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MOON OATH: THE CHOSEN MATE Novel Cover

MOON OATH: THE CHOSEN MATE

Arielle Wren woke up with blood on her hands and no memory of how it got there. Three days ago, a silver mark burned itself into her skin—an ancient symbol she didn't understand but couldn't ignore. Now, that mark is spreading, glowing brighter with each passing hour, and Arielle is changing into something she never asked to become. Lycian Vale is a king on the edge of madness. As Alpha of the Northern Pack, he's spent years fighting a curse that has destroyed every leader in his bloodline. He killed his own father when the madness took hold. Now, with six days until the eclipse, Lycian faces the same fate—unless he can complete the mate bond with the one person the Moon Goddess chose for him. A human woman who wants nothing to do with his world. The bond between them is involuntary. Unbreakable. And absolutely terrifying. Arielle can feel Lycian in her chest, in her blood, in every breath she takes. The mark is rewriting her DNA, giving her strength she never had and instincts she can't control. She attacked a hunter in the forest with her bare hands. She's hearing voices that aren't hers. And every moment she spends near Lycian makes the transformation harder to resist. But accepting the bond means losing herself completely. Becoming Luna to a kingdom of wolves who see humans as weak. Transforming into something that's neither human nor wolf, but something dangerous and new. Trading her quiet life for a throne made of violence and ancient magic. Refusing the bond means death for them both. As hunters close in on the hidden werewolf kingdom and rival packs circle for blood, Arielle must make an impossible choice. She can complete the mating ceremony and bind herself for life to a man she barely knows. Or she can refuse destiny and watch them both descend into madness. The eclipse is coming. The mark is spreading. And time is running out. Because sometimes the only way to survive is to become the monster you feared. A dark paranormal romance for fans of Sarah J. Maas and Jennifer L. Armentrout. Fated mates have never been this brutal or this addictive.
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Chapter 2

Arielle woke up with blood on her hands.

She stared at her palms in the grey morning light filtering through her bedroom window. Red. Wet. Still warm. Her heart kicked into overdrive as she sat up too fast, sheets tangling around her legs.

The blood wasn't hers.

She checked her arms, her legs, ran shaking fingers over her face and neck searching for wounds that had to be there because where else would this much blood come from. Nothing. No cuts. No injuries. Just blood that didn't belong to her coating her skin like she'd dipped her hands in something she couldn't take back.

"What the hell?" Her voice came out hoarse, like she'd been screaming.

Had she been screaming?

Arielle threw off the covers and stumbled to the bathroom, nearly tripping over boots she didn't remember taking off. Her hiking boots. Caked with mud and something dark that looked suspiciously like more blood. She grabbed the edge of the sink to steady herself and looked up at the mirror.

Her reflection looked like it belonged to someone else. Hair matted with leaves and dirt. A scratch across her left cheek that she definitely didn't have when she went to bed. And her eyes looked wrong. Too bright. Almost luminous in the dim bathroom light.

She turned on the faucet and started scrubbing. The water ran pink, then red, then finally clear as she washed away evidence of something she couldn't remember doing. Her hands were shaking so badly she could barely hold the soap.

Think. What was the last thing she remembered?

Going to bed around midnight after reading her grandmother's journals. Making chamomile tea she didn't drink. Falling asleep with the book open on her chest.

Then nothing. Just blank space where the last eight hours should have been.

Arielle dried her hands on a towel and caught sight of her chest in the mirror. She froze.

The mark had changed.

Three days ago, it had been faint silver lines barely visible unless you knew to look for them. A crescent moon with ancient runes woven through it, sitting just below her collarbone like a brand she couldn't scrub off.

Now it covered half her chest. Silver lines spreading like veins of light across her skin, reaching up toward her throat and down toward her heart. And it was glowing. Actually glowing, pulsing faintly in rhythm with her heartbeat.

She pressed her palm against it and felt heat. Not painful, but intense. Alive. Like something was growing beneath her skin, burrowing deeper with every breath she took.

"No." The word came out as a whisper. "No, no, no."

