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Shadows and Secrets

last update Last Updated: 2025-12-21 01:12:57

Two days.

I had two days left before I had to leave Crescent Moon territory forever. Two days to prepare for a life I couldn’t even begin to imagine.

I spent most of the second day studying my mother’s journal. The pages revealed themselves slowly, only showing me what I was ready to see. So far, I’d learned basic meditation techniques meant to help me “connect with my inner wolf,” which seemed pointless given that my wolf was supposedly locked behind a curse. But the journal insisted I practice anyway.

Trust the process, my mother’s elegant script had read. The curse will break when you’re ready. Not a moment before.

How was I supposed to know when I was ready? What did “ready” even mean?

A sharp knock on my door interrupted my thoughts. I quickly shoved the journal under my thin mattress and stood.

“Aria Silvermoon,” a gruff voice called. “Alpha Steele requests your presence in his office. Now.”

My heart sank. What could the Alpha possibly want with me now? Hadn’t he done enough?

Two guards escorted me through the pack house. I kept my eyes down, ignoring the stares and whispers that followed me through the halls. Everyone knew about my rejection. Everyone had witnessed my humiliation.

The pack house had once felt like home. Now it felt like enemy territory.

Alpha Steele’s office was on the top floor, with windows overlooking the entire pack territory. He sat behind his massive oak desk, fingers steepled, his expression unreadable. Damien stood beside him, and my traitorous heart still skipped a beat at the sight of him despite everything.

I hated myself for it.

“Aria,” Alpha Steele said, his voice formal and cold. “Thank you for coming.”

As if I’d had a choice.

“Alpha,” I acknowledged with a slight bow, keeping my voice neutral.

“I’ve called you here to discuss the terms of your departure.” He pulled out a document and slid it across the desk. “This is a formal agreement. You will sign it before you leave.”

I picked up the paper and scanned its contents. My blood ran cold as I read.

“You want me to sign away all rights to ever return to this territory?” I looked up sharply. “And to agree never to speak of my time here or claim any connection to Crescent Moon Pack?”

“Exactly,” Alpha Steele confirmed. “You’re a liability, Aria. A wolfless member reflects poorly on the pack’s strength. We can’t have you spreading that weakness to other territories.”

“A liability,” I repeated, the words bitter on my tongue. “I’ve lived here my entire life. This is my home.”

“Was your home,” Damien corrected, speaking for the first time. His blue eyes were hard, showing no trace of the boy who used to smile at me. “You don’t belong here anymore. Sign the paper, take the small severance payment we’re offering, and disappear quietly. It’s better for everyone.”

“Better for you, you mean,” I shot back, anger finally breaking through my carefully maintained composure. “Can’t have the embarrassing ex-mate hanging around, can you? Might make people question your judgment.”

Damien’s jaw tightened. “My judgment is fine. I chose strength over weakness. Any Alpha would do the same.”

“Then you’re not the Alpha I thought you were.”

The words hung in the air between us. For just a moment, something flickered in Damien’s eyes—regret? Pain? But it was gone so quickly, I might have imagined it.

“Sign the agreement, Aria,” Alpha Steele commanded, his patience clearly wearing thin. “Or we can make things much more difficult for you.”

I looked at the paper again. Every instinct screamed at me to refuse, to fight this injustice. But what would fighting accomplish? I had no power here, no allies except Sarah and maybe Mira. And both of them could get in serious trouble for helping me.

Sometimes survival meant swallowing your pride.

“I want to add a clause,” I said, meeting Alpha Steele’s eyes steadily.

He raised an eyebrow. “You’re in no position to negotiate.”

“Just one clause. If I sign this, I want it stated that the pack owes me nothing, but I also owe the pack nothing. No debts, no obligations, no ties. We’re completely separate.”

Alpha Steele considered this. “Fine. That’s acceptable.”

He called in his assistant, who added the clause and printed a new version. I read it carefully, making sure there were no hidden traps, then signed my name at the bottom.

Aria Silvermoon.

The name my parents had given me, not knowing it would become a cage.

