
Moonlight Claimed
7.6 / 10.0
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AKARI TANAKA didn't know she was a werewolf until she inherited a murder.
Summoned to a remote Carpathian town, she learns she's the last heir of an ancient alpha line-and her great-uncle's suspicious death has thrown the local packs into a war for succession. As her own latent power violently awakens, Akari is caught between a ruthless rival alpha who wants to control her and a fanatical uncle whose faked death masks a plan to sacrifice her in a ritual that will rewrite reality.
To prevent a genocide of her own kind, Akari must forge an alliance with her enemy, master the wolf within, and confront the monstrous truth of her bloodline.
The price of leadership is sacrifice. The cost of failure is annihilation. But in Lupinara, the greatest predator isn't the wolf... it's the past.
Moonlight Claimed Chapter 1
"You know, you've got a lot of quiet potential."
The words slithered into Akari Tanaka's ear, oily and patronizing, the final straw on a night that felt like sandpaper on her soul. She stood frozen at the rooftop's edge, her knuckles bone-white around the stem of her wine glass.
"If you spoke up more," her coworker Taro continued, leaning into her space, his breath hot with cheap beer, "people would really notice you."
Something deep within her cracked.
It wasn't a thought. It was a primal, white-hot command. Shatter it. Shatter the glass. Shatter his smug smile. Shatter this entire polished cage of a life that felt two sizes too small. Rage, sudden and absolute, surged through her veins, a terrifying tide she'd spent twenty-seven years meticulously damning up.
Her vision tunneled to the crystal in her hand. She didn't just imagine it; she felt it. The stem snapping. The bowl exploding outward in a cathartic spray of glittering shards. The red wine arcing through the air like blood, a shocking, beautiful stain on the sterile concrete. The fantasy was so vivid, so brutally satisfying, that every muscle in her arm and hand coiled, ready to obey the impulse.
"Akari? Helloooo?" Taro's grin faltered, a flicker of confusion in his glazed eyes.
She blinked, a violent shudder running through her. The glass was intact. Cool, smooth, full. Her heart hammered a frantic, panicked rhythm against her ribs. What is wrong with me? What was that? The hollow shock that followed the rage left her nauseous.
"Excuse me," she breathed, the words ash in her mouth. She didn't wait for a reply. Turning, she became a ghost moving through the celebration, a silent figure weaving between the roaring clusters of her flushed, triumphant coworkers.
"...her analytics saved the project, but try getting a full sentence out of her in meetings..."
"...heard the promotion is between her and Sato. Sato's a team player, though..."
"...she looks like she'd rather be anywhere else. Talk about ungrateful..."
Each word was a needle pressed under her skin. The noise wasn't just sound; it was a physical weight, pressing on her temples, her sternum, making her skin feel too tight. It had been like this for months, getting worse. This acute, painful sensitivity to everything. She'd blamed burnout, city life, insomnia. But this... this was different.
Only when her gaze, desperate for an anchor, found the waning crescent moon did the pressure ease. It was a subtle shift-the sharp edges of sound softening to a blur, the smells receding, the tightness in her chest loosening a fraction. A fleeting, mysterious calm she couldn't explain, like remembering the lyrics to a lullaby from a dream. The moon had always done this for her, her silent, celestial secret. Tonight, it felt less like a comfort and more like a lifeline she was barely clinging to.
She fled, not offering excuses, ignoring the calls of her name. The elevator's descent was a merciful plunge into silence. She sagged against the wall, pressing her cool forehead to the polished steel, breathing in the sterile, clean scent. The echo of that violent surge left a tremor in her hands.
The pull came again, not from the moon now hidden by towers, but from deep within her own chest. A low, insistent, gravitational tug. East. It yearned east, beyond the city sprawl, beyond the sea, toward the dark mass of a continent she'd never visited. A homesickness for a homeland she'd never known washed over her, so profound it stole her breath. It made no logical sense. Tokyo was her only home. But under the buzzing neon, her soul ached for somewhere distant, wild, and thick with the scent of soil and trees.