She'd been researching the mark for three days. Reading every book Mrs. Kovach had given her, poring over her grandmother's journals until her eyes burned. And everything she'd learned pointed to one terrifying conclusion.

The mark was a bond. A soul bond between her and something that wasn't human. Something that was coming for her whether she wanted it to or not.

Arielle grabbed her phone off the bathroom counter. Six missed calls from Mrs. Kovach. Two voicemails. And a text message sent at three in the morning.

Stay inside. Lock your doors. Do NOT go into the forest. He's hunting tonight.

Her blood went cold.

She opened the first voicemail with trembling fingers.

Mrs. Kovach's voice came through, tight with urgency. "Arielle, if you're hearing this, I need you to listen very carefully. The mark has activated. That means he knows where you are now. Can track you anywhere. You need to stay inside until I can get to you. Do you understand? Do not leave your cottage. Do not go outside for any reason."

The message ended. Arielle's thumb hovered over the second voicemail.

"Arielle, please tell me you're still inside. Please tell me you didn't go out last night. There was an incident in the forest. Someone was attacked. They're saying it was an animal, but I know better. I know what's really out there. Call me the moment you get this."

The phone slipped from Arielle's numb fingers and clattered against the tile floor.

Someone was attacked. In the forest. Last night.

The same night she apparently went outside with no memory of doing it. The same night she woke up covered in blood that wasn't hers.

She looked at her hands again. At the scratch on her face. At her muddy boots sitting by the bed.

What had she done?

A sound from outside made her jump. Footsteps on the porch. Heavy. Deliberate. Not trying to be quiet.

Arielle's heart hammered as she moved to the window and peered through the curtains. A man stood on her porch, his back to the door. Tall, broad-shouldered, wearing dark clothes that looked like they'd been through hell. His hair was black and tangled, falling past his shoulders.

She couldn't see his face, but something about the way he stood made every hair on the back of her neck stand up.

He turned his head slightly, and she caught his profile. Sharp jaw. Strong features. And eyes that glowed silver even in the morning light.

Not human.

Arielle backed away from the window, pulse racing. She needed to call someone. Police. Mrs. Kovach. Anyone.

Her phone was still on the bathroom floor. She started toward it, but a knock on the door stopped her cold.

Not a normal knock. Three deliberate strikes that echoed through the cottage like a warning.

"Arielle Wren." His voice carried through the wood, deep and rough and speaking her name like he'd said it a thousand times before. "I know you're in there. I can hear your heartbeat. Smell your fear. You went into the forest last night. Do you remember? Do you remember what you saw?"

She didn't answer. Could barely breathe.

Another knock. Harder this time.

"I need to speak with you. It's about the mark. About what's happening to you. About what you did last night in the woods." A pause. "About the blood on your hands."

Arielle's stomach dropped. How did he know about the blood?

"I'm not going away, Arielle. You can talk to me through the door or you can open it. Your choice. But we need to talk before someone else finds you. Before they start asking questions you don't have answers for."

She moved to the door without consciously deciding to. Her hand reached for the deadbolt.

"Don't." Her own voice surprised her. "Don't come any closer."

"I'm not going to hurt you."

"That's what monsters always say."

A sound that might have been a laugh. Dark and humorless. "I'm not the monster you need to worry about. Not anymore. That changed the moment the mark appeared on your skin. Now you're one of us whether you want to be or not."

"I don't know what you're talking about."

"Yes, you do." His voice dropped lower. "You've been researching for three days. Reading about werewolves and soul bonds and marks that appear on chosen mates. You know exactly what I'm talking about. The only question is whether you're brave enough to face it."

Arielle pressed her forehead against the door. "Who are you?"

"My name is Lycian Vale. And three days ago, the Moon Goddess marked you as mine. That mark on your chest? It's a bond. A connection between your soul and mine. And last night, when you went into the forest, you weren't alone. I was there. Watching you. Making sure you didn't hurt yourself or anyone else."

"I didn't hurt anyone."

