
Moonpetal Whispers: My Second Chance Love
Ryker Vance, future Alpha, was on quiet evening patrol when Kian Sterling's panicked mind-link sliced his calm. Annoyed, he headed to the Healer's den, thick with Kian's distress.
Kian stammered, "Elian Thorne. He fell. From the sacred cliff." Ryker dismissed it as a clumsy Omega accident, but as he reached the door, a weak, intimate thought slipped into his mind: *"Go home, Ryker."* It was Elian, a low-ranking Omega he barely knew, commanding him.
Confused, Ryker left. His wolf restless, his gaze fell on a neglected moonpetal, Elian's gift, now limp. He woke to an absolute silence, a profound void. The moonpetal was gone, just grey dust. At Elian's funeral, unbearable grief struck. Memories crashed: Elian's mate offering, his "I love you" dismissed, Ryker's ignored warnings of soul-withering. Elian was his *mate*, and Ryker had caused his death.
The word *Mate* branded his soul. Consumed by absolute regret, clutching Elian's ashes, Ryker screamed to the empty sky: "Give him back! Give me a chance. Please."
The world dissolved. He opened his eyes to a training ground, vibrant, years younger. Then he saw him. Across the field, practicing drills, was a younger, healthier Elian, alive. Ryker walked straight to him, took Elian's hand, and with every eye on them, declared, "He's your future Luna."
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Chapter 1
Ryker Vance, future Alpha, was on quiet evening patrol when Kian Sterling's panicked mind-link sliced his calm. Annoyed, he headed to the Healer's den, thick with Kian's distress.
Kian stammered, "Elian Thorne. He fell. From the sacred cliff." Ryker dismissed it as a clumsy Omega accident, but as he reached the door, a weak, intimate thought slipped into his mind: *"Go home, Ryker."* It was Elian, a low-ranking Omega he barely knew, commanding him.
Confused, Ryker left. His wolf restless, his gaze fell on a neglected moonpetal, Elian's gift, now limp. He woke to an absolute silence, a profound void. The moonpetal was gone, just grey dust. At Elian's funeral, unbearable grief struck. Memories crashed: Elian's mate offering, his "I love you" dismissed, Ryker's ignored warnings of soul-withering. Elian was his *mate*, and Ryker had caused his death.
The word *Mate* branded his soul. Consumed by absolute regret, clutching Elian's ashes, Ryker screamed to the empty sky: "Give him back! Give me a chance. Please."
The world dissolved. He opened his eyes to a training ground, vibrant, years younger. Then he saw him. Across the field, practicing drills, was a younger, healthier Elian, alive. Ryker walked straight to him, took Elian's hand, and with every eye on them, declared, "He's your future Luna."
Chapter 1
Ryker Vance POV:
The mind-link from Kian Sterling was a raw slash of panic across the cool quiet of my evening patrol. Urgent. Frayed at the edges. Not a clean report, but a mess of anxiety and the metallic tang of fear. It was enough to pull me from the ridge line, my annoyance a low growl in my chest.
When I reached the Healer's den, the scent of Kian's distress was thick enough to taste. He was pacing near the entrance, a warrior built for battle reduced to a caged animal. Pine needles crunched under his boots. Back and forth. Back and forth.
"Sterling."
He spun, his shoulders tight with a deference that was almost painful to watch. "Alpha Ryker."
I kept my voice flat, cutting through his agitation. "Report. And make it quick. You pulled me from a border sweep."
"It's Elian Thorne," he said, his eyes flicking toward the closed door of the den. The name barely registered. "He fell. From the sacred cliff."
I waited for the rest. The part that justified summoning the future Alpha. It didn't come. I raised an eyebrow. "An Omega falls from a cliff. A tragedy, I'm sure. But hardly a matter that requires my personal attention. Is he dead?"
Kian flinched. "We don't know. Healer Croft won't let anyone in."
A strange thrum of impatience, sharp and unfamiliar, went through me. My wolf stirred, not with aggression, but with a restless energy I couldn't place. I pushed it down. "Omegas are clumsy. It's in their nature. You're a senior warrior, Kian. You should know better than to mind-link me for a domestic accident."
I moved toward the door, intending to get the truth from the Healer myself and put an end to this disruption. My hand was inches from the wood when a young assistant, smelling of antiseptic herbs and fear, blocked my path.
"The Healer is not to be disturbed, Alpha Ryker."
The title was correct, but her stance was defiant. My jaw tightened. The air grew heavy with my displeasure. "I will be disturbed when I see fit. Step aside."
She paled but held her ground. "He's... unstable. The Healer's orders were absolute."
I was about to force the issue, to use the voice that no wolf in this pack could disobey, when it came. Not a sound. Not a scent. A thought, slipping into my mind like a whisper of smoke. It was weak, breathless, and so startlingly intimate it felt like a violation.
*'Go home, Ryker.'*
It wasn't a request. It wasn't a plea. It was a statement, calm and final, spoken with a familiarity no Omega had the right to use. I froze. The thought belonged to Elian Thorne. I knew it with a certainty that made no sense. A low-ranking Omega I barely knew, whose face I could hardly picture, had just reached into my head and given me a command. My frustration evaporated, replaced by a cold, sharp confusion.
I took a step back from the door. Kian and the assistant watched me, their expressions a mixture of fear and bewilderment. They hadn't heard it. The link had been for me alone.
I turned away from the den, my wolf suddenly, unnervingly still inside me. I was leaving not because I was told to, but because the wrongness of it all had set my teeth on edge. This was beneath me. I was washing my hands of it.
***
The Packhouse was quiet. My chambers were spacious, the furniture carved from dark, heavy oak, the furs on the floor thick and expensive. It was a room that spoke of power. Tonight, it felt like a cage. I paced from the hearth to the window, the silence pressing in. My duties were waiting—patrol schedules to approve, training drills to design—but the words on the parchment blurred. My mind kept replaying the feel of that thought. Soft. Fading. And utterly unauthorized.
My wolf wouldn't settle. He prowled the confines of my mind, a low growl vibrating through my bones. I tried to force him into submission, to leash the strange dread that had followed me from the Healer's den, but it was like trying to hold back the tide.
My gaze fell on the windowsill. On a small, clay pot holding a single, neglected flower. A moonpetal. Its silver-blue petals were closed for the night, but the green leaves surrounding them were limp, curling at the edges. I vaguely remembered Elian Thorne pressing it into my hands months ago. A gift for my ascension ceremony. I’d almost thrown it away, but my mother had insisted I keep it. An offering from a pack member, no matter how lowly, was a sign of respect. I’d placed it on the sill and hadn't given it a second thought.
The restlessness finally drove me to bed. Sleep didn't come easy. It was a shallow, fitful thing, full of shadows and the lingering echo of a voice that wasn't mine.
I woke with a gasp. Not from a nightmare. From the silence.
It was absolute. A profound, crushing void where a low hum of energy had always existed at the edge of my senses. I had never noticed it until it was gone. It felt like the world had gone deaf. A cold, soul-deep emptiness settled in my sternum, a hollow ache that had no source and no name.
Drawn by the first weak rays of dawn, I looked toward the window.
The moonpetal flower was gone. In its place, on the polished dark wood of the windowsill, was a small pile of fine, grey dust. Not a single petal, not a shred of a leaf remained. It had simply… disintegrated.
I reached out, my fingers trembling slightly. The morning sun illuminated the fine grey dust. I touched it. The ash-like substance coated my fingertip. A cold that had nothing to do with the air temperature seeped into my bones, a chilling certainty that settled in the empty space where the hum used to be. Something was not just wrong. It was over.
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9.5
Rejected by her mate and tortured to death, Valeria wakes up in a new body, right before her wedding vows. In the body of another woman with the same name as hers.
She never thought of being inside the most powerful Luna. The most scandalous and shrewd woman. The moon Goddess blessed her with the perfect cover.
The big twist? The previous owner of the body had an affair with her ex- fiance. Things take a turn when her new husband, the alpha, knows her little secret.
He can see the souls of people through their eyes. Their unexpected attraction blooms. Until his brother returns from the dead to claim his wife, Luna Valeria.

