Selena Blackthorn
The Blood Moon rises like an omen.
Its light bleeds across the forest, painting the snow in crimson streaks. The wind carries the sound of distant howls — my pack’s song of loyalty, or maybe of mourning. I can’t tell anymore.
I stand at the heart of the ritual ground, my feet bare against the cold stone, the scent of iron thick in the air. The moonlight glints off the obsidian altar before me, the same altar where I was crowned Luna three years ago. Now, it waits for my blood.
They’ve gathered to watch me die.
Rows upon rows of wolves in human form — my brothers, my sisters, my pack — all with eyes that no longer see me as one of them. They murmur, whispering treason, betrayal, the filth Darius planted like seeds of rot in Kael’s mind. I can feel their hate prickling against my skin like frostbite.
And Kael stands before me. My mate. My Alpha.
The man who once held my heart as if it were sacred.
Now he looks at me as though I’m a stain that needs to be erased.
“Selena Blackthorn,” he says, his voice carrying over the wind. Even now, it’s smooth and commanding — the voice that could silence an entire pack with one word. “You have been accused of conspiring with rogues. Of leaking the pack’s defenses. Of betraying your oath as Luna.”
Each word strikes harder than any blade could. I can hear the judgment, but worse — I can hear the doubt. Kael doesn’t fully believe it, not yet. But his pride won’t let him show it.
I try to speak, but my throat burns from hours of silence. They silenced me when I tried to defend myself earlier. Darius made sure of it. I see him now, standing slightly behind Kael — that smug, poisonous smirk curving his lips. He meets my gaze briefly and inclines his head, the tiniest nod of triumph.
It’s all the proof I need.
He won.
“Kael…” My voice cracks, weak but steady enough to cut through the murmurs. “Look at me. You know me better than anyone. Do you truly believe I’d betray our pack?”
The crowd stills. For a heartbeat, it’s only the two of us — Alpha and Luna, lovers and enemies, bound by the Moon herself.
Kael’s jaw tightens. His golden eyes flash with conflict, but then his expression hardens into stone.
“I believed in you once,” he says quietly. “But evidence doesn’t lie.”
“Evidence can be forged,” I whisper. “Memories can’t.”
He flinches, just slightly. I catch it.
The memory of the first night we bonded — when the Moon Goddess herself blessed our union, when Kael swore to protect me until his last breath. I feel that same thread between us still, faint and trembling. The mate bond doesn’t die easily.
But love dies faster.
Kael steps closer, the leather of his boots scraping the stone. He smells like pine and cold rain — the scent that once meant home. Now it only smells like goodbye.
“Do you have anything else to say before the judgment is carried out?” His voice has turned formal, detached. I can almost hear his heart breaking beneath the command.
I lift my chin, refusing to let tears fall. “Only this — when the Moon turns red, remember who stood beside you when no one else did. Remember who bled for you. And when the truth finally comes for you, Alpha Kael Damien… may it hurt as much as this does.”
Gasps ripple through the crowd. Someone shouts for silence. But I don’t look away. I want his face burned into my mind — the man who loved me, the man who’ll kill me.
Kael’s nostrils flare. For a split second, the mask slips, and I see him — not the Alpha, but the man I married. The man who held me through nightmares, who traced constellations across my skin when I couldn’t sleep.
His lips part as if to speak, but Darius’s hand lands on his shoulder.
“Do it,” the Beta murmurs, just loud enough for me to hear. “Before she poisons more minds.”
Kael’s eyes darken. The bond between us burns — searing, twisting. I can feel his hesitation, his torment, through that invisible thread.
And that’s when I realize — the Goddess isn’t watching tonight. She’s silent, letting mortals destroy themselves.
Maybe this is her test.
Two guards grab my arms, yanking me forward until I’m forced to kneel at the altar. The stone is cold, slick with old blood. My blood, from the battles I fought for this pack. How fitting that it will drink from me one last time.
“Alpha,” Darius says, handing Kael the ceremonial blade — the same dagger we used in our mating ritual. Its silver edge gleams with reflected moonlight. “Finish it.”
Kael takes it. His hand doesn’t tremble, but his aura does — a crackle of suppressed emotion, a storm barely held together. I know him too well; I can see it tearing him apart. But pride, that damnable pride, keeps him steady.
I close my eyes, breathing through the pain in my wrists. My wolf howls inside me, thrashing against the silver cuffs binding my magic. She’s furious, desperate, begging to fight. But the silver burns too deep, muting her.
“I forgive you,” I whisper, not sure if I meant it.
The crowd murmurs. The words ripple through them like fire through dry grass. Forgiveness is not what they came to witness. They came for blood. For spectacle.
Kael steps closer, until I can feel his warmth. His breath ghosts against my ear. For the briefest moment, the Alpha mask drops, and his voice trembles.
“Why did you have to do this?”
I laugh softly, bitterly. “Because I didn’t.”
He says nothing. The silence between us stretches thin, taut with everything unsaid — love, betrayal, fear. My heartbeat thunders in my ears, drowning out the chants of the pack. The wind stills. Even the forest seems to hold its breath.
Somewhere above, a cloud passes, and the full Blood Moon blazes brighter — its light bathing us in crimson. I see it reflected in Kael’s eyes, turning them molten.
He raises the blade.
Time slows.
I remember everything — the warmth of his hands on my skin, the first time he called me Luna, the way he kissed me after every victory as if I were the prize. All of it burns behind my eyes, and still, I can’t hate him. Not completely.
The crowd chants his name now. Alpha. Alpha. Alpha.
The rhythm pounds like a war drum.
Kael’s voice cuts through it. “By the decree of the Bloodmoon Pack, for crimes of betrayal and treason…”
He pauses. His hand trembles — just once — before steadying again. “I sentence you, Selena Blackthorn, to death.”
The blade catches the moonlight, and for a moment, it glows white — pure, divine, final.
I lift my eyes to his. “When the truth finds you,” I whisper, “remember this face.”
Kael hesitates. His jaw clenches. His eyes flicker with something — regret, pain, love, I can’t tell.
And then —
A gust of wind howls through the trees, strong enough to scatter the torches. Shadows twist across the altar. The Blood Moon flares brighter, almost blinding.
I hear whispers — faint, feminine, ancient. A voice like silk through smoke:
“Not yet, my child.”
The sound freezes my breath. I glance up. In the distance, the clouds part, revealing the full moon in all its bloodied glory. It feels alive — watching, judging. The voice echoes again, faint but unmistakable.
Kael doesn’t hear it. Only I do.
My pulse races. The Goddess is here.
But she does not save. She watches.
Kael’s grip tightens on the dagger. I can see the veins in his wrist, the strain in his jaw. His eyes glisten — a flicker of humanity, too late.
The crowd roars for blood.
And then —
He takes a step forward.
The moon burns crimson.
The wind screams through the trees.
The blade lifts high, glinting in the light of divine judgment .
And I finally understand: this is how love ends.
With silence.
With steel.
With a promise broken under the Blood Moon.