"Are you sure about that? Because there's a hunter in the village who'd disagree. Claims a woman attacked him in the woods last night. Tore into him with her bare hands. He's in critical condition. And from his description, that woman looked a lot like you."

The world tilted. Arielle grabbed the door frame to keep from falling.

"That's impossible. I was here. I was sleeping."

"Were you? Then explain the blood. Explain the mud on your boots. Explain the scratch on your face that looks suspiciously like it came from fighting through brambles in the dark." His voice gentled slightly. "Arielle, the bond is changing you. Making you stronger. Faster. More dangerous. Last night was the first time, but it won't be the last. If you don't learn to control it, you're going to hurt someone. Maybe kill them. Is that what you want?"

"No." The word came out broken. "God, no."

"Then let me in. Let me explain what's happening to you. Let me help you before this gets worse."

Every rational bone in Arielle's body screamed not to open the door. Don't let the monster inside. Don't trust the voice that knew too much.

But the blood on her hands wasn't going to wash away just because she pretended it didn't exist.

She unlocked the door.

Lycian Vale stood on her porch looking like violence barely contained. Up close, he was devastating in a way that had nothing to do with conventional attractiveness and everything to do with raw, primal power. Those silver eyes locked onto hers with an intensity that made her breath catch.

"You opened the door." He sounded surprised.

"You said you could help me."

"I can. But first, you need to understand something." He took a step forward, not quite crossing the threshold. "That mark on your chest? It's permanent. Unbreakable. Whether you accept me or not, whether you want this or not, you and I are bound now. Your life and mine are tangled together in ways you can't begin to understand. And that means everything you do affects me. Everything I do affects you."

"I don't want to be bound to anyone."

"Neither did I." His jaw tightened. "But we don't get to choose. The Moon Goddess chooses for us. And she chose you for me. Which means we have two options. We can fight it and suffer. Or we can accept it and survive. Your choice."

Arielle looked at him. Really looked. And beneath the power and the threat and the otherworldly silver eyes, she saw exhaustion. Bone-deep weariness. And something that looked almost like fear.

"What happened in the forest last night?"

"You don't remember?"

"No."

Lycian's expression darkened. "That's worse than I thought. The bond is taking hold faster than it should. You're transforming without conscious control. That hunter you attacked? He was hunting me. Set traps all over the mountain, silver-tipped arrows designed to kill werewolves. You stumbled into one of his camps. Saw what he was doing. And something inside you snapped."

"I attacked him?"

"You defended me. Even though you've never met me. Even though you don't know me. The bond recognized that he was a threat, and you eliminated that threat." He took another step closer. "Arielle, you need to understand what you are now. You're not fully human anymore. The mark is changing you. Making you stronger, faster, more aggressive. Making you mine. And in six days, when the eclipse hits, that transformation will complete. You'll either become my mate fully, or the bond will kill us both. Those are your options. Life or death. There's no middle ground."

Six days. Less than a week to decide between accepting a fate she never asked for or dying slowly while dragging this stranger down with her.

"I need time to think."

"You don't have time." Lycian's voice was flat. "The hunter you attacked? He's not alone. He's part of a group that hunts supernatural creatures. And now they know there's something in these mountains worth hunting. They'll come back with more weapons, more traps, more people. And when they do, they won't stop until they've killed everything they find. Including you."

"Then I'll leave. I'll go back to the city where it's safe."

"There is no safe. Not for you. Not anymore." He gestured to the mark on her chest. "That bond is a beacon. I can feel you from miles away. Sense your emotions, your location, your fear. And if I can feel it, other wolves can too. Rival packs who'd love nothing more than to kill you just to hurt me. Rogues who see human-wolf bonds as abominations. Hunters who'll torture you to get information about where the rest of us live."

Arielle's legs gave out. She sank onto the couch, head in her hands, trying to process information that kept piling up faster than she could sort through it.

"This can't be happening."

"But it is." Lycian moved inside finally, closed the door behind him. "And you need to decide right now whether you're going to fight it or accept it. Because six days from now, ready or not, that bond is going to complete. And if you haven't learned to control it by then, if you haven't accepted what you're becoming, the transformation will tear you apart from the inside."

