
Fated to My Best Friend's Father
I woke in the Alpha King's bed, a throbbing mark on my neck confirming his undeniable claim. Days after my own Alpha publicly shattered me, I was now Fated Mate to my best friend's powerful, enigmatic father. Caught between ancient magic and devastating family secrets, my world would never be the same.
My body ached with proof: I, a rejected she-wolf, was Kaelen Blackwood's Fated Mate. This terrifying bond, sealed by crimson on his sheets, far surpassed the political alliance I sought after Zane's brutal rejection. This new destiny, tied to my best friend's father, was a complexity I never anticipated.
Kaelen vanished. My best friend, Briar, discovered my Marking Bite, her fury convinced her father assaulted me. My truth-Fated Mates-shattered her. Zane reappeared, desperate, as Kaelen's council debated their "new Luna" and his "lost pup" past. I felt a pawn in a web of secrets.
Driven by a lullaby and Kaelen's silent challenge, I touched the Moonpetal Grotto. Together, we unlocked its ancient magic, confirming our bond. As the sacred cavern glowed, and Kaelen offered a rare smile, I realized this gesture transcended politics, hinting at a truth far deeper.
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Chapter 3
Elara Thorne POV:
Panic, cold and sharp, seized my throat. Briar’s cheerful, oblivious face was a mask of friendship, and behind it, I saw only the chasm that had opened between us. The lie I needed to tell felt like swallowing glass.
"Luna?" I forced a laugh. It came out thin, brittle. "Briar, don't. Everyone is staring." I gestured vaguely at the warriors, who were now pointedly looking away. "I'm exhausted. The journey..." I let my voice trail off, hoping it sounded like the weary complaint of a political bride, not the ragged whisper of a woman whose soul had been rewritten overnight.
It worked. Briar’s boisterous energy immediately softened into concern. "Of course you are. Gods, I'm an idiot. Dad's probably been his usual charming self, all grunts and glares." She looped her arm through mine, her strength a familiar comfort that now felt like a betrayal. "Come on. Let's get you to your rooms. They're incredible. Maeve showed them to me this morning."
She steered me away from the training grounds, her chatter a welcome distraction that let me hide inside my own head. The Packhouse was a fortress of dark wood and stone, the air smelling of beeswax and old power. It felt less like a home and more like a cage. My cage.
The chambers she led me to were opulent, a suite of rooms with a massive fireplace already crackling and a balcony that overlooked the forest. It was a beautiful prison.
"And the best part," Briar said, flinging open the heavy oak door and marching inside. She spun around, a grin plastered on her face, and pointed a thumb over her shoulder at the door directly across the hall. "That's my father's room. Convenient, huh?" She wiggled her eyebrows, the old, familiar gesture of a friend sharing a dirty joke. My stomach twisted. If she only knew.
I offered a weak smile and ran a hand over the high collar of my tunic, the fabric a flimsy shield. "It's... a lot."
"Of course it is." Briar started unpacking the small leather satchel Maeve had given me, placing my worn copy of *Wuthering Heights* on the nightstand with a reverence that made my eyes burn. "He's trying to impress you. The Alpha King, making a statement." She paused, looking at me, her expression turning serious. "Gods, Elara. You look like you've been through a war. Come here. Sit."
She guided me to a velvet armchair near the fire. Before I could protest, she was behind me, her hands reaching for my hair. "Let me brush this out. You always said it helps you think."
"Briar, you don't have to—"
"I want to," she insisted, her tone leaving no room for argument. She picked up a silver-backed brush from the vanity. "Just relax. After everything, you deserve a minute to breathe."
I closed my eyes, surrendering. The lie was a lead weight in my gut. Every pull of the brush through my long hair was a countdown. She was too close. The scent of her—wildflowers and ozone—was a painful reminder of the simple friendship we were about to lose. I held myself perfectly still, praying she wouldn't notice.
Her fingers were gentle as she worked through the tangles, her movements sure and practiced from a thousand other times she’d done this for me. The steady rhythm was almost soothing. Almost. My wolf was a coiled spring inside me.
"I know this is all for politics," Briar murmured, her voice soft. "But I hope you can be happy here. Truly."
She gathered my hair, pulling it to one side to brush out the ends.
And then she froze.
Her fingers, which had been deftly separating strands, stopped moving. I felt the warmth of her hand against my neck, right over the tender, raised skin. The air thickened. The crackle of the fire was suddenly deafening.
"Briar?" I whispered, my eyes still shut. I couldn't bear to see her face.
Her hand didn't move. I felt the faint tremble in her fingertips. Her breath hitched. A second stretched into an eternity.
