His Luna, His Ruin

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Summary

Fated mates are supposed to save each other. Alan destroyed her instead. Julia never asked for a mate—especially not Alpha Alan, the cold, ruthless leader of Evernight Pack. Their bond was supposed to be destiny, a blessing whispered by the moon. But one tragic night changes everything. When Julia accidentally injures his sister while trying to save a child, Alan’s love turns to fury. He burns her world to the ground. Her clan is wiped out. Her parents are imprisoned. And Julia? She becomes the Alpha’s captive—his maid, his possession… his bed-warmer. She begs him to listen. He refuses. She carries his child. He demands she abort it. He betrays her with his mistress, Olivia, shattering the last piece of her heart. But when the truth finally comes out—and Alan discovers Julia’s innocence—his world collapses. Too late. Julia leaves him, broken and bleeding, to build her own pack. Stronger. Colder. Unclaimed. And when she finds a second-chance mate—George, a powerful, protective Alpha—Alan spirals into madness. His Luna is slipping away. His soul is dying. His ruin is inevitable. Because the greatest curse of a fated mate bond is this: The one who hurts his Luna… destroys himself.

Status
Complete
Chapters
34
Rating
n/a
Age Rating
18+

Fated Bonds and Moonlit Secrets

The full moon hung low in the sky, spilling silver light across the cobblestone streets and dense woods surrounding the small town of Evernight. Shadows stretched like dark fingers, dancing across rooftops and alleyways, and the night was alive with whispers only those attuned to the wild could hear. Julia felt it immediately — the pulse of the world, the subtle rustle of unseen creatures, and the magnetic pull of a presence that made her heart thrum like a drum in her chest.

Alan.

Even before she turned her head, Julia knew he was there. His scent carried through the night, sharp and commanding, with the faintest undertone of warmth that spoke directly to her soul. He was the Alpha of the Evernight pack, a man whose strength and power were unrivaled, and she, whether she admitted it or not, was bound to him by fate — by blood, by instinct, by something older and more primal than either of them fully understood.

She quickened her pace along the quiet street, boots clicking against the stones, her senses straining. Every small sound made her alert: the whisper of wind through the trees, the distant hoot of an owl, the creak of a sign swaying in the night air. Her wolf instincts flared gently, reminding her that she was not just human — that she was more than she appeared. Her heartbeat matched the rhythm of the forest, and every fiber of her being pulsed with heightened awareness.

A soft growl rumbled in her chest, involuntary, as she inhaled the scent of him more clearly. Her fated mate was close — closer than she realized. The bond was subtle tonight, teasing her with whispers of desire, of connection, and of danger. Julia’s pulse quickened, and a shiver ran down her spine. The sensation was both thrilling and terrifying, a reminder that Alan was always near, watching, and waiting.

Across the square, Alan stood tall under the moonlight, his amber eyes gleaming with intensity. The pack around him, loyal and obedient, shifted slightly, sensing the tension in the air. He had felt her presence the moment she entered the streets. His senses as an Alpha were unmatched — every heartbeat, every breath, every subtle scent marked her as his, even if neither of them had yet fully acted on the pull that drew them together.

Julia paused at the edge of the fountain in the town square, brushing a strand of hair behind her ear. Her gaze swept over the buildings, over the trees lining the outskirts of the town, and then settled on the forest beyond, where shadows moved with a life of their own. Her instincts told her something was coming — something she couldn’t yet name. She swallowed the lump in her throat, trying to steady the wild excitement that churned in her chest.

Alan moved through the night with the silent authority of a predator. Every step he took exuded control, power, and danger. The moonlight glinted off the edges of his dark hair, the contours of his jaw, the commanding line of his shoulders. He was the kind of man who dominated every space he entered, every pack member who followed him, every person who dared to challenge him. And yet… he was hers. Fated to her. Bound by something no words could describe.

Their eyes met across the square, and Julia felt the familiar pull in her chest, the magnetic tug that had drawn them together since they first met. She had tried to resist it once, in the early days when she thought she could walk her own path. But instinct, fate, and the blood that coursed through her veins reminded her that she was never truly free of him.

A voice from behind startled her, snapping her out of her reverie. “You’re late.”

It was Marla, her best friend, human, oblivious to the supernatural undercurrent that pulsed through the town. “I know,” Julia said, forcing a smile. “Traffic, you know.” Her voice was steady, but her senses remained alert. Something was off — she could feel it in the air, in the subtle vibrations of the ground, in the way the wind whispered through the leaves.