She looked up at him. "What am I becoming?"

"Something more than human." His silver eyes held hers. "Something less than wolf. Something that's never existed before because human-wolf bonds like this are rare. Most humans die during the transformation. Their bodies can't handle the change. But your grandmother was marked too, and she survived long enough to refuse the bond. Which means you have the bloodline. The strength. The potential to survive this."

"My grandmother refused her bond and died slowly over decades."

"Yes. And her wolf went mad and had to be put down like a rabid animal." Lycian's voice went hard. "Is that what you want? To spend the next twenty years withering away while I lose my mind bit by bit? To know that you're killing both of us because you were too afraid to take a chance?"

"That's not fair."

"Nothing about this is fair. But it's real. And it's happening. And you have six days to decide if you're brave enough to face it."

Arielle stood up, moved to the window, stared out at the forest that had apparently witnessed her attacking someone last night. The forest that had always felt safe and now felt like enemy territory.

"I don't even know you."

"Then get to know me. You have six days." Lycian moved to stand beside her, close enough that she could feel heat radiating from his skin. "Let me take you to my territory. Show you what my world looks like. Meet my pack. See what you'd be walking into if you accepted this bond. Make an informed choice instead of running blind."

"And if I still say no?"

"Then we both die. But at least you'll die knowing the truth instead of drowning in fear of the unknown."

The mark on Arielle's chest pulsed with sudden heat. She gasped, pressed her hand against it, felt warmth spreading through her entire body like fever.

"What's happening?"

"The bond is responding to proximity. The closer we are, the stronger it gets. The more it wants to complete itself." Lycian's hand covered hers over the mark, and the heat intensified. "In six days, this feeling will be unbearable. It will consume every thought, every breath, every moment until we either give in or it destroys us. That's what you're up against, Arielle. Not a choice between love and freedom. A choice between transformation and death."

She pulled her hand away, stepped back, needed distance before she couldn't think at all. "I need time alone. To process. To think."

"You have until tomorrow dawn. Then I'm coming back whether you want me to or not. Because hunters are coming, and you need to be somewhere safe when they arrive. My territory is protected. Warded against humans with hostile intent. You'll be safe there."

"I don't want to be safe. I want my life back."

"Your old life ended the moment that mark appeared." Lycian moved to the door, paused with his hand on the knob. "Tomorrow dawn, Arielle. Be ready. Or I'll carry you out of here myself. Your choice whether you come willingly or fighting."

"That's kidnapping."

"That's survival." He opened the door, then looked back at her one more time. "And for what it's worth, I'm sorry. Sorry the moon chose you. Sorry you're tied to me. Sorry your life got destroyed because of something neither of us could control. But I'm not sorry enough to let you die. So tomorrow dawn. North pass. Don't make me come get you."

Then he was gone, leaving Arielle alone in her cottage with blood-stained boots and a mark that burned like a brand and six days to decide if she was brave enough to become something she'd spent her whole life being taught wasn't real.

She sank back onto the couch and did something she hadn't done since her grandmother died.

She cried.

Not quiet tears. Not dignified grief. She sobbed like a child, shoulders shaking, snot running down her face, making sounds that would have embarrassed her if anyone had been there to hear.

But the cottage kept her secrets. Just stood there, silent and patient, while she broke apart.

When the tears finally stopped, when she'd cried herself empty and hollow, Arielle wiped her face with her sleeve and looked down at the mark on her chest.

It was still glowing. Still spreading. Still changing her into something she didn't recognize.

She thought about her grandmother's journals. About Clara's warning. About decades of regret written in cramped handwriting.

Don't make my mistake. Choose differently.

Tomorrow dawn. Six days until the eclipse. Six days to decide if she was brave enough to let herself transform or stubborn enough to die fighting it.

Arielle looked at her blood-stained hands one more time.

Then she went to pack a bag.

Because deep down, in a place she didn't want to acknowledge, she already knew what choice she was going to make.

The only question was whether she'd survive it.

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