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When My Alpha Used Pack Law to Trap His Luna Novel Cover

When My Alpha Used Pack Law to Trap His Luna

Elara’s world collapses when Alpha Kaelen utilizes a primal pack law to coerce her into a forced soul-binding. Though these traditions are intended to safeguard their species, they now serve as a cage. While Elara resists Kaelen’s suffocating authority, she stumbles upon grim truths regarding their pack’s ancestry. She is caught between her duty and a longing for autonomy. Can she secure her liberty, or will the Luna’s burden crush her soul?
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Chapter 2

I learned the shape of my cage on a Tuesday morning, standing in the kitchen with a kettle in my hand.

The mind-link is supposed to be private between sender and receiver. But sometimes, when an Alpha is angry and not paying attention to the edges of his own broadcast, fragments leak out to wolves who are close enough and bonded enough to catch them. I was bonded to Caleb. I was in the next room. And he was angry.

I heard his voice in my head the way you hear someone shouting through a wall. Muffled. Partial. But enough.

"...made it clear to Silverfang. They understand the terms."

A pause. Beta Reyes answering, quieter, harder to catch.

"Thornridge agreed this morning. Duskhollow took longer, but they came around once I mentioned the trade route."

Another pause.

"No pack within a thousand miles will take her. Not without losing every alliance they have."

I set the kettle down on the burner very carefully. I turned the gas on. I watched the blue ring of flame come up clean and even, and I kept my breathing the same as it had been the moment before.

My wolf, who had been silent for three days, lifted her head inside me. She didn't make a sound. She just listened, the way I was listening.

Silverfang. Thornridge. Duskhollow. Every door I might have walked through. Every wolf I might have called. Closed in forty-eight hours, while I was making tea and sleeping in the guest room and pretending not to hear Cora's footsteps down the hall.

So that was the shape of it.

Not a fence. A wall.

I poured the water over the tea leaves and watched them turn dark. I thought, all right. All right. So we don't go where they expect.

---

Cora moved into my life the way water moves into a low place. Slowly at first. Then all at once.

The first morning I came down to find her in the kitchen, she was wearing one of my aprons. Not Caleb's flannel this time — she'd graduated. The apron was pale yellow with small embroidered bees along the hem, and it had been a housewarming gift from a pack member I'd been kind to during her pregnancy.

Cora was making coffee. She looked up when I walked in and gave me that same waiting smile.

"Morning, Vivian. I made enough for two."

"Three," I said.

She blinked. "Sorry?"

"Three of us live here."

Her smile held. "Right. Of course."

I took a mug down from the cabinet. I poured my own coffee. I did not look at the apron.

I walked past her into the small alcove off the kitchen where I kept my herbs. Dried lavender, valerian root, white willow bark for Caleb's pain. Glass jars I had labeled myself in careful handwriting. The shelf had been mine for five years. Nobody else used it. Nobody else knew what went into the blends.

Three jars had been moved.

Not taken. Just moved. Slid two inches to the left, the lavender now where the chamomile had been, the chamomile sitting where the willow bark belonged. A small thing. A nothing.

A message.

I put each jar back exactly where it belonged and did not say a word.

---

In the garden, she pulled three of my tomato plants out of the bed and replaced them with cut flowers from the market. Tulips. They would be dead in a week.

At pack dinner that Friday, she sat in my chair beside Caleb. I came in late, on purpose, and took the seat across from them at the far end of the table. Caleb's eyes flicked up to me and then down to his plate. Cora cut her steak with small, neat motions.

Nobody at that table said anything. Not Beta Reyes. Not Dex, who had once told me I was the best Luna in a generation. Not Rosalind, who folded her hands in her lap and looked at the centerpiece.

I ate my food. I made polite conversation with the elder on my left about the seasonal patrol rotation. I asked after his grandson.

When I went up to bed, my wolf was very quiet, and very awake.

---

In the morning I made a decision.

I was not going to fight where they could see me. I was not going to argue, not going to weep, not going to give anyone in that house a single reason to think I was anything other than a Luna who had absorbed her lesson and was getting on with her life.

Let them think it. Let all of them think it.

I went back to my duties.

I checked the patrol schedules and signed off on the rotation Beta Reyes had drafted. I visited the pack healer's cottage and dropped off a tincture for the warrior who'd torn his shoulder last week. I sat with three pregnant she-wolves and answered their questions about labor. I attended the moon-cycle meeting and took notes in my neat, even handwriting.

In the evenings, I prepared Caleb's herbal blend exactly as I always had. White willow bark, valerian, a pinch of ginger for the joints. I steeped it for the full eleven minutes. I set it on the side table by his armchair. I did not look at his face when I handed him the cup.

"Thank you," he said the first night, his voice careful.

"Of course," I said.

He drank it. The lines around his eyes eased the way they always did. He looked at me as if he was searching for something, and I gave him nothing to find.

By the third night he had stopped saying thank you. By the fifth he was reading reports while he drank, the cup half-forgotten in his hand. The household exhaled around us. Pack members began to speak to me again at the morning briefings. Cora's smiles grew lazier, less performed — the smiles of a woman who believes the contest is over and the trophy is on its way to the shelf.

Good, I thought. Good.

A wolf in plain sight is a wolf no one watches.

---

And in the margins, in the hours nobody looked at, I started to move.

I took a long walk at dusk along the eastern fence and counted the patrol intervals. Twelve minutes between sweeps on the north quadrant. Eighteen on the southeast, where the terrain was harder. I noted which warriors ran which shifts and which of them carried phones.

I cleaned out my desk drawer one afternoon and burned three letters I would not want anyone reading.

I pulled an old map of the territory from the back of the study and traced the borders with my finger, slowly, the way you trace something you intend to memorize.

Not Silverfang. Not Thornridge. Not Duskhollow.

There was one more pack out there. One Caleb hadn't called. One that had no alliance with Shadowcrest at all, and therefore nothing to lose by talking to me.

Ironvale.

I folded the map back into its envelope. I put it in the drawer. I went downstairs and asked Caleb if he wanted his tea now or after dinner.

He said now.

I brought him the cup, and I smiled.

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