Marla frowned, glancing at her. “You’ve been… distracted lately. More than usual.”

Julia laughed softly, masking the truth. “Just thinking about exams. You know how it is.” But as Marla chattered on about mundane things, Julia’s attention drifted back to the forest. The moonlight painted silver streaks across the trunks of the trees, and she felt it again — the pull of Alan, the fated bond, the whisper of wolf instincts that urged her to move, to run, to fight.

A rustle in the shadows made her turn sharply. Her heart jumped. Her wolf instincts flared for the first time tonight, reminding her that she was a predator, not just prey. But it was not danger that approached. It was him. Alan stepped silently from the edge of the forest, his presence magnetic, overwhelming. The pack members behind him faded into the background; the night itself seemed to bend around him.

“You feel it too,” he said, voice low and rough, carrying the power of the Alpha. It was not a question. It was a statement, a claim, a reminder.

Julia’s breath caught. “Feel what?” she asked, though she already knew. She could feel the pull of their bond, the invisible tether that connected them across space and time. Her wolf instincts screamed for recognition, for submission, for something she could not yet name.

Alan’s eyes softened slightly, though the danger in them never fully dissipated. “The bond,” he said. “It’s stronger tonight. The moon… it calls to us both.”

Julia swallowed hard, trying to steady herself. Her instincts wanted to run to him, to fall into him, to let herself be claimed. But her mind argued — she was independent, she was capable, she had her own life. And yet, every fiber of her body ached with longing, with recognition, with the undeniable truth that she was not whole without him.

The wind shifted, carrying the scent of the forest, the distant cries of nocturnal creatures, and the faintest trace of danger. Julia’s ears twitched, her nostrils flaring slightly. The night was alive, and she could feel it — the thrill, the danger, the pull of the wild. And beneath it all, the heartbeat of her fated mate, steady, commanding, impossible to ignore.

Alan stepped closer, closing the distance between them with the quiet confidence of a predator. Julia’s wolf instincts flared, her body responding even as her mind protested. The bond thrummed through her, a constant reminder of what was and what could be, a force older than anything she had ever known.

“You can’t hide from it,” he murmured, his voice brushing against her ear like a whispered warning. “Not from me. Not from the bond. Not from what we are meant to be.”

Julia’s heart raced. Her pulse echoed in her ears. She wanted to argue, to push him away, to deny the truth that every instinct screamed. But she couldn’t. Not fully. Not tonight.

The moon hung heavy and bright above them, casting silver light over the square. Shadows flickered, wind whispered, and the night waited. The bond between them thrummed like a living thing, a promise of passion, danger, and the trials to come. And somewhere deep in the shadows, fate watched and waited, knowing that this was only the beginning.

The night deepened around Ever night as Julia stepped out of the small college library, hugging her books close to her chest. It was late—later than she intended. The moon sat heavy in the sky, a glowing, watchful eye that made her wolf stir restlessly beneath her skin.

Her boots clicked softly against the path, echoing in the quiet. The small town slept early, but the woods surrounding the streets never did. Crickets sang; branches rustled; somewhere far off, a wolf howled into the silver night.

Julia inhaled the cool air. Her senses sharpened, expanding outward like invisible threads. She could smell pine, damp earth, and faintly—very faintly—the scent of a familiar Alpha.

Alan.The bond tugged, gentle but persistent, brushing against her heart with a mix of warmth and warning.

“Not tonight,” she whispered to herself, shaking her head. The connection was always strongest on full moons. It made her nervous—made her wolf too aware, too alert, too hungry for someone she wasn’t ready to accept.

But tonight, something else moved beneath the surface of her instincts. A prickling. A signal. A warning.

Danger.

Julia slowed, her eyes narrowing as she reached the narrow lane leading toward the forest shortcut. Her wolf bristled, ears perking inwardly, claws pressing beneath her fingertips though she remained in human form.

A sound—small, frightened.A whimper.

Her brows drew together. Then she heard it clearly—the harsh laughter of grown men, the shifting of feet, the sharp intake of breath from someone small.

Julia’s heart slammed against her ribs.

Without thinking, she dropped her books and bolted.

The smell hit her first—sweat, alcohol, aggression—and then she saw them. Three hulking men cornering a tiny girl who couldn’t have been older than ten. The child shook violently, her thin arms trying to cover her head while one of the men grabbed her wrist.

“You little brat,” he hissed. “Think you can hide? Think we won’t find you?”

