LOGINElara’s POV
My living room has been converted into a filming set. We’re currently sitting on the biggest couch in the packhouse, our unused chimney behind us, surrounded by four professional cameras, a lighting rig, and approximately seventeen production staff members who are all walking around my house with intense energy. Everyone has told me about a hundred times what they need from me since they walked into my home. Like they already own me. And now we’re finally shooting the first interview. "Luna Elara," the host starts, leaning forward with overly practiced ease. She has perfect hair, perfect skin, and the whitest teeth I have ever seen. If I hadn’t watched her practice her smile in my mirror for ten minutes straight, I would think she’s a robot. "Are you certain you want a divorce?" I meet the lenses. Four of them, arranged in a slight semicircle, each one a dark and patient eye. I've stood in front of cameras before, but this feels different. They are all out of my control. "Yes, I think it’s the best option for u—" I start to calmly respond. "No. Cut,” Kael demands sharply. I blink and turn to him, just as confused as the host, “Your tone is wrong.” Kael is sitting next to me, currently frowning at me with more than just dissatisfaction. He has been acting like an absolute prick for two days. He’s been completely different, with a lot less patience than normal, snapping at everyone in the house, even his beloved Seraphine. And right now, he looks crazy. The cold detachment he always carries himself with is gone, replaced by nervous anxiety. He’s freaking sweating and twitching, looking like a crackhead desperate for the next hit. I wish I knew what exactly happened two days ago to make him rush everything like this and become so emotionally maladjusted, but of course he hasn’t said anything to me. He would never. "You can’t sound happy," he growls at me, pissed as hell, “I told you to sound angry. This is a fucking reality show. You need more emotion so it feels real and engaging. I told you a million fucking times!” Seraphine rushes closer and once again wipes the sweat off his forehead and fixes his—usually—perfect hair, which looks very flat today. His vibes are so bad, even his hair is misbehaving. And he has the whole house tense as hell… except for me, to be honest. I am not intimidated or shaken. I just feel embarrassed. He has always ignored me and treated me like I’m nothing but an accessory to him, but he has never mistreated me in public. Absolutely not. He’s unraveling right now. If we were a real couple, I would do anything to help him ground himself and stop this crazy behavior. “Sorry,” I murmur, taking a deep breath and hoping my burning face is not too red right now, “I can do it better.” “Please. Stop wasting everyone’s time,” Seraphine snaps, giving me a nasty look and shaking her head when she finally stops fixing his hair, “Ready. Perfect.” Kael’s face softens when he looks up at her, and that finally ignites the fire he wanted from me. “I’m always perfect,” he jokes with her, finally smiling and relaxing just slightly. Then he fucking shoots me a dirty look too, just like Sera, “She’s the problem.” What? How dare he? I’ve been doing everything he asked from me, except give the exact tone he needed me to. So now I’m the problem? Fuck him. There is a quiet sound from my left that is unmistakably a laugh being poorly suppressed. I turn my head. It’s Rowan, watching us from the corner. He schools his face back to neutral approximately two seconds too late. "Alpha," he says, "I think she forgot how it’s like to be on camera. She lost her one talent.” I take a deep breath and try to hold my smile because I should be used to this… and I guess I am. The thing about being Luna Elara Draven in a room full of people who work for Kael is that I am always simultaneously respected—simply because of my title—and disrespected because of everything else. In the eyes of everyone around me, I am an Omega with a good face and a lucky marriage, someone who came from a poor pack and was elevated to a position I have no business holding. Kael is, of course, an entirely different category of person. Alpha. Unmatched in intelligence and strength, perfect in every way, so I am extremely lucky to be standing next to him. That's the general consensus in the Greyhound pack. But right now we’re surrounded by about twenty people who come from the outside and don’t instantly want to bow down to Alpha Kael Draven and suck his dick, so they can realize how rude everyone is being to me. The embarrassment feels unbearable now, and my eyes start watering. Of course, everyone notices. Then one of the guys behind the cameras starts pointing at me and ordering the girl on his right to make sure she catches it. My pain. So they can use it. Because that is the whole point, isn’t it? "I'm ready to try again," I say. Then I take a deep breath and look back at the cameras, "I want a divorce from Alpha Kael Draven more than I want anything in this life. I can’t even bear to sit next to him right now. I’m sick of sharing a bed with him every night and having to be around him and the woman he’s obviously sleeping with behind my back. So, to answer your question, Danielle Drover… yes, I am certain I want to divorce him and dissolve our bond completely." Silence. Everyone in this room can see I actually mean that. Including Kael, who is now staring at me with surprise in his eyes. “Was