The Moon Goddess Pendant 21
Third Person’s POV
Velda smirked. “I can’t mimic her meekness. But if I were to pretend to be sweet and coo…”
She crossed her arms, forced a sugary grin, and drawled, “Honey…”
She shuddered dramatically. “Ugh, goosebumps! How does she stand being so
fake?”
Ulrik shuddered too, but the act reminded him of Adelaide her gentle voice always firm, her posture straight as a wolf’s pride
flag, never bending to please.
Velda strode onto the boardwalk, her combat boots tapping sharply.
It was a pity they couldn’t keep half her assets, but with Adelaide gone, Velda would be the undisputed Luna.
She no longer had to persuade herself with the title of “secondary mate.”
Ulrik stayed behind, sitting on a lakeside bench.
The parchment he received that afternoon blazed like a laser, piercing through his mental fog.
Memories, buried by battle and ambition, surfaced slowly–ripples on the lake bringing fragments to light.
He remembered the first time he saw Adelaide at a werewolf gathering, standing by a floor–to–ceiling window, conversing with
elders.
When he came to Frostfang to court her, she sat on a leather sofa, twirling her father’s old badge. “I want a mate who honors wolf
traditions—no lovers, no breeders. Can you do that?”
He’d pledged his life to her then, his heart swelling with pure joy.
He recalled the wedding preparations, the emergency orders on the day of their bonding ceremony.
When he said goodbye to Adelaide at the pack borders, the heart–wrenching reluctance he still vividly remembered.
At that time, his mind was filled with the incomplete bonding ceremony–he was supposed to fully mark her in the bedroom, yet all he could do was watch her figure grow smaller in the distance, the white hem of her dress lifted by the airflow, like a silver wolf eager to spread its wings.
Later, as the campaign against the Northern Tribe progressed, many wolf warriors perished.
He didn’t know when his turn would come, and at that moment, he stopped thinking about Adelaide, focusing instead on strategizing with Velda and the wolf warriors on how to defeat the enemy.
He witnessed Velda shift into a massive gray wolf, her claws bared against the Northern Tribe’s wolves.
In that moment, he realized female wolves could be so powerful.
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He began to see Adelaide’s carefully coordinated scarves and handmade cooldes as relics of a parallel world.
On nights in the trenches eating compressed rations, he preferred listening to Velda analyze enemy fortifications, watching her
dagger trace attack routes in the sand, her eyes reflecting determination.
He fell for Velda when she shared her beliefs: female wolves needed no special protection–strength was its own shield
Her confidence, her sharp analysis of battle plans, her unwavering gaze–she was everything Adelaide wasn’t.
Her noble life, he understood, was safeguarded by the blood of wolf warriors.
He conveniently forgot the seven graves in Frostfang’s cemetery, bearing Adelaide’s family names.
Returning to Frostfang, Adelaide walked past the Packhouse.
The pack grounds bore signs of renovation. The Packhouse and the Alpha and Beta residences had all been refitted with new doors, erasing all traces of blood and claw marks.
Even the bloodstains on the walls, those that refused to wash away, had been covered with a coat of whitewash.
Elder Halsey had called in favors from distant clan members to help unload and organize the moving truck. noveldrama
After the bustle died down, Halsey and Adelaide strolled the plaza.
Frostfang used to be lively and bustling, but now it was eerily quiet.
Halsey said, “Frostfang’s yours to rebuild. The Omegas are just the few you brought from Bloodmoon, and the wolf guards are alarmingly few. You need to recruit new members. I can help with the Omegas.”
“Thank you,” Adelaide said. “Jessica and Ivy will handle it.”
“No trouble at all. We’re Davidson kin,” Halsey sighed. “Your father, Alpha Bentley, used to share battle stories. We were so
proud of him. Now, no Davidsons step into the arena.”
Adelaide fell silent. “Honor comes in many forms.”
“Sever ties with the Tenars,” Halsey warned at the pack’s edge.
“I understand.”
“One day, Ulrik will regret this.”
“Maybe,” Adelaide said firmly. “But I don’t care.”
Halsey nodded approvingly and turned to leave Frostfang
Adelaide returned to the Packhouse and tasked Jessica with recruiting new Omegas for the pack, emphasizing the need for careful
selection.
Adelaide still resided in her old house, which bore no traces of renovation.
Since her departure for Bloodmoon, it had stood empty, save for routine cleaning.
The year with Bloodmoon felt like a nightmare.
Had she not become Alpha Ulrik’s Luna, her family’s fate might have been different.
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