Julia’s blood boiled. A roar threatened to tear from her throat. Every instinct inside her—the wolf, the protector, the Luna she didn’t yet know she would become—flared like wildfire.

“Hey!” she shouted, her voice slicing through the night. “Let her go!”

The men whipped around. The tallest sneered. “Look what we have here, boys. Another one.”

Julia didn’t wait for them to come closer.

She grabbed the long wooden stick lying by the roadside—probably fallen from a fence—and tightened her grip. Her heart pounded, breath fast, but her mind locked into focus. Her wolf surged, muscles tightening, senses sharpening.

“Step away from her,” she warned, her voice deeper, edged with a growl she couldn’t hide.

The men laughed.

Then one lunged.

Julia swung the stick with full force—fueled by panic, instinct, and the need to protect. Time stretched thin. Her eyes locked on the attacker, her aim meant for his arm—

—but the girl moved.

A blur of small motion. A shift. A step she wasn’t supposed to take.

The stick connected with a sickening crack.

Not with the man.But with the girl.

The child let out a strangled cry before collapsing to the ground.

Julia’s entire world stopped.

“No. No, no, no…” She dropped the stick, falling to her knees beside the girl. “Please, open your eyes. Please—”

The child didn’t move.

The hooligans, realizing trouble was bigger than they wanted, cursed under their breath and scattered into the trees.

Julia didn’t even glance at them.

Her trembling hands hovered uselessly over the unconscious girl’s shoulder. She didn’t dare touch her. Tears blurred her vision.

“I didn’t mean to… I was trying to help…”

Her voice cracked.

A growl broke through the forest.Deep. Dangerous. Alpha-deep.

Julia froze.

The scent hit her first: power, authority, fury simmering hot enough to burn the night itself.

Alan.

He emerged from the trees like a creature carved from shadow and moonlight. His amber eyes glowed—literally glowed—with rage and fear. His wolf was right beneath the surface, barely restrained.

And then he saw the small body on the ground.

His world stopped.Just as hers had.

“Mary…” His voice shattered. He dropped to his knees, lifting the unconscious girl—his sister—into his arms.

Julia’s breath hitched.

Mary.The innocent child she had been trying to save.The one she had struck.

Alan’s trembling fingers brushed Mary’s hair back. His entire body shook with something that made the air vibrate.

Then his eyes slowly, dangerously, lifted to Julia.

“Explain,” he growled, voice deepened by his wolf, vibrating with raw fury.

Julia’s own wolf whimpered inside her. Her throat tightened painfully.

“I—I didn’t mean to. Alan, listen to me, please. Some men were attacking her. I was trying to protect her, I swear—”

But Alan stood.And his fury rose like a storm.

“You hurt her.“His voice dropped to a deadly whisper.“You touched my sister.”

“I didn’t mean to,” she pleaded, stepping forward. “Please just—”

“Don’t take another step,” he snarled. The ground itself seemed to vibrate. “Do you have any idea what you’ve done?”

His aura exploded outward—Alpha dominance so sharp it stole her breath. Julia staggered back, knees nearly buckling.

She reached out instinctively. “Alan, she needs help. Let me—”

“Touch her,” he growled, “and I’ll break your hands.”

Julia recoiled as though burned.

Alan’s wolf was raging. His scent was fury and heartbreak blended into something animalistic. Something terrifying. His jaw clenched so tight she thought it might crack.

“You were supposed to be her Luna,” he whispered, voice shaking. “Her protector. My mate.”

Julia’s heart cracked at the pain in his tone.

“Alan, please. I—”

“Enough.“The word thundered.The air stilled.

He cradled Mary closer, his arms trembling. His expression hardened into stone, into something colder than she had ever seen in him.

“I swear to the moon, Julia,” he said, voice low, deadly calm, “I will make you feel every ounce of the pain you caused tonight.”

Tears streamed down her cheeks. “Alan, please—”

“You’re finished,” he spat. “Your clan. Your family. Your life.”

Julia’s stomach dropped.

“Don’t say that,” she whispered. “You know I would never hurt her.”

But Alan had already turned.His wolf surged beneath his skin.His mind closed off.

His heartbreak had already turned to vengeance.

He walked away with Mary in his arms, his aura ripping through the air like a blade. The shadows swallowed him whole.

Julia remained frozen, the moon staring down at her like a judge.

Her hands trembled.Her wolf cried inside her chest.Her heart felt like it had collapsed into dust.

Her fate as a Luna…just died.

And something darker began to rise in its place.