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Blood Ties And Moon Fire

Blood Ties And Moon Fire

Seventeen-year-old Aria Moonwell, heir to the strongest werewolf pack, watched her home burn under the claws of vampires. With vengeance burning in her veins, she swears to destroy every bloodsucker who crosses her path. But fate plays its cruelest trick when she meets Luca Blackthorn the rebellious vampire prince she's been trained to hate. He's dangerous, beautiful, and carries a secret that could end both their worlds. Bound by a forbidden alliance and a passion neither can resist, Aria and Luca must fight side by side to uncover a dark force rising from the ashes - an ancient witch whose curse binds their bloodlines in eternal conflict. As war rages and kingdoms fall, they'll learn that love isn't the greatest power... blood is. And when the final moon rises, one of them must die or both will be reborn as monsters. 🔥 Love. Power. Revenge. Under the Blood Moon, nothing stays pure not even love.
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Chapter 5

The forest still hummed with the echo of their pact. The air was heavy, charged with the strange pulse of magic that had flared when Aria and Luca clasped hands. Hours had passed, yet her skin still tingled where the crescent mark burned faintly against her wrist. The same mark now glowed crimson beneath his glove - proof of the curse, or perhaps the beginning of something far more dangerous. They were bound now. Not by trust, not even by choice  but by blood and something older than both of their worlds. Recap: In the aftermath of the truce, Aria had reluctantly agreed to work with Luca to uncover the truth behind the witch's curse  the same power that destroyed her pack and threatened to consume both vampire and werewolf realms. As dawn crept through the shattered forest, they began their journey toward the borderlands  the place where the ancient war first began, and where, according to Luca, the witch's tomb still slept.The world changed as they moved farther from Moonwell territory. The air turned colder, the trees darker, the sky a deeper shade of iron.Aria kept her distance, always walking a few paces behind him, her hand never far from the hilt of her blade. She told herself it was caution. It wasn't. It was control. Because the longer she watched him move  the quiet confidence, the deliberate grace the harder it became to remember that he was the enemy.Luca broke the silence first. "You've been glaring at the back of my head for the last hour." "Maybe I'm imagining where I'd stick my knife."He glanced over his shoulder, a crooked smile tugging at his lips. "Charming." "I wasn't trying to be." "I know," he said, voice low, "that's why it works." Aria rolled her eyes and quickened her pace. The nerve of him  a vampire prince acting as if centuries of hatred were some kind of joke. But she couldn't deny that there was something disarming about him. Not the way he looked  though his beauty was infuriating  but the way he didn't act like the monster she expected.They reached a ridge overlooking the valley below. Ruins stretched across the land  remnants of a forgotten war. Broken stone towers pierced the fog, and blackened banners fluttered weakly in the wind. "The Blood Citadel," Luca said. "Once the seat of my ancestors. Now it's a graveyard." Aria studied the ruins. "And you want to go in there?" "It's the only place left where we might find her sigil  the mark of the witch. If I'm right, it'll explain why our bloodlines were bound.""And if you're wrong?"He turned to her, eyes dark as the storming clouds. "Then neither of us leaves alive." They reached the outskirts of the citadel as night fell. Shadows clung to the stones like smoke. The gates, twisted and half-buried in vines, opened with a mournful groan. Aria stepped carefully, her senses alert. Every sound  the drip of water, the scrape of metal  felt amplified. Luca led the way, his movements silent, almost too graceful. Inside the grand hall, moonlight filtered through the shattered ceiling, illuminating carvings along the walls scenes of battle, betrayal, and sacrifice.Aria paused before a mural. It showed a woman cloaked in flame, her hands outstretched as wolves and vampires alike bowed at her feet. "The Blood Witch," Luca murmured beside her. "Selene." "You said she cursed our bloodlines," Aria whispered. "Why?" "Because love betrayed her." His tone was bitter. "She loved a wolf a prince, like you loved your pack. When he chose his people over her, she