"Get a grip," she whispered to the night, her voice lost in the city's roar. Clenching her fists until her nails bit half-moons into her palms, she forced her body to turn away from the invisible call and marched toward the familiar.
The familiar silence of her apartment greeted her, a stark contrast to the cacophony outside. The act of slipping off her heels in the genkan was ritual, grounding. She flicked the light on.
And froze.
There, on the polished wooden floor, lay an envelope.
It was thick, expensive ivory paper, its edges crisp and deliberate. No stamp. No address. No postmark. Just her name-AKARI TANAKA-written in elegant, stark black ink that seemed to gleam under the light.
Her pulse, which had just begun to settle, kicked into a frantic gallop. No one had buzzed up. The building had secure mailboxes downstairs. This had been hand-delivered. Slipped under her door.
Crouching slowly, as if approaching a live animal, she picked it up. A faint, impossible scent reached her-pine resin and damp, cold earth, clean and wild, utterly alien in her world of concrete and recycled air. The envelope was heavy, substantial. A dark red wax seal held the flap firmly closed. Pressed into it was a symbol that made her breath catch.
A wolf's head, rendered in fierce, elegant detail, its muzzle raised as if mid-howl, framed perfectly by a sharp crescent moon.
Her thumb traced the raised wax. A jolt, like static electricity, but warmer, shot up her finger. She snatched her hand back, heart pounding.
***
Pale morning light filtered through the sheer curtains, doing little to dispel the shadows clinging to the corners of the room. Akari hadn't slept. The envelope had sat on her kitchen island all night, a silent, commanding presence. Every time she'd closed her eyes, she smelled pine and damp earth, felt that insistent pull in her chest, now twinned with a low thrum of anxiety.
The new moon had left the sky empty, a blank, starless slate. She felt its absence like a missing limb, unmoored.
With a final, steadying breath that did nothing to calm her, she picked up the letter opener. The wax seal cracked with a sound like a frozen twig snapping, sharp and final in the quiet apartment.
Inside was a single sheet of the same heavy cream paper. The letterhead was embossed, formal, and utterly foreign:
IONESCU & SONS, SOLICITORS
Lupinara, Romania
Her eyes skimmed the lines of precise, formal English-then snagged, her heart stuttering to a stop.
We regret to inform you of the passing of Mr. Kenji Tanaka, your great-uncle... sole surviving next of kin... immediate succession to the entire estate...
The words blurred for a second. Great-uncle?
She sank onto the stool, its hard edge biting into her thighs. The paper trembled in her hands.
Kenji Tanaka.
The name meant nothing. No stories whispered at bedtime. No faded photographs on a family altar. No mysterious gifts or calls from abroad. Her parents, now gone five years, had never uttered a word.
"I don't have a great-uncle," she said aloud, the words echoing in the sterile quiet. The apartment offered no argument, just the distant hum of the refrigerator.
A desperate, scrabbling need for proof seized her. She crossed to a storage cabinet, pulling out a plastic bin labeled "Family." She sifted through documents, old diaries, until her fingers found a small, faded photographic album. There, nestled between pictures of school ceremonies and vacations, was one of her as a toddler, maybe three years old. Her parents smiled in a sunlit park, her mother kneeling with an arm wrapped securely around tiny Akari, her father standing behind them, his hand on her mother's shoulder. They looked happy, whole.
And in the background, slightly blurred but unmistakable, stood a man. Tall, posture rigidly straight, dressed in a dark suit too formal for a park outing. He wasn't smiling. He was looking directly at the camera-directly at her.
Her blood ran cold.
With numb fingers, she turned the photo over. Her mother's flowing script: A trip to Ueno Park to remember. Akari and Uncle Kenji?
The question mark was a tiny, devastating dagger.
Betrayal, cold and sharp, washed over her. They'd known him. They'd stood beside him. They had hidden him from her entire life. Why?
