
Chapter 1 of Unveiling the Lycan Princess
The morning light filtered through my bedroom curtains like a mockery of hope, casting shadows across the Luna crown that had been waiting on my dresser for eight failed ceremonies. I traced my fingers along its silver edges, each delicate moonstone a reminder of promises unkept, dreams deferred.
Today was supposed to be different. Today was supposed to be the ninth time—the final time—that Matteo Reed, Alpha of Shadowpine Pack, would finally claim me as his Luna.
I caught my reflection in the mirror, my hand unconsciously moving to my bare neck. The skin there felt cold, unmarked by the mate bite that should have claimed me years ago. Other she-wolves my age already wore their marks with pride, their bonds complete and unbreakable. But here I was, still waiting, still hoping, still believing that this time would be different.
My wolf stirred restlessly in the depths of my consciousness—a presence I could barely feel, unnamed and weak. She had never fully emerged, never spoken to me the way other wolves communed with their human halves. The pack healers called me a Late Bloomer, said my wolf would surface when the time was right. But at twenty-four, I was beginning to wonder if 'right' would ever come.
"Today," I whispered to my reflection, lifting the crown with trembling hands. "Today he'll mark me. Today we'll finally be complete."
The crown felt heavier than it should, weighted with the expectations of nine ceremonies, nine white dresses hanging unworn in my closet, nine cakes that had gone uneaten. But I pushed the doubt away. Matteo loved me. He'd told me so countless times. The delays weren't his fault—pack business, territorial disputes, the demands of being an Alpha. I understood. I always understood.
I set the crown carefully on my head, adjusting it until it sat perfectly. The woman in the mirror looked back at me with hollow eyes, but I forced a smile. Today would be different.
The sound of heavy footsteps thundering up the pack house stairs shattered the morning silence. My bedroom door burst open without warning, and Matteo stumbled inside, his usually immaculate appearance disheveled and wild. His dark hair stuck up at odd angles, his shirt wrinkled and stained, his eyes wide with panic.
Behind him, Marcus Thompson, his Beta, followed with the same frantic energy, both men breathing hard as if they'd run miles to reach me.
"Aurora!" Matteo's voice cracked with desperation. "Thank the Moon Goddess you're here."
The crown slipped slightly on my head as I turned to face them, my heart already sinking. I knew that look. I'd seen it eight times before, each one preceding another cancellation, another excuse, another reason why our ceremony couldn't proceed.
"What's wrong?" The words came out smaller than I intended, barely a whisper.
Matteo's hands shook as he ran them through his hair. "It's Katherine. She's—" His voice broke, and he had to pause to collect himself. "She's dying, Aurora. She collapsed at Moonridge Pack territory this morning."
Katherine Simpson. The name hit me like a physical blow. Matteo's... friend. The she-wolf he'd been spending increasing amounts of time with, claiming pack alliance business. The one whose scent I'd started detecting on his clothes, whose name made his eyes soften in ways mine never seemed to.
"The pack healer says it's essence drain syndrome," Marcus added, his voice grim. "A rare wolf sickness that attacks the core of a werewolf's power. Without immediate treatment, she'll be dead by nightfall."
My fingers tightened on the crown's edge. "I'm sorry to hear that, but what does this have to do with—"
"She needs an Alpha blood transfusion," Matteo interrupted, his eyes boring into mine with desperate intensity. "The healer ran compatibility tests on every Alpha in the region. You're the only match, Aurora. Your aura signature—it's the only one that can save her."
The words hung in the air between us like a death sentence. I felt something cold and heavy settle in my chest, spreading through my veins like poison.
"You want me to give her my Alpha essence." It wasn't a question.
Matteo dropped to his knees before me, his hands reaching for mine. "Please, Aurora. I'm begging you. Katherine is... she's important to the pack alliance. Her death would destabilize everything we've worked for."
Important to the pack alliance. Not important to him personally, of course. Never that.
I looked down at him, this man I'd given everything to, kneeling on my bedroom floor and begging me to save another woman. The crown suddenly felt like it weighed a thousand pounds.
"And our ceremony?" I asked, though I already knew the answer.
"We'll have to postpone it again. Just until Katherine recovers. You understand, don't you? You always understand."
Something inside me snapped. A sound like breaking glass echoed through my mind, and suddenly I could see everything with crystal clarity. Nine ceremonies. Nine postponements. Nine times I'd swallowed my disappointment and smiled and said I understood.
I understood, all right. I understood that I would always come second. I understood that my needs would always be sacrificed for others. I understood that Matteo would keep taking and taking until there was nothing left of me to give.
Slowly, I removed the crown from my head and set it on the dresser with deliberate care.
"You want my Alpha essence?" My voice was steady now, cold as winter moonlight. "Fine. But this time, it's going to cost you."
Matteo's eyes widened with hope and relief. "Anything, Aurora. Name your price."
I met his gaze directly, feeling something new and terrible unfurling in my chest. "The entire western territory. All of Shadowpine Pack's accumulated resources. And complete severance of our mate bond."
The silence that followed was deafening. Even my dormant wolf seemed to hold her breath.
"If you want my blood to save Katherine Simpson," I continued, my voice growing stronger with each word, "then you can pay for it like any other business transaction. Because that's all this has ever been to you, hasn't it, Matteo? Business."
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