LOGINElara Moonfall, an abused omega of the Blackmere Pack, is revealed as the fated mate of Alpha Rowen Blackmere during a public ritual. Rowen rejects her, choosing power and pride over fate. After enduring intensified abuse, Elara flees the pack territory. Rowen tracks her down and brings her back, unable to resist the pull of their bond. As Elara’s wolf fully awakens, her rare healing abilities and strength begin to shift pack dynamics. Threats from rogues force her into the center of pack survival. Rowen struggles with guilt and obsession, while Elara resists emotional reconciliation. Through blood, battle, and betrayal, Elara claims her place as Luna, not through submission, but through undeniable power. The Blackmere Pack is transformed by the omega they tried to destroy.
View MoreElara Moonfall woke before the bell rang. She always did. The servant quarters were still dark, the air cold enough to bite through the thin blanket pulled up to her chin. Around her, other omegas slept in uneven breaths, bodies curled tight against the chill. Elara lay still for a moment longer, staring at the wooden beam above her head, counting the cracks she knew by heart. Today would be long.
She swung her legs off the narrow bed and stood quietly, careful not to wake anyone. Her feet touched the stone floor and she hissed softly at the cold. There was no time to linger. If she was late, someone would notice. Someone always noticed when it was her. She washed quickly at the basin, scrubbing her hands until the skin went pink and tender. The water smelled faintly of iron. She braided her hair tight against her scalp and pulled on the same worn dress she wore every day, the fabric thin from years of washing. It hung loose on her, sleeves a little too long, hem brushed by too many floors to count. By the time the bell finally rang, she was already moving through the corridors with a bucket in one hand and a rag in the other. The Blackmere pack house was waking. Doors opened. Voices echoed. Boots struck stone. Elara kept to the edges, slipping past warriors and betas who barely glanced at her unless it was to frown. She started with the training hall. Blood still stained the floor from the night before. Dried and dark, ground into the stone by careless boots. Elara knelt without hesitation and began to scrub. The rough surface bit into her knees through the thin fabric, but she did not slow. A group of young warriors passed behind her, laughing loudly. “Careful,” one said. “You will wear a hole through the floor if you keep scrubbing like that.” Another snorted. “Maybe she is hoping it will swallow her.” Their laughter echoed off the walls. Elara did not look up. She focused on the rhythm. Dip the rag. Scrub. Rinse. Again. The ache in her shoulders settled into a dull, familiar burn. It was easier not to think when her body was busy. Someone kicked her bucket as they passed. Water sloshed across the stone, soaking the hem of her dress. “Watch where you put your things,” a beta said sharply, not slowing his stride. “I am sorry,” Elara murmured automatically, even though she knew it was useless. He did not respond. By the time the hall was clean, her hands were raw and her back throbbed. She carried the bucket down the corridor toward the kitchens, head bowed as she passed a cluster of pack members gathered around the morning fire. She heard her name, spoken softly. “Elara.” “She still has not shifted, has she.” “She is past eighteen.” “Useless, then.” Elara’s steps did not falter. The kitchens were warmer, thick with the smell of bread and meat. She set to work wiping counters, sweeping ash, hauling sacks that strained her arms. A cook frowned at her. “You missed a spot yesterday,” the woman said, pointing at a patch of soot near the hearth. “I will clean it now,” Elara replied. “You should already know better.” Elara nodded and knelt again. No one ever asked why she was slow. No one asked why her wrists sometimes trembled when she lifted heavy things. No one asked about the faint bruises that bloomed and faded along her arms and ribs. She was an omega. That was explanation enough. By midday, she had cleaned the council hall twice and carried water until her shoulders screamed. She slipped out to the courtyard only when she was told to scrub the stone steps leading up to the Alpha house. Her stomach tightened as she approached. The Alpha house loomed above the rest of the pack, stone walls tall and unyielding. Elara rarely came this close. When she did, she kept her eyes down and her movements quick. She knelt on the steps and began to scrub. The door opened. Elara stiffened but did not look up. Rowen Blackmere stepped out into the sunlight. She knew his presence instantly. Everyone did. It was like the air shifted when he was near, pressure settling heavy on her skin. She kept her gaze fixed on the stone beneath her hands, heart beating faster for reasons she did not understand. Rowen paused. Elara felt his eyes on her. Not the quick, dismissive glance she was used to from others. This was different. Lingering. Heavy. It made her shoulders tense. “Leave her,” someone said behind him. “She will finish.” Rowen did not answer. Elara scrubbed harder, her hands stinging as the rough stone scraped against them. She could feel her pulse in her throat. The silence stretched, uncomfortable and thick. Then the door closed. Only after his footsteps faded did Elara allow herself to breathe properly. Her hands shook slightly as she finished the steps. She told herself it was exhaustion. Nothing more. She did not think about the way his gaze had felt like a weight she could not shake. That evening, she ate alone, as she always did. A small portion, eaten quickly before anyone could take it from her. She drank water until the hollow ache in her stomach dulled. When night came, she returned