
Claiming the Alpha's Heart
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In the fog shrouded forests of Crescent Valley, Elara North never expected to return. She thought the past was behind her until the town, the forest, and a mysterious Alpha named Kael Draven reminded her that some destinies cannot be ignored.
Kael is fierce, commanding, and unshakably determined. And when he claims Elara as his fated mate, she is thrust into a world of pack politics, primal instincts, and dangerous secrets. Suspicion and attraction tangle together, and the closer she gets to Kael, the more she realizes that survival may mean surrender and love may come with a cost.
With the forest alive, predators lurking, and the full moon looming, Elara must uncover the truths that everyone else fears to face. Can she trust Kael with her heart... and her life? Or will the shadows of Crescent Valley consume them both?
Claiming the Alpha's Heart Chapter 1
I hadn't planned on coming back to Crescent Valley.
If I were being honest with myself, I would admit that I had spent years doing everything I could to forget it existed. The forests. The fog. The way the town always felt like it was holding its breath, waiting for something unseen to happen. Crescent Valley was a place I had learned to push to the back of my mind, locking it away with memories I didn't want to touch.
But when my grandmother's voice trembled over the phone thin with age, strained by stubborn pride there was no version of me that could say no. I heard the effort it took for her to sound calm. I heard the pauses where she wanted to say more but didn't. And I knew, even before she asked, that I was already on my way back.
So I drove north.
Mile after mile passed beneath my tires as the world slowly changed. Road signs faded. Cell service weakened. The trees grew thicker the farther I went, pressing in from both sides of the road like silent watchers. The sky remained gray, heavy with clouds that never quite broke. By the time I reached the narrow stretch of highway leading into town, it felt like the rest of the world had fallen away.
Crescent Valley welcomed me the same way it always had quietly and without warmth.
The air felt heavier the moment I stepped out of my car. Cold settled into my skin, sharper than I remembered, seeping through my clothes like it had been waiting for me. It felt deliberate, as though the town itself wanted to remind me that I didn't belong here anymore. Fog clung low to the ground, curling around my ankles like it was alive, like it knew my name.
I pulled my jacket tighter around myself and glanced up at the line of trees bordering the road.
They looked unchanged. Too tall. Too dense. Too close. Their dark branches tangled together, blocking out light and sky alike. The forest had always loomed over Crescent Valley, but standing there again, I realized how little distance there truly was between the town and the wilderness surrounding it.
Grandmother's house sat at the edge of town, just far enough that the forest crept close to the backyard fence. It was smaller than I remembered, the paint peeling slightly, the porch steps worn down by time and weather. Still, it stood firm, stubborn in the way only old things could be, refusing to yield even as everything else aged around it.
She was waiting for me at the door.
"Elara," she said, relief softening her sharp eyes as she pulled me into a hug. Her arms felt thinner than before, but the strength in her grip was the same. "You took your time."
"I came as fast as I could," I replied, breathing in the familiar scent of herbs and old books that clung to her sweater. For a moment, I let myself hold on, grounding myself in something familiar.
Inside, the house felt warmer than the outside world, but even there, something felt off. The windows were locked despite the mild weather. Heavy curtains were drawn tight, blocking out the pale daylight. I noticed it without commenting, though a small knot of unease settled in my stomach.
That night, I slept poorly.
The forest made noise in a way cities never did. It wasn't constant, but when it moved, it demanded attention. Branches cracked sharply, loud enough to wake me. Wind whispered through the leaves, carrying sounds I couldn't quite place. Once, sometime after midnight, I thought I heard a distant how long, and full of something that made my chest tighten.
It pulled me from sleep with my heart racing.
I told myself it was just a wolf.
Morning didn't bring much comfort.
At breakfast, my grandmother frowned as she scanned the yard through the kitchen window, her fingers tightening around her cup.
"Another one," she muttered under her breath.
"Another what?" I asked, following her gaze.
She hesitated, then shook her head. "Nothing you need to worry about."
That was the first time I noticed the missing things.
The chicken coop behind the house stood open, the latch broken clean through. Feathers littered the ground, scattered in a way that didn't look natural. There were no bodies. No blood. Just absence. The kind that left too much room for questions.
Later that day, when I went into town, I heard more of the same.
Old Mr. Hayes complained loudly in the grocery store about losing two goats overnight. His voice shook with anger and something else fear, maybe. A woman at the register mentioned her dog hadn't come home in days. Someone else joked nervously about locking their doors before dark, the laughter forced and hollow.
But no one explained anything.
When I asked questions, conversations stopped.
People shrugged. Changed the subject. Smiled too tightly, as if pretending hard enough might make the problem disappear.
"It's just wildlife," they said.
I wasn't convinced.
Wildlife didn't break locks cleanly. It didn't leave behind neat claw marks etched into wood. And it didn't make a whole town act like they were afraid of their own shadows.
That afternoon, I decided to take a walk.
The path near the forest edge was one I remembered from childhood. It used to feel safe. Familiar. Now, it felt like crossing an invisible line. The closer I got to the trees, the quieter everything became. Birds fell silent. Even the wind seemed to pause, as though the forest itself was watching.
I noticed something half-hidden near the trail.
A backpack.
It was torn, the straps shredded as though they'd been pulled apart by force. I knelt and touched the fabric. It was still damp.
Recently.
My pulse quickened.
I didn't hear him approach.
"You shouldn't be here."
I turned sharply.
He stood a few feet away, tall and broad-shouldered, dressed simply in dark clothes that blended too easily with the forest behind him. His presence was unsettling not because he looked dangerous, but because he felt controlled, like a storm held back by sheer will.
"I was just walking," I said, straightening. "Is that not allowed?"
His eyes flicked briefly to the backpack, then back to me. Gray. Cold. Assessing.
"This area isn't safe," he said. "You should go back to town."
Something about the way he spoke calm, firm, and unquestionable irritated me.
"I can take care of myself."
His jaw tightened. "That's what everyone thinks."
For a moment, we just stared at each other. The air between us felt charged, sharp and uncomfortable, though I couldn't explain why. There was something about him that made my instincts scream even as my curiosity burned brighter.
Then he stepped back.
"Leave," he repeated, softer this time. "Before it gets dark."
I watched him disappear into the trees, moving with a smoothness that didn't seem entirely human.
I stood there longer than I should have.
That night, I wrote everything down.
The missing animals. The silence. The backpack. The man in the forest.
Kael Draven.
Someone in town had mentioned his name earlier, warning me away from his family without explaining why. I didn't know who he was, only that the way he had looked at me felt like he already knew something I didn't.
As I lay in bed, staring at the ceiling, the forest howled again.
This time, it sounded closer.
And for the first time since returning to Crescent Valley, I stopped telling myself I was imagining things.
Something was wrong here.
And whatever it was, the forest wasn't going to let me ignore it for long.
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Claiming the Alpha's Heart of Contents
New Release Novels