“You’ll receive your payment at the border,” Alpha Steele said, dismissing me with a wave. “Guards will escort you back.”

“Wait,” Damien said suddenly. Both his father and I looked at him in surprise. “I want a moment alone with her.”

Alpha Steele frowned but nodded. “Five minutes. Then she goes back.”

The guards and Alpha Steele left, closing the door behind them. I stood rigid, waiting for whatever new humiliation Damien had planned.

He didn’t speak immediately. Instead, he walked to the window, staring out at the territory with his back to me. The silence stretched uncomfortably.

“Why?” I finally asked, unable to bear it any longer. “Why ask to speak to me alone if you’re just going to stand there?”

“I wanted to make sure you understood,” he said quietly, still not turning around. “This isn’t personal, Aria. It’s politics. Strategy. An Alpha has to think about the pack’s strength, its reputation.”

“Stop,” I interrupted, my voice shaking with barely controlled fury. “Don’t insult me by pretending this is about pack politics. You rejected me because I embarrassed you. Because you’re so obsessed with appearances that you’d rather have a powerful mate than one who actually loved you.”

“Love isn’t enough!” He spun around, and I was startled to see genuine anguish on his face. “Love doesn’t protect the pack. Love doesn’t win wars or negotiate treaties. I need a Luna who brings strength to my position, not one who weakens it.”

“So you chose Vanessa.”

“I chose what was best for my future,” he corrected. “You’ll understand someday, when you’ve lived in the real world long enough. Not everything is about feelings.”

I laughed bitterly. “You know what’s funny? I actually believed you cared about me. I thought what we had meant something.”

“It did mean something,” he said, and he actually sounded sincere. “You were my first love, Aria. I’ll always remember that. But first loves aren’t meant to last. They’re lessons. Ways to learn what we really need.”

“And what did you learn?” I asked, even though I wasn’t sure I wanted to know the answer.

“That power matters more than sentiment. That an Alpha can’t afford to be weak.” He took a step toward me. “I hope you find somewhere you fit, Aria. Somewhere your… condition… doesn’t matter so much. Maybe among humans, or...”

“Don’t,” I cut him off, my voice ice. “Don’t pretend you care where I end up or what happens to me. You made your choice. Live with it.”

I turned toward the door, desperate to escape before the tears I was holding back started to fall.

“Aria, wait.”

Against my better judgment, I stopped.

“I really do hope you’ll be okay,” Damien said softly. “Despite everything, I never wanted to hurt you.”

I didn’t turn around. “But you did hurt me. You broke me in front of everyone I know. And the worst part? You don’t even have the decency to feel guilty about it.”

I opened the door and walked out without looking back. The guards were waiting to escort me back to my cell, but I barely noticed them. I was numb, operating on autopilot.

Back in the omega quarters, I finally let the tears fall. Not for Damien, I was done crying over him. But for the life I was losing, the home I’d never see again, the girl I used to be who believed in fated mates and happy endings.

That girl was dead now.

Something else was taking her place.

I pulled out my mother’s journal and opened it with trembling hands. New words appeared on the page, glowing silver in the dim light.

My darling girl,

I know you’re hurting. I know the rejection feels like the end of everything. But this pain is necessary. You cannot become who you’re meant to be while chained to people who don’t see your worth.

The curse protects you, but it also teaches you. It forces you to find strength beyond your wolf, power beyond your bloodline. When your wolf finally emerges, you won’t just be powerful, you will be wise. You’ll know the difference between those who love you for what you can give them and those who love you for who you are.

Tomorrow you leave. You step into the unknown. I won’t lie to you, it will be hard. Lonely. Sometimes terrifying.

But you are my daughter. You are a Silvermoon. And we don’t break.

We bend. We learn. We adapt.

And then we rise.

The next pages will show you where to go. Trust them. Trust yourself.

I love you beyond measure.

Mom

The words faded, replaced by a map. It showed Crescent Moon territory and the surrounding lands. A glowing path led north, through the mountains, to a place marked with a silver star.