turned her rage into a curse that bound every generation after them." Aria stared at the painted flames. "So this war started because of love." Luca's gaze met hers. "Love is the most dangerous weapon of all." Their eyes held longer than they should have. The silence between them shifted  not cold now, but electric. Aria looked away first. "We should keep moving." He didn't argue, but his expression softened, as though he understood something she didn't want him to.They descended into the lower chambers. The air grew thicker, the darkness alive with whispers. The corridor walls were lined with ancient runes, and each step echoed like a warning.Aria's hand brushed the mark on her wrist  it pulsed faintly, glowing in sync with Luca's. "Do you feel that?" she asked. "Yes," he said. "It reacts to the witch's magic. We're close."A door loomed at the end of the hall, carved with the sigil of a crescent moon bleeding into a star. The moment Luca touched it, the mark on his wrist flared. The door groaned open, revealing a circular chamber lit by crimson fire.At its center lay a stone altar  cracked, but still humming with power. "This is it," Luca said. "Her heartstone."Aria approached cautiously. The firelight cast strange shadows across his face. She could see the exhaustion in his eyes, the weariness of someone carrying too many secrets. "What happens if we destroy it?" she asked. He hesitated. "Then the curse might end. Or we might die trying." "You don't sound confident." "I'm not." She studied him for a long moment. "Why risk it?" "Because I'm tired of being a weapon," he said quietly. "I want to choose what I am. Don't you?" Something in his voice cracked her defenses. She stepped closer  too close. "You're not what I expected, vampire." "And you're not what I was told, wolf."They stood inches apart, the fire painting their faces in shades of red and gold. Aria could feel the heat of him, smell the faint metallic scent of his blood. It was wrong. It was dangerous. But it was real.The mark on her wrist pulsed again faster this time, echoing the beat of her heart."Aria," he murmured, her name like a secret.She froze. "Don't." But he didn't move closer, didn't touch her. He only looked and somehow, that was worse."Every time I close my eyes," he said, "I see fire. I hear screams. And now, I see you in the middle of it. I don't know if you're my salvation or my doom."Her throat tightened. "Maybe I'm both."For a heartbeat, the world narrowed to the space between them  breath and silence and the whisper of fate.Then the ground trembled. The fire flared, roaring like a beast awakened.Luca spun toward the altar. "She knows we're here!"The runes on the walls ignited in red light. A voice, ancient and venomous, echoed through the chamber. "Children of betrayal... your blood belongs to me." The flames coiled into a woman's shape  tall, radiant, terrible. Her eyes burned like twin suns. "Selene," Luca breathed. The witch's laughter filled the air. "You would defy the curse I forged? You think your love stronger than blood?"Aria stepped forward, blade drawn. "We're not afraid of you." "Not yet." The witch smiled. "But you will be." The fire lashed out. Aria slashed at it, but her blade passed through smoke. Luca shouted something in the ancient tongue, raising his hands the mark on his wrist blazing. The air erupted in chaos.Pain seared through Aria's body as the mark burned brighter and brighter, until the world dissolved in light. When she opened her eyes, she was lying in the ruins outside the citadel. The fire was gone. The night was silent. Luca knelt beside her, blood trickling from a wound on his temple. "She's awake," he whispered. "But we weakened her  for now." Aria groaned, sitting up. "What happened?" "You saved me," he said, almost smiling. "You threw yourself in front of the blast." "I didn't mean to." "I know," he said softly. "You never do." Their eyes met again, and this time she didn't look away. The hatred she'd clung to for so long was fraying, unraveling into something she didn't have a name for. The night wind carried the scent of ash and rain. Luca reached for her hand  just briefly, enough for the marks on their wrists to pulse in unison."For now," he said, "we fight together." Aria nodded. "For now." But even as she said it, she knew the truth: something between them had already changed  something neither magic nor war could undo. And somewhere in the ruins below, the witch's laughter still echoed, faint but certain. The curse was far from over. It had only begun to bloom.