8.3
I was the long-lost Donovan heiress, finally brought home after a childhood in foster care. My parents adored me, my husband cherished me, and the woman who tried to ruin my life, Kiera Reese, was locked away in a mental facility. I was safe. I was loved.
On my birthday, I decided to surprise my husband, Ivan, at his office. But he wasn't there.
I found him at a private art gallery across town. He was with Kiera.
She wasn't in a facility. She was radiant, laughing as she stood beside my husband and their five-year-old son. I watched through the glass as Ivan kissed her, a familiar, loving gesture he’d used with me just that morning.
I crept closer and overheard them. My birthday wish to go to the amusement park had been denied because he’d already promised the entire park to their son—whose birthday was the same day as mine.
"She’s so grateful to have a family, she’d believe anything we tell her," Ivan said, his voice laced with a cruelty that stole my breath. "It's almost sad."
My entire reality—my loving parents who funded this secret life, my devoted husband—was a five-year lie. I was just the fool they kept on stage.
My phone buzzed. It was a text from Ivan, sent while he stood with his real family.
"Just got out of the meeting. So exhausting. I miss you."
The casual lie was the final blow. They thought I was a pathetic, grateful orphan they could control.
They were about to find out just how wrong they were.

7.3
WARNING ⚠️: This book contains sex scenes and mature contents not fit for readers below 18+.
If you love steamy romances and emotional stories, this book is the one.
By day, Damon follows her rules in the kitchen: chopping, kneading, burning his fingers, and surviving her sharp mouth.
By night, she follows his.
Damon Blackwell is a cold, dangerous billionaire who hates Christmas, women, and anything that smells like joy. Haunted by tragedy and trauma, and memories of the girl he once loved and lost, he lives like a machine: money, control, and pleasure without attachment.
Then his grandparents and three ruthless brothers dare him to do the impossible:
Live like a normal man for 12 days to Christmas: no staff, no luxuries, no protection, no control and no bad temper. He has to change and be easygoing with investors.
Fail, and he loses the biggest business deal of his life.
Indulgence is over for him.
The only place Damon knows he can grab survival? A small-town Christmas cooking competition hosted by that one woman who broke his heart years ago.
Merry Steele never expected to see Damon again. The man she left without a word. The man who haunted her dreams after she broke his heart back now stands in her kitchen offering a deal she can't refuse:
Cook for him. Sleep with him. Pretend to be his fiancée until the end of the year.
The pay is tempting. The temptation is even greater.
Before Christmas, can they resist the heat, desire, and lingering love they once shared and keep it strictly business?
As family obligations, enemies, and a high-profile Christmas ball close in, Damon and Merry must correct old heartbreak, passion, and dangerous feelings.
Will Damon ever forgive his fuckmate?
Can Merry resist the billionaire who once stole her heart... or will old flames burn hotter than ever under the snow, the lights, and the Christmas feelings?