Then, with a sharp, sudden movement, her hand wasn't gentle anymore. She yanked my hair fully aside, exposing the side of my neck to the cool air of the room. I flinched, my eyes flying open. I met her gaze in the vanity mirror.
The color had drained from her face, leaving her freckles standing out like flecks of blood on snow. Her eyes, wide with horror, were fixed on the reflection of my neck. On the dark, bruised, unmistakable pattern of teeth sunk into my flesh.
Her voice was a ragged whisper, torn from her throat. "That's... that's a Marking Bite." Her eyes lifted from the mark to my own in the mirror, and in them, I saw a fury so profound it made me shudder. "He forced you."
The accusation hung in the air, heavier than stone. She didn't see a fated bond. She saw an assault. She saw her father, the Alpha King, as a monster.
Briar stumbled back, away from me, as if I were the source of a fire. Her hands clenched into fists at her sides. "That bastard," she breathed, her voice shaking with a rage I had never seen in her before. "A Marking Bite isn't part of a political alliance. That's possession. That's permanent." Her eyes, blazing now, locked onto mine. "If there's a war over this, Elara, I'll stand with you. Not my father. I swear it."
Her loyalty was a blade twisting in my gut. She was ready to betray her own blood for me, all based on a terrible, logical misunderstanding.
My hand flew to my neck, covering the mark as if I could hide it, as if I could undo what she’d seen. "No," I said, shaking my head, the motion frantic. "Briar. It wasn't like that."
"Don't protect him!" she snapped. "I know who he is. I know what he's capable of. He wanted to secure the alliance, and he took you—"
"He didn't take anything," I cut her off, my voice stronger now, desperation sharpening the edges. I stood and faced her, forcing myself to meet her furious, protective glare. I had to end this before it spiraled into something we could never take back. I took a deep, shuddering breath, the truth a terrifying weight on my tongue. "We're Fated Mates. The Goddess chose this."
The words fell into the silence between us. Briar stared at me, her face a canvas of disbelief. The fury in her eyes faltered, replaced by a deep, wrenching confusion. She opened her mouth to argue, to deny it, but no sound came out. Her mind was reeling, trying to fit this impossible truth into the monster she had just constructed. She saw her powerful, ruthless father. She saw me, her friend running from a brutal rejection. The two didn't connect.
And then, something broke in her expression. The fire in her eyes didn't just falter; it was extinguished, leaving behind a glassy, vacant shock. Her breath hitched, a tiny, wounded sound. I saw the moment the world went silent for her. The silent, irrefutable proof had been delivered straight into her mind.
A sharp gasp escaped her lips. Her hand flew to her mouth, her knuckles white. Her wide, shocked eyes met mine again, but this time, the fury and confusion were gone. In their place was dawning, horrified comprehension. Kaelen had confirmed it.
The fierce protector I knew vanished, replaced by a stranger. The knowledge didn't just change her mind; it unmade her, right in front of me.
Her rigid posture dissolved. Her shoulders slumped. With a slow, deliberate grace that felt ancient and terrifying, Briar Blackwood, my best friend, sank to the floor. The rustle of her training clothes was the only sound in the vast, silent room as she lowered herself into a formal, perfect curtsy. Her head bowed.
When she spoke, her voice was a whisper, stripped of all its earlier fire. The title was no longer a joke. It was a sacred vow.
"My Luna."
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8.1
In a world where the moon governs blood, power, and fate, Aeron Blackclaw, a feared werewolf Alpha, crosses paths with Elara Vale, a quiet human girl whose presence soothes the savage beast within him. What begins as an impossible attraction slowly deepens into a love that feels ancient-protective, consuming, and forbidden. Aeron knows that loving a human could strip him of his crown and his life, yet staying away from Elara feels like tearing his soul apart.
As the Blood Moon rises and long-buried prophecies begin to stir, a devastating truth is revealed: Elara is not merely human. She is the Ancient Wolf, a legendary being reborn once every thousand years to restore balance between realms-her memories erased to shield the world from destruction. Her awakening threatens the fragile truce between humans and wolves, igniting fear, envy, and hunger for control. Shadows gather, and betrayal seeps in from those closest to them, wearing the faces of loyalty and love.
Pulled between duty and desire, fate and free will, Aeron and Elara are forced onto opposing paths by lies and bloodshed. As war erupts and secrets unravel, they must decide whether their bond can survive betrayal, prophecy, and the merciless pull of destiny. Bound by the Moon That Forgot Her is a sweeping supernatural romance about a love that defies time, memory, and the unforgiving laws of two colliding worlds.

