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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1

Moonbound

Elmyra Vale had always known where she belonged in the Mooncrest Pack. At the edges.

In the background, Unseen.

She stood just beyond the ring of torchlight, where the shadows were thickest and the forest pressed close, her fingers laced together to stop their trembling. The clearing buzzed with excitement as wolves gathered beneath the rising full moon, voices overlapping in laughter and whispers. Tonight was not a night for silence or invisibility.

Tonight was the Moon Rite.

The night fate revealed itself.

Elmyra swallowed and focused on breathing evenly. She had spent days preparing herself for this moment, reminding her heart again and again that expectations only led to disappointment. Omegas did not dream of mates. Omegas endured.

At eighteen, she had learned that lesson well.

Her parents had been gone for years now, claimed by a border conflict that Mooncrest spoke of only in passing. Their absence had left her unprotected, her place in the pack reduced to quiet labor and careful obedience. She worked hard, spoke little, and never asked for more than she was given.

It was safer that way.

The clearing brightened as more torches were lit.

Elders took their places around the ancient stone etched with symbols older than the pack itself. Young wolves clustered together, nerves and excitement written openly on their faces. Some laughed too loudly. Others clasped hands, pretending calm.

Elmyra watched them with distant awareness, her chest strangely tight.

She told herself it was nothing.

Then the murmurs shifted.

A hush rippled through the clearing, spreading outward like a wave. Elmyra lifted her head instinctively, her gaze following everyone else's toward the path leading into the clearing.

Alpha Kael Draven stepped into the light.

The reaction was immediate. Backs straightened. Voices fell silent. Even the air seemed to still be around him.

Kael walked with controlled confidence, his presence heavy and commanding. At twenty-six, he carried the weight of leadership with practiced ease, broad shoulders squared, expression calm and unreadable. Moonlight caught in his dark hair and traced the sharp lines of his face.

Elmyra's breath caught painfully.

She looked away at once, heat creeping up her neck. She hated the way her body reacted to him, the way something deep inside her always tightened when he was near. It had been that way for as long as she could remember, an awareness she had never been able to explain or escape.

She told herself it was foolish.

Dangerous.

The Alpha was untouchable. And she was no one, The ritual began.

The elders' voices rose in a low chant as incense burned, smoke curling upward toward the moon. One by one, wolves stepped forward into the circle. When the moon revealed a bond, it came quietly at first. A shared look. A sudden pull. Recognition spreading across two faces at once.

Gasps followed. Smiles. Tears.

Elmyra stayed where she was, watching as though from behind glass. This was not her moment. It never would be.

Then the air changed.

The shift was sudden and unmistakable. Pressure built in her chest, stealing her breath. Her heartbeat stuttered, then thundered wildly as heat flared beneath her skin.

Elmyra stiffened.No.

A sharp pull yanked at her core, so strong it made her stagger. Her vision blurred as something inside her stirred violently, unfamiliar and overwhelming.

Her wolf moved.

She had never felt it before. Not really. Always distant. Always quiet. But now it surged forward with undeniable force, flooding her senses with awareness and urgency.

Elmyra gasped as her feet carried her forward against her will.

Confusion rippled through the pack as she stumbled into the torchlight. Whispers rose, sharp and incredulous. She barely heard them. Her focus narrowed until there was only the pull guiding her toward the center of the clearing.

Toward him.

The moonlight flared brighter, almost blinding. A burning sensation seared her wrist, and she cried out softly as a faint silver mark bloomed on her skin before fading just as quickly.

Silence crashed down.

Elmyra lifted her head slowly.

Kael stood directly in front of her.

For one suspended heartbeat, the Alpha's composure cracked. Shock flashed across his face, raw and unfiltered, before something darker took its place. The bond slammed into Elmyra with brutal clarity, wrapping around her heart and soul with terrifying certainty.

Mate.

The truth hit her so hard she nearly fell.

Her wolf surged forward, recognizing him instantly, fiercely. Tears burned her eyes as the connection roared through her veins, filling every empty space she had carried for years.

The whispers exploded.

An omega, Impossible. This must be a mistake,

Laughter followed, sharp and cruel, cutting through her fragile hope.

Elmyra searched Kael's face desperately, clinging to the idea that he would say something. That he would stop this nightmare from unfolding.

He stepped back.

The movement was deliberate. Final.

"This is wrong," Kael said, his voice cold and steady as it carried across the clearing.

Her heart cracked open.

"I reject this bond."

The pain was instant.

White-hot agony tore through her chest, ripping the air from her lungs. Elmyra collapsed to her knees with a strangled sound, clutching at her heart as the bond screamed in protest. The severing was violent, public, and merciless.

Gasps rippled through the crowd.

"She is unfit to stand beside an Alpha," Kael continued, his voice unwavering. "Her weakness threatens this pack."

The moonlight dimmed.

Something inside Elmyra broke beyond repair. Her wolf howled once in fury and despair before falling silent. The pain consumed her, leaving her shaking on the cold ground as the world blurred and darkened.

By morning, the decision was made.

Elmyra Vale was exiled from the Mooncrest Pack.

She stood at the border as the sun rose, pale light filtering through the trees. A small bundle of supplies lay at her feet. No one met her eyes. No one spoke her name.

Behind her, Mooncrest turned away.

Elmyra drew a shaky breath and stepped forward into the forest.

She did not look back.

Because somewhere beneath the pain, beneath the rejection and silence, something deep within her had awakened.

And it was watching.

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