7.6
I was the fiancée of the Chicago Outfit’s heir, a bond sealed by blood and eighteen years of history.
But when his mistress pushed me into the freezing pool at our engagement gala, Jax didn’t swim toward me.
He swam past me.
He scooped up the girl who pushed me, cradling her like fragile glass, while I struggled against the weight of my gown in the murky water.
When I finally dragged myself out, shivering and humiliated before the entire underworld, Jax didn’t offer a hand. He offered a scowl.
"You’re making a scene, Eliana. Go home."
Later, when that same mistress shoved me down the stairs, shattering my knee and my dance career, Jax stepped over my broken body to comfort her.
I overheard him telling his friends, "I’m just breaking her spirit. She needs to learn she’s property, not a partner. Once she’s desperate enough, she’ll be the perfect obedient wife."
He thought I was a dog that would always return to its master. He thought he could starve me of affection until I begged for scraps.
He was wrong.
While he was busy playing protector to his mistress, I wasn't crying in my room.
I was packing his ring into a cardboard box.
I cancelled my transfer to UCLA and enrolled at NYU instead.
By the time Jax realized his "property" was missing, I was already in New York, standing next to a man who looked at me like a queen, not a possession.

7.2
Emily wakes up to cries and screams one fateful day, unaware that her life is about to take a ride even she cannot fathom.
She eventually finds out she is mated not just to her best friend, but also to the bastard responsible for the misfortune that befell her pack.
...
Excerpt from the story.
"I don't know why the Moon Goddess paired you both with me. I find it more of a curse than a blessing." Alpha Leo paused to look at both our faces, his expression void of feeling of any kind.
"I, Alpha Leo Woods of Dark Moon pack, on this day, reject you, Emily Langston and Reece Emilio of Greyhound pack," His face morphed into a mocking glare. "A pack that no longer exists,"
I heard many in the crowd chuckle. "...as my mates! Hereafter, you both mean nothing to me and are just ordinary slaves in captivity."
So...what's next?
You'll find out only after diving into this masterpiece.
And of course, there's more than six spicy scenes, in case you're a fan of that. :)

8.8
When Nigerian financial analyst Eniola Adeyemi exposes a 2.3 billion naira money laundering scheme, she becomes the target of powerful criminals who'll stop at nothing to silence her. Her only protection? A contract marriage to Elijah Kingston-the cold, ruthless, American billionaire CEO whose own family is at the heart of the conspiracy. What begins as a transactional arrangement for safety and an heir becomes a dangerous game of power, betrayal, and undeniable passion as they're forced to choose between empire and love.

8.6
Today was my father's grand second wedding, but for me, it was the anniversary of my mother's death.
My new stepmother, Marley, who was only four years older than me, cornered me. To establish her dominance as the new Luna, she ordered her servants to force me to my knees and violently ripped my late mother's necklace from my neck.
It was the only memento my mother had left me. Marley sneered, threw it to the ground, and shattered the gems. When I scrambled to pick up the broken pieces, she dug her high-heeled shoe into the back of my hand, mocking me as dirty trash. No one stepped in to help. My father was too busy celebrating his new marriage under the dazzling lights, completely erasing my mother's memory and leaving me to be abused in my own pack.
My heart was full of grievance and despair. Why did my mother's lifelong devotion end with her grave desolate and her daughter humiliated? I swore I would never become a weak, discarded she-wolf whose life depended on a man.
Desperate to escape the suffocating wedding, I ran outside and stumbled right into the chest of a terrifying stranger.
"No one should ever touch what is precious to you."
His golden eyes blazed with fury as sparks instantly shot through my veins. He was Kade Blackwood, the ruthless Alpha of the feared Blood Moon Pack—and my fated mate.







![[Dubbed Version] Forced In: Love and Hate](https://v.melolo.com/b1265344voduse1318177724/fa99f0e65145403705295514399/DGaeSsfK9BMA.webp!15491.webp!15491.webp)
![[Dubbed Version] Rented Love: The Hidden Billionaire](https://v.melolo.com/b1265344voduse1318177724/1f33a5845145403706115178993/ayviziNIr0cA.webp!15491.webp!15491.webp)