9.7
Some chains are forged in iron.
Others in desire.
Sebastian Kol has existed for six centuries. Cursed to burn alive in his own skin every night he transforms into a beast even he cannot control. He wants one thing. Freedom. And after five centuries of searching, a prophecy finally gives it a name.
Leilani Ravenwood.
She carries the mark of the moon goddess on her skin and a prophecy that brands her as his salvation. Her blood silences his beast, and her touch sets him on fire.
In the worst possible way. And in the best possible way.
Furious at the hold she has over him, Sebastian takes her, strips her of everything, and bends her world until it breaks, determined to own what the goddess dared to use against him. What follows is dark and consuming. A monster who has never met his match, and a woman who proves to be it.
But Leilani Ravenwood does not break easily. And somewhere between the hatred and the hunger, the punishment and the pull, the ancient beast begins to suspect the terrible truth.
The woman born to be his salvation may already be his undoing, his poison and cure wearing the same skin.
And he is running out of reasons to care.

9.1
I was a wolfless Omega who married the most powerful Alpha, but I was slowly dying of Bond-Rejection Sickness because my fated mate despised me.
Instead of caring about my failing health, Dallas flaunted his mistress and treated my agony as a pathetic tantrum. When I handed him a sacred rejection letter just to save my own life, he ruthlessly shredded it and used his Alpha Command to force me to stay.
He locked me in his suite, watched me violently throw up from the sickness, and threatened to cut off my grandfather's life-saving medical funds if I didn't play the perfect Luna for his public image. To him and his Pack, I was just a useless burden, a piece of property they could abuse and control at will.
I couldn't understand why I had to suffer and die for a man who didn't even know his entire empire was built on the secret defense algorithms I had written. Why should my absolute loyalty be repaid with such suffocating cruelty?
"I, Gemma Hart, reject you, Dallas Blackwood, as my mate."
I slammed a new rejection document right onto his table in front of his smug mistress. Before his furious roar could even echo through the restaurant, I legally revoked the patents to my algorithms, completely paralyzing his Pack's security grid, and walked away. Let the arrogant Alpha see what happens when his property declares war.

9.7
A monotonous, colorless life and dull relationships instantly fade into the background the moment you step into a completely different world-one with its own rules and laws. It looks so much like ours, and yet is radically different, for here live werewolves and countless other incredible beings.
Bring a cursed Alpha King's heart back to life? Ride off into the sunset with one of the handsome guards? Or fall for a dangerous witch and uncover the true face of evil? Wrap it all up for me-I'll take it!
An extraordinary world, vivid characters, blazing emotions, and passionate love with a touch of spice ❤️🔥
18+
"Quite an interesting hall you've got here," Karadeylis said without even glancing around, his steps bringing him dangerously close. "But OURS holds unforgettable memories of the time we unwrapped your restless little ass."
I gasped in outrage at his brazen words-especially with so many people around-but my panties betrayed me, dampening at the memory of exactly what that bastard had reminded me of.
"How dare you?!" I hissed, our faces now only inches apart. Goosebumps ran across my skin at the dangerous nearness. I could feel his hot breath on my lips, the heat of his half-bare body, and that intoxicating scent I knew too well. Our breathing came ragged, as if we had just finished running a marathon, unable to break free from the magnetic pull of each other's gaze.
"No one else dares-only me, Prepedollie!" the scoundrel growled, gripping me firmly by the tail and yanking my face closer to his as his eyes devoured me. "I warned you-once I found you, there would be no mercy!"

9.5
I woke up gasping from a nightmare of flames devouring Chandler Finch's estate, my body wrapped in burning curtains as I died alone.
But my eyes opened to silk sheets in his penthouse master bedroom. He was alive beside me, his cedarwood scent real. This was my second chance—I'd been reborn.
His phone buzzed: Eugenia Stewart's "emergency." Her security detail reported her refusing meals, unstable. Chandler bolted without a glance, rushing to her side.
I signed the brutal cohabitation contract binding me to him, but Temperance had planted birth control pills in the trash—a trap to frame me. Chandler found them, exploded in jealous rage, crushing the pills to dust. "No child unless it's mine," he growled, possessive fire in his eyes.
Brett, Eugenia's lapdog, stormed in later, accusing me of manipulation. I fired back: Chandler demanded my womb for his heir. Brett paled, fled to tattle.
Then the storm hit—power outage, locked on the terrace in pouring rain, freezing as Eugenia faked an asthma attack on Chandler's line, stealing his focus again. I hung up, huddled with a stray puppy, nearly dying from hypothermia.
He'd never believed me before—Eugenia's lies always won, dooming me to isolation and fire. Why did her every whimper trump my screams? How could he be so blind?
This time, reborn weeks before the inferno, I wouldn't beg. I'd play his game, shatter Eugenia's web, and make Chandler mine—before the flames returned.

9.1
This is a terrifying memory I'd rather never speak of again.
We were just high school students when the town accidentally unearthed a mass grave.
That night, Keegan Wilkerson, the most popular senior, showed up at a party with a trophy: a finger bone he had stolen from the site.
He passed the bone around. Everyone wanted to touch it, just to prove they had the guts.
A day later, Keegan was bedridden with a raging fever, drifting in and out of consciousness. Then he started counting with his eyes closed. "One... two... three..." He counted endlessly.
Soon, everyone who had touched that bone fell ill, in the exact same order.
The doctors called it a rare infection.
But my grandma said it was a curse, and that Wilkerson was already beyond saving.