrected.
Her wolf shifted uneasily.
“And rule two,” he continued, turning away to pour himself a drink, “you don’t leave pack grounds without telling me.”
“That’s normal,” she said, a little too quickly.
“Rule three,” he added, glancing at her over his shoulder, “when I give you an order, you follow it. Immediately.”
Faye opened her mouth, then closed it again.
This was an Alpha. This was how packs worked. She’d grown up watching Lunas stand at their mates’ sides, quiet, supportive, loyal.
Chosen.
“Yes,” she said finally.
Gabriel smiled again—that same sharp, satisfied curve of his mouth. “Good girl.”
The words sent an unexpected shiver through her. She told herself it was excitement. Adjustment. The bond settling.
She did not tell herself it felt like something tightening around her throat.
The pack adored her.
They bowed their heads when she passed. Offered gifts. Smiled warmly and called her Luna like it was a blessing she’d earned rather than something she’d been claimed into.
Gabriel made sure she stood at his side during gatherings, his hand always resting on her lower back, his fingers digging in just enough to remind her where she belonged.
He praised her publicly.
“She’s strong,” he told the pack one night. “Obedient. Loyal. Everything a Luna should be.”
Faye smiled, cheeks aching.
Later, when she spoke out of turn—only a suggestion, really, about patrol rotations—his hand tightened painfully on her thigh beneath the table.
They finished the meal in silence.
That night, he did not touch her.
“You embarrassed me,” he said, voice cool.
“I didn’t mean to,” she whispered. “I was just trying to help.”
“I don’t need help.” His gaze pinned her in place. “I need support.”
She nodded. Apologized. Promised to do better.
He kissed her forehead, gentle as a benediction. “I know you will.”
The bond grew heavier with each passing day.
It tugged when he was displeased. Burned when she disappointed him. Wrapped around her chest when he summoned her, a silent command she learned not to ignore.
Sometimes, in the quiet moments, she wondered why love felt like holding her breath.
But when she looked at Gabriel—at the pack’s Alpha, at the mate fate had chosen—she swallowed the thought down.
This was destiny.
This was the moon’s will.
And if it hurt—
Well.
Pain, she told herself, was just another form of loyalty.