to the servant quarters and curled on her bed, staring at the ceiling again. Tomorrow would be the Moon ritual. She tried not to think about it. The Moon ritual was for those who still hoped. Those who waited for mates, for bonds, for futures that felt real. Elara had stopped hoping years ago, somewhere between her parents dying and the pack deciding she was nothing more than labor. Her wolf had never come. Eighteen had passed in silence. Nineteen too. The pack had whispered at first, then shrugged and moved on. Broken omegas were not rare. They were just inconvenient. Elara turned onto her side and closed her eyes. Sleep came slowly. When it did, it brought heat. Not the fevered kind she remembered from childhood illnesses. This was deeper. Thicker. It coiled beneath her skin, spreading through her chest and down her spine. Her breath hitched. She shifted restlessly, sheets tangling around her legs. Her heart pounded. A strange ache bloomed low in her body, unfamiliar and frightening. She pressed her thighs together, confused and embarrassed even though she was alone. “What is wrong with me,” she whispered into the dark. The heat surged, then faded, leaving her shaking. She lay there long after, staring into nothing, her thoughts scattered and uneasy. Somewhere outside, the Moon climbed higher. Elara did not know it yet, but the floor she had scrubbed clean that morning would soon be stained again. Not with blood. With something far worse. With her name spoken aloud under silver light. With a bond that would shatter her world before she ever learned how to want it. When dawn finally crept through the cracks in the wall, Elara was already awake, heart heavy with a dread she could not explain. She rose quietly and reached for her bucket. The pack would need her. Even if the Moon no longer would.Elara woke to the smell of unfamiliar linen and the steady thud of her own heartbeat. For a moment she did not move. Her body felt heavy, limbs slow and sore, as if she had been dragged through water and left there too long. The ceiling above her was smooth stone, pale and clean, nothing like the cracked boards of the servant quarters. Sunlight spilled through tall windows she had only ever seen from the outside.The Alpha house.The realization landed with a jolt that made her stomach twist. She pushed herself upright too quickly and paid for it when dizziness rushed in. Her head swam. She grabbed the edge of the bed and waited until the room steadied. The sheets slid against her skin, soft and warm, wrong in a way that made her chest tighten. She should not be here. The door opened without warning.Elara’s breath caught. Her shoulders went rigid as Rowen stepped inside. He had changed out of his traveling clothes. He wore a simple dark shirt, sleeves rolled back, his hair loose arou
Elara woke before dawn with her heart racing and her skin damp with sweat. For a moment she lay still, staring at the low ceiling of the servant quarters, listening to the quiet breathing of the other omegas around her. The room smelled of soap and old straw and something faintly metallic, like fear that had soaked into the walls and never left. Her chest ached.Not the sharp, tearing pain from the night of the ritual. This was different. Duller. Constant. Like something inside her had been bruised and left to heal wrong. She rolled onto her side and pressed her fist against her ribs, trying to ground herself. It did not help. The memory rose anyway. The way the square had gone silent. The way everyone had looked at her. The way he had said it. I reject her.Elara squeezed her eyes shut. She did not cry this time. The tears felt used up, scraped dry by hours of silent shaking and muffled sobs. What remained was a hollow, buzzing ache and a single, stubborn thought that would not leave
Rowen did not sleep. He stood at the tall windows of the Alpha house long after the pack had settled, the curtains untouched, the glass cold beneath his palm. The forest stretched out below, dark and watchful. Normally it soothed him. Tonight it felt like accusation. He told himself he had done the right thing.An omega without a wolf could not stand beside an Alpha. Tradition mattered. Stability mattered. The pack had enemies. Weakness invited bloodshed. He repeated those truths like they were law, like they could drown out the other thing beating against his ribs. It did not work. Every time he closed his eyes, he saw her collapse.Not the humiliation, not the whispers. Her face. Shocked, then torn open by pain she had not expected. By pain he had caused. Rowen’s jaw tightened. He straightened and forced himself to breathe slowly, the way he did before battle. In through the nose. Out through the mouth. Control was everything. He had built his rule on it. Still, the bond refused to
The pack square filled before the moon climbed high enough to stain the stones silver. Elara stood at the edge of it, half-hidden behind a column that smelled of old rain and ash. Her hands were raw from scrubbing the kitchens since before dawn. Soap still clung to her skin, sharp and bitter. She flexed her fingers and tried to shake the ache loose. It did not help.Around her, the Blackmere Pack gathered in their best clothes. Warriors with clean boots and polished weapons. Betas laughing too loudly. Omegas pressed together, eyes lowered. She recognized every sound. The scrape of leather. The murmur of anticipation. The faint hum beneath it all, the pull of the Moon ritual that set her nerves on edge. Tonight was not meant for her.She had told herself that over and over. The Moon had already passed her by once. Twice. Three times. Her eighteenth birthday had come and gone without the heat, without the shift, without anything but the usual work and the same hollow looks. People had s
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