By noon, operating on a numb, robotic autopilot, she had booked a one-way ticket. Tokyo Narita to Bucharest Otopeni. Leaving in three days.
As she closed her laptop lid, a notification popped up in the corner of the screen-a cloud storage service suggesting a "Memory from 10 years ago." It was the park photo. With a hollow curiosity, she clicked.
The software had applied an "AI enhancement," cleaning up the blurry background. The image loaded, sharper, clearer, crueler.
The man in the background was now in stark focus. Kenji Tanaka. Sharp, severe features. Hair like iron. And his eyes... even through the digital correction, they were unmistakable. A luminous, piercing amber. They didn't just look at the camera. They seemed to see through it, through time and distance, to hold her gaze across the years. They were not the eyes of a kindly great-uncle. They were ancient, alert, and wild. The eyes of a wolf.
In that moment, the last piece of her old reality crumbled. The unexplained rage, the sensory overload, the moon's strange solace, the gravitational pull east-it was all connected. This was no simple inheritance. It wasn't even a choice.
It was a summons. A reckoning.
And it was not just waiting for her to arrive.
It was waiting for her to come home.
Continue Reading
Moonlight Claimed of Contents
Chapter 1 Ch. 1Chapter 2 Ch. 2Chapter 3 Ch. 3Chapter 4 Ch. 4Chapter 5 Ch. 5Chapter 6 Ch. 6
Chapter 7 Ch. 7
Chapter 8 Ch. 8
Chapter 9 Ch. 9
Chapter 10 Ch. 10
Chapter 11 Ch. 11
All Chapters all
New Release Novels

7.6
I moaned out his name. "Damien, you are not trying hard to get me, yet .."
He smirked and whispered to my ears. "I like being hard, Not "trying" hard."
When Lila Sinclair's mother is sentenced to life in prison, her world collapses overnight. With nowhere else to go, she is taken in by Sebastian Blackwood, her mother's former lover. A powerful, reserved man who agrees to shelter her under strict conditions.
Lila is placed in his household... and into a life she never asked for, sharing a roof with two stepbrothers who change everything.
Damien is danger wrapped in charm...intense, controlling, and impossible to ignore. Ethan, on the other hand, is steady, kind, and grounding...the only place she feels safe when everything else feels like it's slipping away.
But Lila's situation comes with a hidden clause: her stay in the country is temporary. Within 365 days, her legal protection expires. To remain, she must marry one of the Blackwood heirs.
One house. Two brothers. Twelve months of blurred lines, buried secrets, and emotions she was never meant to feel.
As desire clashes with safety and passion wars with peace, Lila is forced into a choice that could secure her future...or destroy it completely.

8.4
Grace, after three years of silence from a crash that stole her voice and family, finally uttered a hoarse syllable. It was her first sound, a breakthrough she desperately wanted to share with Josiah, her childhood protector. Instead, through a slightly ajar door, she heard his careless chuckle, followed by a sharp, entitled voice.
Alexandria's voice sliced through the air: "Josiah, are you really planning to bring that little mute to the banquet? She's a walking trailer park tragedy. It's embarrassing." Grace froze, waiting for Josiah to defend her. He didn't. Instead, he sighed, calling her "a responsibility" and "a lifeless ghost," then pulled Alexandria closer.
The words were serrated blades. Her silent devotion, her self-erasure for his peace, had made her a punchline. He was relieved she was broken. The bitter realization of his betrayal ignited a cold, white-hot fury.
Wiping away tears, Grace met Josiah, feigning her usual submissive smile, and quietly refused his "hush money." As he walked away without a glance, her inner voice was clear, sharp, and resolute: "I'm done playing your game."

9.5
My boyfriend, Jefferson, convinced me to give up my Yale scholarship for him. He was my secret, my escape from the shame of my mother's past, and I threw away my future for our love.
Then, at a gala, he publicly announced his engagement to Aubrey Carroll-the girl who made my high school years a living hell.
He trapped me in his mansion, forcing me to become her personal servant. She tortured me daily, culminating in her brutally killing our dog, Charlie, with a garden trowel.
