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The Luna He Rejected Is The Millennium Wolf

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Blurb

Have you ever been betrayed by the ones you loved?The ones you trusted most, the ones you thought you couldn’t live without—only to discover your entire life was a lie?“That’s was me”.I’m Sienna Alexander, the "weak" omega they all looked down on. I was supposed to be the Luna of the Silver Fang Pack, mated to the powerful Alpha Lucas. I thought my mating ceremony would finally end my suffering at the hands of my wicked stepsister, Ivy, and her cruel mother, Morrigan.I was wrong. It was a trap.On my coronation night, Lucas didn't just reject me—he broke the bond, mated with my sister, and turned me into a puppet. They didn't just want my title; they wanted my bloodline. They performed a grafting ritual to siphon my Millennium essence and bind it to Ivy’s womb. They left me for dead.But they forgot one thing. What doesn't kill a wolf only makes her legendary. I’ve returned—not as a broken omega, but as the Millennium Wolf. My bloodline has awakened, and with it, a power the world hasn't seen in a thousand years. The Law of the Millennium is simple: use the tide, lose time. Call the dead, owe the dead. Lucas, Ivy, and everyone who stood by and watched me bleed will soon learn one thing.Sienna: The Millennium Wolf Has Returned

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Chapter 001
Sienna's POV Today was my Luna coronation. The Silver Fang Pack had waited months for it. I had waited longer. I stood on the balcony, looking at the thousands of wolves gathered in the courtyard below. Their torches burned in lines and clusters against the dark edge of the forest, the light catching and throwing back until the whole crowd looked like fallen stars pressed up against the ground. For a moment I closed my eyes, breathed in the night air, and let myself believe in it. The warmth. The noise rising from below. The weight of the gown on my shoulders. The silk was expensive. My hands were cold. Lucas had promised me this day since we were children. Years of telling me I was his anchor, his reason for leading, the only thing that made the weight of it bearable. I had believed him the way you believe things when the alternative is nothing at all. The cheering from the courtyard reached me muffled, as if it were traveling through water. The fabric of the gown felt wrong against my fingers. Not a ceremony dress. Something else. I breathed in and out and told myself the feeling would pass. Then the sound came through from the suite behind me. Wet. Rhythmic. Skin against skin with a cadence that moved up my spine before my mind had finished deciding what it was. I did not run. I did not scream. I walked toward the bedroom door because my legs were still working while the rest of me had not caught up yet. Each step moved through something thick and resistant, the air tasting of cedar and Ivy's perfume, sweet and heavy, already in the room before I reached the door. She had her fingers buried in his hair. Her back was arched, her head tipped sideways, her mouth at his neck, breathing something against his skin in the particular low tone of a person saying a thing they have rehearsed. "Remind me." Her voice carried the ease of someone who has been in this room before. Many times. "Tell me whose mark really matters." "You know it is yours," Lucas said. Not soft. Not with the low rough quality of a man undone. His voice was flat and certain, the same voice he used in elder meetings when he was drawing a boundary and making sure it held. The voice of ownership. The voice of a decision already made. I hit the doorframe. The wood was solid against my shoulder and I held onto it, waiting. Waited for him to see me and stop. Waited for the moment where this became something else, something with an explanation that would make the cedar smell and the sound and the way he was looking at her make sense in a way I could survive. He did not stop. His hands found her waist, pulling her closer, and the look on his face was something I had never seen aimed at me in all the years I had known him. Hungry in a way that had no patience in it. Hungry in a way that had clearly been hungry for a very long time. My heart found my ribs over and over. The music from the courtyard kept playing, indifferent, the celebration continuing without any awareness of what was happening on the floor above it. All the years of him standing between me and the people who wanted to reduce me. At the academy, in the pack halls, every time Morrigan's cruelty found a new angle and Lucas was the one who stepped in front of it. I had believed that was love. That was my mistake. Not blindness but belief. There is a difference. Blindness is accidental. Belief requires you to choose it, every day, against the evidence. He had not been protecting me. He had been deciding when. I did not know how long I stood there before the tears started. They moved slow, they