Lunar Falls, the label read. Sanctuary. Safe haven for the lost and broken. Ask for Elder Vera. Tell her you’re mine.

I traced the path with my finger, memorizing every detail. Lunar Falls. I’d heard whispers of it, a mysterious place where wolves who didn’t fit into traditional pack structures went to find refuge. Rogues, outcasts, those with nowhere else to go.

It would be a two-week journey on foot, through dangerous territory. But it was a destination. A purpose.

Hope.

A soft tapping at my window made me jump. I looked up to see a shadow on the other side of the tiny window; someone was on the roof.

More tapping, more insistent this time.

Carefully, I climbed onto the small bench beneath the window and pushed it open. A rope dropped down, and a moment later, a figure descended.

It was a young man I didn’t recognize, maybe seventeen or eighteen, with dark hair and sharp features. He held a finger to his lips, then pulled out a note.

I unfolded it quickly.

Sarah sent me. Tomorrow night, when they come to escort you to the border, I’ll create a distraction. Use it to grab the bag I’m about to give you and head north immediately. Don’t go to the official border crossing; they’ll be watching. There’s a weak point in the northern fence near the old oak tree. Go through there.

The bag has supplies, money (from Sarah), and a map. Get to Lunar Falls. You’ll be safe there.

Burn this note.

- Marcus

I looked at the boy, Marcus, with new eyes. Why was he helping me?

He must have read the question on my face because he pulled out another small note.

Sarah was kind to me when I had no one. I owe her. And what they did to you was wrong. Not all of us agree with the Alpha’s decision.

I nodded, tears welling in my eyes. There were still good people in this pack. People who saw the injustice, even if they couldn’t speak against it openly.

Marcus pulled up the rope, revealing a sturdy backpack attached to the end. He lowered it to me carefully. I grabbed it and set it on the floor.

He gave me a final nod, then climbed back up the rope and disappeared into the night.

I waited a few minutes, then opened the backpack. Inside I found:

Sturdy traveling clothes (much better than the thin dress I was wearing)

A warm cloak

Dried food and water supplies

A hunting knife

A fire-starting kit

A compass

And wrapped carefully in cloth—a stack of money. More than Sarah’s small pouch. These were serious travel funds.

Beneath it all, I found another note in Sarah’s handwriting.

Aria,

This is everything I could gather without raising suspicion. The money comes from several sources, including pack members who wanted to help but couldn’t do so openly. You’re more loved than you know, child.

You can get to Lunar Falls. Elder Vera is an old friend. She’ll keep you safe and help you discover your true power.

When you’re strong enough, when your wolf emerges, remember: you owe this pack nothing. Not loyalty, not mercy, not forgiveness.

Be the queen you were born to be.

All my love,

Sarah

I clutched the note to my chest, overwhelmed by the kindness of people who risked punishment to help me. Sarah, Mira, Marcus, and others, whom I may never know about.

I wasn’t as alone as I thought.

I burned both notes in the candle flame, watching the paper curl and blacken until nothing remained but ash. Then I carefully packed everything back into the bag and hid it under my mattress with the journal.

Tomorrow night. Tomorrow night, my new life would begin.

I lay down and closed my eyes, but sleep wouldn’t come. My mind raced with plans, possibilities, and fears. What would Lunar Falls be like? Would Elder Vera really help me? What if I couldn’t make it through two weeks of dangerous travel alone?

What if the curse never broke?

No. I couldn’t think like that. My mother had promised the curse would break when I was ready. I just had to trust her. Trust the process. Trust myself.

In the darkness, I felt a strange stirring deep inside me, not my wolf, not yet, but something. A whisper of power, of potential. It was there, buried beneath the curse, waiting.

Soon, I thought. Soon I’ll be free of this place. Free to discover who I really am.

Damien thought he’d broken me. The pack thought I was worthless.

They were all so very, very wrong.

I smiled in the darkness, and it wasn’t a gentle smile.

It was the smile of a girl who had nothing left to lose.

And everything to gain.

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