The White Shawl
The first sign that something was wrong was the shawl.
It should have been silver.
Every future Luna of Blackwood Pack wore silver during the Moon Claim—moon-thread over the shoulders, a visible promise that she was about to step into healing authority, legitimacy, and rule beside her Alpha. Elena had seen the shawl prepared three days ago with her own eyes. She had touched the embroidery herself, fingertips trembling over the crescent sigil stitched near the collar.
Tonight, when the attendant approached her at the foot of the moonstone dais, the fabric laid over her arms was plain white.
Not silver at all. Just white, the color given to women with no rank and no claim.
For one stunned beat, Elena simply stared at it.
“Stand to the left, Lady Whitmore,” the clerk said without meeting her eyes.
The left position was for witnesses, not for the woman who was supposed to be claimed.
The hall around her gleamed with cold ceremonial light. Moonstones lined the high walls, throwing pale fire over carved pillars and the packed tiers of guests. The Blackwood inner circle stood closest to the dais in dark formal leathers, their expressions carefully blank. Behind them, the noble families of neighboring packs watched with avid interest. The Whitmores had been seated farther back than promised. No one would call it an insult out loud, but everyone could see it.
Her mother had gone pale before the ceremony even began. Her father’s jaw had been set so tightly Elena thought he might crack a tooth.
Still, she lifted her chin.
“By custom,” Elena said quietly, “I stand beside the Alpha until the mark is verified.”
The clerk smoothed a crease in his scroll. “The record requires further review.”
A murmur rippled through the nearest rows.
Further review.
It wasn't a denial she could fight. It was worse: a delay wrapped in procedure, with all the humiliation built into it.
Elena locked her fingers at her sides before they could curl. If the hall caught even a hint of panic, it would tear into her.
So she stepped where she was told.
The white shawl settled over her shoulders like surrender.
Across the dais, Adrian Blackwood did not look at her.
That frightened her more than the shawl, more than the changed position, more than the whispers starting to gather like storm clouds across the hall.
Adrian should have crossed to her before the rite. He should have taken her wrist for the traditional joining stance. He should have stood shoulder to shoulder with her beneath the moonstone arch, giving the pack a clear image of the future they were about to bless.
Instead, he remained near the central altar, broad-shouldered and immovable, his black ceremonial coat clasped at the throat with the Alpha’s insignia. He looked every inch the ruler Blackwood Pack expected him to be—cold, powerful, impossible to challenge.
And distant.
So distant that the bond between them, once a living current under her skin, felt like a wound covered in ice.
Elena knew his face. She knew every slight shift of his mouth, every shadow in his gray eyes, every line of restraint across his body. She had spent years learning how to read him because loving Adrian had required fluency in silence.
Tonight, his silence was deliberate.
Tonight, he was refusing to claim her before he ever opened his mouth.
The eldest Tribunal official stepped forward, robes dragging over stone. “Let the Moon Claim of Blackwood Pack commence. Let the Alpha present the woman marked to stand as his Luna.”
The hall quieted at once.
Elena’s heart pounded so loudly she could hear the blood in her ears.
This was the moment she had been waiting for. The one thing no one could alter without exposing themselves. The ritual required Adrian’s public confirmation. Whatever strange humiliation had been arranged around the edges of the ceremony, he would have to end it now. He would have to say her name.
Adrian turned at last.
His gaze met hers.
For one stupid, desperate second, Elena thought she saw conflict there. Some last restraint. Some hidden reason for the cruelty of the evening.
Then he spoke, and whatever was left of her hope shattered cleanly.
“I do not present Elena Whitmore as my Luna.”