How could I, when every time I closed my eyes, I saw Damien’s face twisted with disgust? Heard his words echoing in my mind like a death sentence. Wolfless. Weak. Worthless.
The stone floor of the Omega Quarters was cold and unforgiving beneath me. I’d given up trying to find a comfortable position hours ago. Now I just sat with my back against the wall, staring at the sliver of moonlight that crept through the narrow window high above.
Three days. I had three days to leave the only home I’d ever known.
The thought should have terrified me, but all I felt was numb. The pain of the broken mate bond had faded to a dull, persistent ache in my chest, like a wound that would never fully heal. Physical pain I could handle. It was the emotional devastation that threatened to swallow me whole.
A key turned in the lock, and I tensed. Dawn had barely broken; I could see the first hints of pink in the sky through my tiny window. Who would come for me this early?
The door swung open, and a figure stepped inside. Not a guard. Vanessa.
Of course, it was Vanessa.
She looked immaculate as always, her blonde hair perfectly styled despite the early hour. Her green eyes swept over me with undisguised satisfaction as she took in my disheveled appearance, wrinkled white dress, tangled hair, and tear-stained face.
“Well, well,” she said, her voice dripping with false sweetness. “How the mighty have fallen. Oh, wait, you were never mighty, were you? Just a delusional little orphan who thought she could actually become Luna.”
I didn’t respond. Didn’t give her the satisfaction of seeing how her words cut.
She circled the small room like a predator stalking wounded prey. “I wanted to come personally to make sure you understood something, Aria. Damien was always mine. Always. You were just… a distraction. A placeholder until I was old enough for him to claim me properly.”
“Is that what you tell yourself?” I finally spoke, my voice hoarse from crying. “That he chose you because he wanted you, and not because I didn’t have a wolf?”
Her eyes flashed with anger. “He chose me because I’m everything you’ll never be. Strong. Powerful. Worthy.” She leaned closer, her voice dropping to a venomous whisper. “And just between us? He never loved you. Not even a little. Every time he kissed you, he was thinking of me.”
The words should have hurt. Maybe they would have, yesterday. But I’d already been broken so thoroughly that there wasn’t much left to shatter.
“Are you done?” I asked tiredly. “Because if you’re just here to gloat, you can leave. You won. Congratulations.”
Vanessa straightened, smoothing her dress. “Oh, I’m not done. I wanted to make sure you understood that if you try to come back, contact Damien, or interfere with our lives, there will be consequences. Severe ones.”
“I wouldn’t dream of it,” I said flatly. “You can have him. You deserve each other.”
For a moment, uncertainty flickered across her perfect features. She’d expected me to cry, to beg, to fight. My indifference seemed to unsettle her more than tears ever could.
“Three days, Aria,” she said, recovering her composure. “And then you’re gone forever. Good riddance to wolfless trash.”
She swept out of the room, slamming the door behind her. I heard the lock click, sealing me back into my cage.
I should have felt angry. Defeated. Something. Instead, I felt… empty.
Vanessa was right about one thing: I would be gone in three days. But I wouldn’t be broken. I wouldn’t let them win.
I pulled out my mother’s necklace again, studying the crescent moon pendant in the growing morning light. It looked ordinary now, no trace of the mysterious glow from last night. Had I imagined it? Some desperate hallucination born of pain and desperation?
“Mom,” I whispered to the pendant, to the memory of a woman I barely remembered. “If you can hear me, wherever you are… I need help. I need to understand why this is happening. Why I’m like this.”
The pendant remained cold and still in my palm. No glow. No answers. Just a piece of silver jewelry and a whole lot of questions.
The morning dragged on in silence. I counted the stones in the wall, traced patterns in the dust on the floor, and did anything to keep my mind occupied. Around midday, the food slot opened again, and another tray appeared. More bread, some dried meat, water.
This time, there was a note tucked under the bread.
I grabbed it quickly, unfolding the small piece of paper with trembling fingers.
The head omega wants to see you. Tonight. Knock three times on the door when the moon is high. Someone will come.
I stared at the note, my heart racing. The head omega, Sarah, had always been kind to me. She’d been my mother’s friend before the accident that killed my parents. But why would she risk coming to see me now? And who was this “friend” helping us?
I burned the note in the small candle they’d left me, watching the paper curl and blacken until nothing remained but ash. Whatever Sarah wanted to tell me, it was clearly meant to be secret.
The day crawled by agonizingly slowly. I tried to rest, to conserve my energy, but anxiety kept me alert. Finally, night fell.
I waited until the moon rose high in the sky, just as the note had instructed. Then I approached the door and knocked three times.
For a long moment, nothing happened. Then I heard footsteps approaching—light, quick, not the heavy tread of guards.
The lock clicked. The door opened a crack.
“Quickly,” a voice hissed. I recognized it, Mira, the girl who’d brought me food earlier. “You have ten minutes. Go.”
I slipped through the door into the dark hallway. Mira grabbed my arm and pulled me deeper into the omega quarters, away from the guard station. We moved through a maze of narrow corridors until we reached a small room in the back.
Sarah sat waiting for me, her weathered face drawn with worry. At sixty, she was one of the oldest wolves in the pack, and one of the few who still remembered my parents clearly.
