Damon
Damon had faced war without flinching.
He had stood at the edge of his territory, blood on his hands and smoke in the sky, making decisions that determined whether his people lived or died. Fear had never ruled him. Doubt had never slowed him.
But this…this bond was something else entirely.
Damon left the open field just as the gathering began to break apart. Guards straightened as he passed, lowering their heads instinctively, sensing the storm beneath his controlled exterior.
The crowd seemed to shift around him without him slowing his steps, wolves moving aside instinctively as he passed. The last light of the day caught his tall frame, stretching his shadow long across the grass. His stride was confident and his posture remained straight and steady, untouched by the noise behind him. He did not look back at the pack, as if he had already said everything that needed to be said.
As he walked toward the darker path leading away from the field, his presence lingered, heavy and undeniable, long after he was gone.
The bond pulsed again.
Subtle. Persistent.
Like a quiet knock on a door he refused to open.
Damon clenched his fists. Alpha instincts urged him to turn, to seek, to protect. To find the one tied to his soul and pull him close. Every instinct screamed that someone out there belonged to him, someone vulnerable, someone aching.
An omega.
That alone was dangerous knowledge.
Omegas were protected, yes, but they were also political liabilities. An omega mate meant expectations, scrutiny, weakness in the eyes of rival packs. The Blackwood Pack sat at the center of contested territories, its strength the only thing keeping enemies at bay. His pack is the strongest, most feared and wealthiest pack in the west and that much power made his list of enemies endless.
A male omega mate would be seen as a c***k in his armor.
He would not allow it.
Damon stopped at the balcony overlooking the lower grounds. From here, the forest spread wide and endless, moonlight filtering through ancient trees. Somewhere in that sea of shadows, his omega existed.
He could feel him.
That was the worst part.
Damon exhaled slowly and did the unthinkable. He shut the bond down again. He did not sever it only death could do that. But he buried it beneath layers of discipline and denial, forcing his alpha power to suppress the call.
Pain lanced through his chest, sharp and punishing.
He welcomed it.
Better pain than weakness.
Later that night.
Damon stood beside his new Luna Hannah Lopez as the pack gathered beneath the open sky.
The full moon bathed the clearing in silver light, illuminating the assembled wolves, warriors, elders, omegas, children. Tradition demanded the alpha and his mate stand together during moonrise, a visible symbol of unity and strength.
Hannah as the new Luna fit that image perfectly.
She stood tall, her presence commanding without effort, her gaze steady and sharp. She was everything a ruling Luna was meant to be, decisive, proud, unyielding.
And she was not his true mate.
Damon could feel the lie like a stone in his chest.
Hannah glanced at him, her expression unreadable. “You’re distracted,” she said quietly.
“I’m fine,” Damon replied.
She did not believe him.
Hannah knew Damon well enough to recognize restraint when she saw it. He was holding something back, something heavy. But she also knew better than to press him in public.
Not yet.
As the moon reached its peak, a ripple moved through the pack, an instinctive response to lunar energy. Omegas lowered their gazes. Alphas straightened. The air thrummed with ancient power.
Damon’s attention betrayed him.
His gaze drifted unconsciously toward the edge of the gathering, where the omegas stood together.
And there he was.
His mate.
He stood slightly apart from the others, his shoulders tense, his eyes downcast. Moonlight clung to him in a way Damon had never noticed before, highlighting the soft curve of his cheek, the faint tremor in his hands.
The bond stirred violently.
Damon’s jaw tightened.
Kyrian felt it too.
He looked up.
Their eyes met.
The world narrowed to that single point of connection.
hope flaring painfully in his mates eyes, seeking and reaching out to him. Just for a second, just for a brief second Damon wanted to run to him, touch him, kiss his skin and comfort him.
Damon looked away. His poker face masked any expression or emotion he felt.
Deliberately.
The bond screamed.
Kyrian recoiled as if struck, his heart splintering with a sharp, silent c***k. He lowered his gaze at once, shame flooding him, his hands curling into fists at his sides.
The message was clear.
You are nothing to me.
Damon stood rigid, forcing himself to focus on the ritual, on his Luna beside him, on anything but the omega he had just destroyed with a single choice.
Luna Hannah noticed anyway.
She followed his earlier gaze, her eyes settling on Kyrian with sharp interest.
Something shifted behind her calm exterior.
Kyrian knew the exact moment Damon turned away.
It felt like being pushed underwater.
One second, the bond hummed softly in his chest uncertain but alive and the next, it was smothered beneath a crushing weight. Kyrian gasped, staggering back against the trunk of a tree as his knees threatened to give out.
His chest burned.
Not physically something deeper. Something that left him hollow.
“So that’s it,” he murmured, his voice barely audible.
He had heard stories growing up. Of alphas who rejected the bond for power. Of omegas who were left carrying a connection that would never be returned. They said the pain dulled with time.
They didn’t say it broke something permanent.
Kyrian wiped his eyes angrily and straightened. Crying wouldn’t change anything. The moon had chosen. The alpha had refused. That was the end of it.
Or so he told himself.
When he returned to the pack house, whispers followed him like shadows. Omegas sensed changes in each other, shifts in scent, in posture, in the way the air responded.
“You feel different,” Mara said softly, stepping into his path. She was older, her hair threaded with silver, her eyes kind but sharp. “Did something happen?”
Kyrian forced a small smile. “Just tired.”
She studied him for a long moment, then nodded. “Be careful, child. The moon does not touch lightly.”
He said nothing.
Because what was there to say?