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ASHES OF THE LUNA QUEEN
ASHES OF THE LUNA QUEEN
Author: Wonderful65

Chapter 1 – The Return

Author: Wonderful65
last update Last Updated: 2025-06-16 22:53:05

The moon hung low over the forest, cloaking the trees in silver light. A quiet breeze whispered through the leaves, carrying with it a scent that made Aria’s heart stumble in her chest. It wasn’t the crisp pine or the musky undertone of wolf fur she was used to. It was something new, something that shouldn’t have been there.

She stood on the balcony of the Alpha’s estate, her bare feet chilled against the stone, her long silver-blonde hair stirring gently in the wind. Her senses had sharpened over the years, being Luna demanded nothing less, but no amount of experience could prepare her for the gut-deep instinct clawing at her now.

He was back.

Kaelen.

Her mate. Her husband. Her Alpha.

She closed her eyes, willing her heart to still. It had been nearly three years since he had left on that mission across the western territories, longer than he’d promised. He had sent word when he could, vague messages of shifting alliances and rogue attacks, but the silence that followed had stretched into something colder, heavier. Something like abandonment.

She’d ruled the pack in his absence. She had held every bond together, led warriors into battle, soothed grieving mothers, and welcomed new pups into the world. They called her Luna Queen behind closed doors. A title earned, not inherited.

And now he was returning, unannounced.

A knock echoed from behind her.

“Luna,” said Elias, the Beta, stepping onto the balcony. His gaze was unreadable. “He’s arrived.”

Aria turned, trying to keep her breath steady. “Is he well?”

“He is.” Elias hesitated. “But… he didn’t come alone.”

A chill ran down her spine. “Who?”

Elias shifted uncomfortably, eyes darting to the forest beyond the estate.

“A woman. She’s… she’s his fated mate.”

The words crashed over her like a tidal wave, freezing the air in her lungs. Aria blinked. Her heart beat once, hard, then seemed to stop.

“That’s not possible.” Her voice cracked.

Elias looked away. “He asked to speak with you. Alone.”

Of course he did.

Aria straightened her spine. “Have them wait in the main hall.”

“Yes, Luna.”

He left her there with the wind and the moonlight and the echo of betrayal still hanging in the air.

Kaelen stood by the fireplace, just as he had the night before he left, like nothing had changed. But everything had. His dark hair was longer, his jaw sharper, his presence still commanding. Yet Aria no longer felt warmth bloom in her chest when she looked at him. Only questions.

Then her eyes found the woman at his side.

She was beautiful. Ethereal, even. Her eyes were a shade of violet that didn't belong in this world. Her skin pale, her aura strange. There was a hum around her, something unnatural, though no one else seemed to notice.

Kaelen took a step toward Aria. “Aria”

“You should have written,” she said coldly. “Or sent word before arriving with a stranger. I am still Luna of this pack.”

“I know. You’ve done… incredibly.” His voice was hoarse. “But I didn’t know how to say it in a letter.”

Aria looked at the woman again. “You said she’s your fated?”

He nodded, guilt flickering across his features. “I didn’t expect it. We crossed paths while I was tracking rogue movements in the Bloodfang territory. As soon as I saw her, I knew.”

Aria swallowed back the storm rising in her throat.

“And what does that mean for me, Kaelen?”

His eyes met hers. “Nothing changes”

“Don’t insult me.” Her voice cracked like a whip.

He stepped closer. “Listen, Aria. I still love you. I chose you. I meant every word. That hasn’t changed.”

She stared at him in disbelief. “But now fate gave you a better offer?”

“It’s not like that.”

“Oh?” She laughed bitterly. “Because from where I stand, it looks exactly like that.”

“I brought her here to integrate into the pack,” Kaelen said. “That’s all. You and I, our bond, our work, it doesn’t have to end.”

Aria stepped back, wounded pride wrapped tightly around her spine. “You think I’ll share you? That I’ll stand by while your so-called fated mate takes my place in your heart, and in this pack?”

“No one’s taking your place,” Kaelen said. “I still need you, Aria. The pack needs you.”

She felt the sting of tears but refused to let them fall. “Don’t confuse needing me with loving me.”

The violet-eyed woman remained silent. Watching. As if she knew exactly what her presence meant.

“I gave you everything,” Aria whispered. “I held this pack together with bloody hands while you were gone. I trusted you. And now you come back and ask me to be less?”

Kaelen looked away, jaw clenched.

Aria turned. “You’ll both stay in the guest wing. Not the Alpha quarters.”

“Aria”

She didn’t look back. “Until the Elders decide how to address this… complication, I expect full compliance. I will not be disrespected in my own home.”

That night, Aria couldn’t sleep. She paced her chambers like a caged animal, rage simmering under her skin. She wanted to scream. To shift. To run until her paws bled. Instead, she walked.

The moon was full now, bathing the forest in a haunted glow. She passed warriors on night patrol, all of them bowing their heads respectfully, though their eyes were filled with unease. Rumors would spread by morning, if they hadn’t already.

She found herself at the sacred glade, the heart of the territory, where the oldest trees whispered to those who listened. Here, she knelt in the grass and let herself feel it, everything.

Betrayal. Humiliation. Grief.

It rolled over her in waves until she was gasping.

“I gave him everything,” she said to the wind. “Why wasn’t that enough?”

The trees gave no answer.

And then, a scent, foreign and sharp, curled through the glade.

Aria stood, heart suddenly alert. She wasn’t alone.

A figure emerged from the shadows. Not Kaelen. Not Serenya. A man she didn’t know.

His presence was unsettling. His eyes were pale and reflective, like moonstone. A faint, crackling energy danced around him, as if lightning slept beneath his skin.

“You shouldn’t be here,” Aria said, stepping between him and the glade’s heart.

The stranger tilted his head. “Neither should she.”

“What are you talking about?”

“She who walks with stolen fate. She does not belong.”

Aria’s spine tingled. “Serenya?”

He smiled, but it didn’t reach his eyes. “She was sent. Not chosen.”

“Sent by who?”

But the man was already walking backward into the shadows.

Before he vanished, he spoke once more.

“You’ll burn before you rise. But you will rise, Luna.”

And then he was gone. By dawn, Aria had made her decision. She walked into the war council chamber and faced the Elders, Kaelen, and Serenya. The pack’s inner circle sat in silence as she spoke.

“This territory is under my protection,” she said. “But if my presence is no longer respected, then I will relinquish my role.”

Gasps echoed.

Kaelen stepped forward. “Aria, don’t”

“I am not abandoning my people,” she continued. “But I will not compete for my place. You wanted fate to decide. Let it.”

She removed the Luna crest from her neck and set it on the table.

“I will return when you remember who I am.”

And with that, Aria Virelle, once Luna of the Nightwind Pack, walked out the door, into exile, into freedom, and into a future that would either destroy her… or make her rise.

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