When her friends arrived, they joined in, stripping me half-naked and live-streaming my panic attack for the world to see.
The man who once promised to protect me watched as they destroyed me.
But as I lay bleeding out on the floor, it wasn't an ambulance that arrived. It was the private security of Alexzander Stevens-my estranged, billionaire grandfather.
He revealed I was his sole heiress, and now, we were going to make them pay for every last tear.

9.2
Rebirth with a Twist.
Fawn Jones doesn't get a chance to resolve the issues with her marriage. No, she gets murdered in her own bathtub. Drowned by the husband she hated after he had moved his mistress into their bed, Fawn's last lucid thought is a promise before death. "I will not stay weak. I will make you pay. If not in this life, then the next." Then she wakes up. Different room. Different body. Different life. Cassandra Huntington – rich, infamous, beautiful in a way Fawn never had been. Cassie had been in a coma for six months after a car crash. Her billionaire husband, Blake, had just signed the paperwork to turn off her life support when she suddenly started breathing on her own. Now everyone thinks Fawn is Cassandra. The media calls it a miracle. Blake calls it complicated. The woman wearing his wife's face is softer, sharper, funnier... and so tempting he hates himself for wanting her. Fawn calls it an opportunity for revenge. Her killers are still out there. Her old body is in the ground under a lie. And the only weapons she has now are Cassandra's money, Cassandra's reputation... and Cassandra's husband. So, she plays the role. Learns to walk in six-inch heels. Smiles for the cameras. Seduces a man who once couldn't stand his wife and now can't seem to stay away from her. While she quietly buys into the company that ruined her old life. While she gets close enough to the man who killed her to watch him crack. They drowned the wrong woman. Now she's awake. And she's not done.

9.8
Ina Holman, heiress to a failing real estate empire, was forced to attend a high-stakes matchmaking meeting to secure a financial lifeline for her family.
But the drink she was handed was secretly spiked. Desperate to avoid a public scandal that would ruin her father, she fled into a VIP elevator, only to fall directly into the arms of Buren Warner—the most ruthless billionaire predator on Wall Street.
After a blurred, chaotic night, the nightmare truly began.
A fabricated scandal of her hotel rendezvous hit the front pages. Her father slapped her across the face, using the disgrace as an excuse to freeze her accounts and kick her out onto the streets, legally severing her from the family trust before declaring bankruptcy.
Even worse, her twin sister was killed in a sudden estate explosion.
And the final, crushing blow? Ina discovered that her ex-boyfriend, Faron, the man supposed to save her family, was secretly gay. He and her best friend had orchestrated the drugging to destroy Ina's reputation, allowing Faron to break their alliance and keep his inheritance without suspicion.
Stripped of her home, her family, and her dignity, Ina screamed in agony on the freezing streets.
Her own father had murdered her sister for a fifty-million-dollar insurance payout and sacrificed Ina to hide his assets. The people she trusted most had conspired to ruin her life just for their own selfish greed.
Driven into a corner with absolutely nothing left to lose, Ina stared at the cold, calculating billionaire who had tracked her down to an abandoned cliffside estate.
"Marry me, and I will give you the power to destroy them all."
To avenge her sister and crush the people who betrayed her, Ina signed her soul to the devil.

8.3
When Eli is forced to enroll at Blackwood Academy, he thinks it is just another remote boarding school. But on his first night, he realizes the terrifying truth.
This school is a prison.
Trapped in endless, deadly time loops, students are forced to complete cruel, supernatural trials. Ghosts, cursed hallways, hidden rules, and unspeakable creatures hunt them after dark. The only way to stay alive is to solve mysteries, earn credits, and obey the academy's twisted commands.
No one remembers how they arrived.
No one has ever graduated.
No one leaves alive.
Eli must team up with other desperate students to uncover the academy's century-old secret. If they fail, they will be trapped in the nightmare forever.
At Blackwood Academy, survival is the only exam.