that good enough for you, dear?” “I guess,” he murmurs, then looks at the host again, who is still staring at us with her mouth open, “Keep going. We don’t have all day.” She recovers wonderfully. “Alpha Kael, how does that make you feel?” He takes a second to get into character and then pretends to be sad. And the crazy thing is… he’s good at it. Kael lowers his head, jaw tightening just enough to look wounded instead of furious. His eyes lose that sharp edge he always carries around like a weapon, softening into something almost vulnerable. If I didn’t know him, I would believe him. “It’s difficult,” he says, voice rough in all the right places, “Obviously. Elara is my wife. My fated mate. I never wanted things to end like this.” I can already imagine the comments online. Poor Alpha Kael. Cold, bitch of a wife humiliates him on television while he fights for his marriage. Meanwhile, this man has barely looked at me for the last five years unless it benefited him. "Next question,” she quickly adds, “What is one thing the other person has done that moved you the most?" "For me, there isn't just one most touching thing,” Kael responds, “Only many warm and ordinary moments that I keep in my heart." I watch the crew from the corner of my eye. The host is nodding and the camera-guy looks satisfied. "I do have one," I say, "Five years ago, when I was severely attacked by public opinion once he announced me as his Luna… he spoke up for me. Defended me and made me feel special.” The room is quiet for a moment, and then it’s filled witht the warmth of an audience that has finally been given something real to hold onto. I can hear it in the small sounds people make, the way attention shifts and settles. I look at my hands. I meant what I said. That is the complicated truth sitting underneath all of this — that Kael has never been a villain in a simple way. He did speak up for me back then, without being asked. "Second question," the host continues, "In your years of marriage, what benefit do you think you have brought to each other?" I open my mouth. "I'll answer first. She’s too slow,” Kael says, lifting his hand to wipe his sweat himself. I simply close my mouth. Alright. "The benefit I've brought her," he continues, "Is a fortune of over ten billion dollars. She has limited education and entered society late, so her understanding of certain things is quite lacking. I am five years older, and as an Alpha, whenever I have time, I guide her, correct her, and help her understand deeper social rules." A pause. "Honestly," he adds, with something that is almost a fond laugh, "I sometimes envy her. If someone had guided me like this when I was younger, I would have been very fortunate." I become aware of how the camera-guy’s expression turns uncomfortable again, and how the host, whose smile has been professionally maintained this whole time, finally does a clear confused look. Kael looks satisfied. He means it well, I think. That is the thing that would make other people angrier than it makes me —he genuinely means it well. In his mind, he has just described a benevolent arrangement. A gift, even. "Luna… what about you?" I consider the question. "None," I say. A beat. "Sorry?" The host blinks in confusion. "Nothing," I say honestly, holding her gaze, "The benefit I've brought him is nothing. He’s always been the one who benefits me and that’s it.” “Got it," she moves us forward with another one of her smiles, "What is the thing you regret the most over your marriage?" Kael shifts into the answer like he was prepared for this one. "Probably that I've spent too much time managing the pack these past five years," he says, with perfectly calibrated emotion. He turns toward me, and the look he gives me is warm in a way that makes something in my chest do a complicated thing I refuse to examine, "There's never really been any conflict between us. The only issue is that I've been too busy. That's also why I joined this show." I scoff and allow myself to show my displeasure to that, shaking my head dramatically. “Darling… don’t be over-dramatic,” he complains, trying to hold my hand. I snath it away. "The thing I regret the most," I say before the host can ask, and I hear my voice come out steady, quieter than usual, "is once kneeling in front of him. Willingly submitting to him.” The words fall into the silence and stay there. I don't elaborate. I don't need to. The image is its own complete sentence, and the room seems to understand that, even without knowing the story behind it. “Last question… do you still love each other?” Danielle asks softly. Kael pauses for exactly the correct amount of time. “With all my heart.” What a wonderful fucking liar. “Now, Elara,” The host continues, everyone’s eyes shift to me, “Do you love him?” “No,” I respond, and I’ve never been more honest before, “I don’t.” To my surprise, Kael looks utterly incredulous, his face turning pale, as if he had never expected my answer.As soon as I see the lake, I know what’s going to happen. When I was young, I was too much of a prude to strip down at the lake back home. And Adrian was always too much of a good guy to make me feel bad about it. So we developed the system of jumping in whatever we were wearing, which was deeply impractical and deeply fun at the same time. And something we did almost every day for a long, long time. Which is why I'm not surprised when Adrian doesn't slow down at all. I have just enough time to take a full breath before we hit the cold-as-fuck water.I go under, feel my feet find the bottom, and push up hard, breaking the surface gasping."Fuck! Oh, god," I let out, which is all I have for a moment, and then I notice two figures running toward us from the bank and have one panicked second before I realize they're production staff with long microphones, sprinting to catch whatever we say. I ignore them completely and turn back to Adrian, who surfaces a second later."Holy shit," he