“Aria, child,” she said, standing to embrace me. I nearly broke at the kindness in her touch, the first gentle contact I’d had since the rejection. “I’m so sorry. So, so sorry.”
“Sarah, what’s happening?” I asked, pulling back to look at her. “Why did you want to see me?”
She glanced at Mira, who stood guard by the door, then pulled me down to sit beside her. “Because there are things you need to know. Things about your parents. About who you really are.”
My breath caught. “What do you mean?”
“Your mother was my dearest friend,” Sarah began, her eyes distant with memory. “And she made me promise something before she died. She made me swear that if anything happened to her, I would tell you the truth when the time was right.”
Sarah reached out and gently lifted my mother’s necklace, studying the crescent moon pendant. “About this. About why you don’t have a wolf. About who your family really was.”
My pulse thundered in my ears. “I don’t understand.”
“Aria, your parents weren’t ordinary pack wolves. Your mother came from a very old, very powerful bloodline. The Silvermoon line was once royalty among werewolves. But your family was hunted, destroyed by enemies who wanted their power.”
I stared at her, my mind reeling. “Royalty? That’s impossible. My parents were just… they were just regular pack members.”
“That’s what they wanted everyone to believe,” Sarah said urgently. “They went into hiding when you were born, changed their names, hid their true nature. They thought they could keep you safe by staying hidden. But they were found anyway.”
“The car accident,” I whispered. “It wasn’t an accident, was it?”
Sarah’s eyes filled with tears. “No, child. They were murdered. And you… You were supposed to die with them. But your mother, in her final moments, cast a spell. A curse, really. She bound your wolf, sealed away your power, to make you appear worthless. Wolfless. So the people who killed her would leave you alone.”
The room spun around me. “A curse? My mother cursed me?”
“To save you,” Sarah insisted, gripping my hands. “Don’t you see? If you had shown any sign of power, of your true heritage, they would have killed you, too. This way, you were beneath notice. Just a tragic orphan, no threat to anyone.”
“But if I’m cursed, how do I break it?” I asked desperately. “Is there a way?”
Sarah pulled something from her pocket, a small, worn leather journal. “Your mother left this with me. She said that when you were old enough and ready, you would need it. I think… I think now is the time.”
I took the journal with shaking hands. The leather was soft with age, the pages yellowed. On the cover, drawn in fading ink, was a symbol—a crescent moon, just like my pendant.
“What’s in it?” I breathed.
“I don’t know. Your mother spelled it so only you could read it. But Aria…” Sarah’s voice dropped to barely a whisper. “You need to leave. Not because you’re wolfless, but because if the people who killed your parents ever discover you’re still alive and that the curse might be breakable… they’ll come for you.”
“Who? Who would come for me?”
“I don’t know all the details. Your mother was very secretive, very protective. But I know it was someone powerful. Someone within the werewolf world. Someone who’s still out there.”
A knock on the door made us both jump. Mira stuck her head in. “Guards are making rounds. We have to go. Now.”
Sarah pulled me into another fierce hug. “Be safe, Aria. Be smart. And when your wolf finally awakens, remember, you’re not worthless. You never were. You’re a Silvermoon. You’re royalty. And one day, you’ll make them all pay for what they’ve done.”
She pressed something else into my hand, a small pouch heavy with coins. “It’s not much, but it’ll help you get started wherever you go. Now run. Mira will get you back.”
I clutched the journal and the coins to my chest as Mira grabbed my arm and hauled me back through the maze of corridors. We made it back to my cell just as I heard guard boots in the distance.
Mira shoved me inside and locked the door. “Good luck, Aria,” she whispered through the crack. “I hope you find what you’re looking for.”
Then she was gone, and I was alone again.
But not really alone. Not anymore.
I sank to the floor with the journal and opened it, trembling. The pages were blank, completely blank. I flipped through frantically, but there was nothing. No writing, no instructions, just empty parchment.
Disappointment crashed over me until I noticed something. In the moonlight filtering through my window, faint silver letters began to appear on the first page, glowing with the same light as my pendant.
If you’re reading this, then I am gone, and the time has come for you to know the truth. You are not broken, my sweet girl. You are powerful beyond measure. You are the last surviving heir of the Silvermoon Royal Bloodline.
The curse I placed on you was born of love and desperation. I knew they would come for us. I knew we couldn’t escape. So I made you invisible, made you appear so worthless that no one would see the threat you pose.
But curses, my darling, are meant to be broken.
This journal will guide you. It will teach you who you are and how to reclaim your birthright. But you must be patient. You must be strong. And you must trust no one until you know your own power.
The curse will break when you’re ready. When you’re strong enough to handle what you truly are. Until then, stay hidden. Stay safe.
I love you more than the moon loves the stars.
Tears streamed down my face as the words faded from the page, replaced by new ones—instructions, warnings, a map of sorts.
I was cursed. Hidden. Protected.
And when that curse broke, when my wolf finally emerged, I would be powerful.
Damien had rejected me, thinking I was nothing. The pack had exiled me, believing I was weak.
They had no idea what they’d just set free.
I clutched the journal to my chest and smiled through my tears. It wasn’t a happy smile. It was something darker. Hungrier.
Three days until I had to leave.
Three days until my new life began.
And one day, maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, but one day, I would return.
Not as the powerless, wolfless girl they’d thrown away.