burned, and I did not sob yet. I just stood in the doorway of my own room on the night of my own coronation, feeling the years turn over one by one and show me their other side. My mother's death. Morrigan's voice over the body saying it was for the best, saying I should be grateful for the roof and the food and the opportunity she was giving me. My father framed and cast out while the pack watched and decided not to notice. All of it was supposed to lead here. To this day. To safety finally, a home, a reason to stop bracing. I sobbed once. The sound came out wrong, too loud, scraping against the high ceiling and the quiet room. I pressed my hand over my mouth but it had already gone. I did not know how long I lay there before the door opened. Lucas walked in without looking at me. He pulled off his ceremonial jacket, put it over the chair, his eyes on the rug. His expression carried the specific emptiness of a man who has finished something and is already somewhere else. He looked the way people look after a long day of necessary work. Done, and ready to be done with it. "You are still up," he said. "I saw you." My voice came out thin. Barely there. "Lucas. In there with her. Why." He looked up. His eyes were bloodshot and flat, and what was behind them was not guilt. It was the particular tiredness of someone who has been carrying a conversation they did not want to have and has finally run out of patience for the delay. "Drop it, Sienna." His jaw tightened once. "The ceremony was a chore. I do not have the energy for this." "A chore." The air went somewhere. I could not locate it. "Lucas. I thought tonight was ours." He looked at me for a moment, the way someone looks at a door they are about to close. "I, Lucas of the Silver Fang, reject you," he said. "You are not my Luna." The bond did not break gradually. It snapped, clean and total, the way a branch snaps when the weight on it has exceeded what was ever going to hold. The mark on my neck went white-hot, my lungs emptied, and I was on my knees on the stone floor without my legs agreeing to it. The cold of the marble came through the gown immediately, my hands finding nothing to hold. Lucas watched. He did not flinch when my knees hit the stone. He did not move toward me. "I will speak to the council tomorrow." His voice was level. Discussing the weather. Discussing pack boundaries. "You will keep the title publicly because people need a face during the transition. But that is all you are now." "Why." It came out broken. "Lucas. I loved you." He crouched down until his face was close to mine. Cedar. Ivy's perfume underneath it. Both of them on his skin. "Because you are a dead end," he said. "A broken wolf. You cannot give me a strong heir. But your essence will keep the son Ivy carries strong." "Ivy." The word arrived in my mouth before I had finished understanding it. A sound at the door. She was standing in the frame wearing the Luna's robe, my robe, the silk of it catching the firelight. She looked at me on the floor the way you look at something you have been patient about for a long time and have finally finished being patient about. Her red hair held the firelight and gave it back darker, the color of something drying. I pushed myself up. My arms were shaking, the floor kept shifting, and I opened my mouth. "Get out," I said. "How could you—" "Quiet, Sienna." Alpha Command. It landed across my shoulders like a physical weight, dropping all at once, pinning every muscle to stillness before the sound of his voice had finished. My face pressed against the cold marble. Dust against my cheek. The command sat on my spine and did not lift. "Watch your mouth when you speak to my Luna," Lucas said. Ivy crouched. Her nails found my jaw, tilting my face up, and she looked into my eyes with the close unhurried attention of someone confirming a suspicion. "You feel it," she said. Quiet. Almost gentle. "Is it starting yet. Your Millennium blood, waking up for me." I did not understand. I could not ask. The command held my throat locked, the cold of the floor pressed up through my skin, the firelight moved across the ceiling above her, and I lay there unable to move. Morrigan stepped out of the shadow behind them. She looked down at me the way she always had. The way she had looked at my mother's body, at my father's exile, at every bruise her hand had left on my skin over the years. The calm of someone who has already decided the outcome and is simply watching the sequence complete itself. "Enough." Her voice was flat and final. "Take her to the basement. The siphoning needs to begin before dawn while the moon holds its position." I did not see the hand that hit me. The world simply stopped mid-frame, gone between one breath and the next. The last thing that reached me was the vibration of Lucas's footsteps on the floor as he walked away, the cedar smell of him growing fainter with each step. Then nothing. The cold dark. I was no longer a bride.

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