As soon as the cameras start rolling, Mariah leads me to Adrian’s cabin before going back to work. I knock on the front door, then I stand there for long enough that I start feeling like an idiot, rehearsing reasons to be here in case Paulie answers, but then the door opens and it's Adrian."Hey, Ella," he says, taking a small step back like he wasn't expecting me at all, which he probably wasn't, "What's up?""Not much. I'm bored and I need to just get away for a bit. Want to skip communal breakfast and go somewhere, just us?"I watch his expression move through confusion, intrigue, and then settle into something that looks like genuine delight. His smile starts growing. Slow and unstoppable."Just like back in the day, huh?" he finally asks, and looks over his shoulder once—a quick, guilty glance at his wife, the one he’s totally going to sneak away from—then he steps out and pulls the door shut behind him, "Let's go. Fast."We walk away fast, then faster, and then we're basically
The need to be with Kael is still present the next morning, along with the general discomfort of being pregnant with a baby who needs something I don’t have. I give the need ten minutes of aggressive ignoring while I brush my teeth and it does not go away, and then I give it ten more minutes while I get dressed, but it does nothing. So… that’s when I make the executive decision to simply do what my body and soul both want.Of course Kael is not in the cabin, so I ask our assistant producer to show me where his temporary office is.Once I’m right outside his door, I start second-guessing this executive decision. Because what if he just tells me to leave? What if I’ve walked all this way at almost eight in the morning to be dismissed in under sixty seconds, which would be on-brand for him and devastating for my dignity?But then I think about the kisses. I think about the fact that I was not alone in any of them. He was there, present, involved and wanting it as much as I did. He was
"Alright. I'm going to need everyone to act distracted," the main producer says, then turns to me, "Elara, you need to be a little more emotional than normal, alright? Please."He continues with more instructions for me and once he's done, he counts down on his fingers until the livestream resumes.I take a deep breath. And then I go off on Kael.He helps me by bringing up the comment again and I let myself feel more than I normally would, firing back at him about whatever I can reach for. In the background I can hear Danielle Drover's voice addressing the public from the studio, smooth and reassuring, telling everyone it was a false alarm, just rumors, nothing to worry about, because everything is perfectly fine!Meanwhile, I shove Kael in the chest."—and I'm sick of you!" "Stop acting insane," Kael mutters, low enough that it sounds private, "They're about to resume full broadcast, Elara. Let it go.""No! I hate that you only care about your image and never about my feelings!" I s
My heart is going crazy as I watch people on the screen yelling and fleeing in every direction, but I can't actually see anything happening—no rogues, no visible threat, just the loud chaos of a crowd that has decided something is very wrong and is acting accordingly. It's the fear that spreads fastest, always. The thing itself comes second.Kael is out of his seat before I've fully processed what's happening.He walks straight to the screen as if being physically closer to it will grant him more information, which is not how screens work, but apparently it's an alpha instinct because Adrian does the exact same thing two seconds later. Now they're both standing there, side by side, arms crossed, watching the feed with intense energy. They are clearly very used to being in charge of situations and not being in charge of this one is visibly bothering both of them in identical ways.Beside the screen, the main producer is still murmuring into his earpiece. I watch him carefully, becau
Danielle Drover, the host, finishes her opening segment and works her way through each couple easily. She clearly knows how to make everything feel spontaneous. I answer her questions on autopilot, smile in the right places, and then it's our turn to start talking to the public directly. "Okay," I say, looking at my tablet, "Let's find some good questions." I scroll past an impressive volume of variations of ‘girl, leave him’—someone has written an entire paragraph in the reasons why—and then finally find something worth reading. "Amaia Edwards asks 'Elara, have you two always been this different?'" I look up, "Yes, honestly. We came from very different places, as most of you probably know." Beside me, Kael nods once, like he's approving a motion. So stiff. The comments keep coming and most of them are warm toward me and increasingly creative (mean) about Kael, and after a while I start to feel a little bad for him. A little. "Guys," I grimace, looking at the camera, "