8.9
CURSED FOR LOVE
8.9
"We can't be together," he whispered, voice breaking.
"You are my destruction."
Tears burned her eyes as she shook her head, stepping closer even though it felt like standing at the edge of a blade.
"And you... are my ruin too."
The words tasted like a goodbye neither of them could accept.
They were bound by something that had been waiting before either of them had names - stitched into the marrow of their bloodline, fed on every grief their ancestors had swallowed in silence. A curse that needed only one thing to wake.
Them, together.
They were never meant to love safely.
And if they ever surrendered to it -
One would die.
The other would be hollowed out by loving them.
The curse had learned patience from centuries of waiting.
And already, without permission, without mercy, the distance between them was shrinking.

7.4
Cadence, a modern botanist, woke up to a glaring sun and massive, alien purple leaves blocking the sky. She was stranded in a terrifying, primal world.
Before she could process the metallic smell of blood in the air, a white tiger the size of an SUV crushed a giant boar's neck right in front of her. The beast locked its piercing blue eyes on her hiding spot. But instead of tearing her throat out, a blinding flash of silver light erupted, and the monster transformed into a towering, heavily scarred naked man.
He was Harlan, a shifter who immediately claimed her as his mate under tribal law. Dragged back to his primitive village, Cadence faced a brutal reality. Unbonded females were targets, and she was expected to take multiple mates just to survive. The tribal women mocked her fragile frame, calling her useless. To make matters worse, her foreign scent attracted a rogue serpent-shifter who violently ambushed her in the river.
The icy shock of the serpent's attack plunged Cadence into a deadly, burning fever. The tribe's Shaman tried his healing magic, only to shake his head and abandon her.
"She lacks primal fortitude. She will rely entirely on her own weak vitality. I can do nothing."
As Harlan held her shivering body in despair, Cadence felt a deep sense of desperate injustice. Was she really going to die in a filthy stone hut in an unknown universe, killed by a simple cold?
No. She remembered her grandfather's strict survival lessons. Forcing her heavy eyes open, she grabbed her terrified tiger mate's hand. She didn't need their failing magic; she had science.
"I need specific plants to live. I need white willow bark. And a spicy, ginger-like root."
She rasped, preparing to show this savage world the true power of a modern survivor.

9.6
I was the devoted Luna of the Blackwood Pack, bound to my fated mate, Alpha Ryker.
But he coldly rejected our sacred bond for a pure-blooded she-wolf, tossing me aside like garbage.
That was when a cold voice in my head revealed the horrifying truth.
"Your fate is to be rejected, a tragic footnote in their epic love story."
My entire life was a scripted prophecy controlled by a twisted entity.
According to the script, I was supposed to be locked away, my inner wolf withering from the broken bond until I died in agony.
The entity even confessed to orchestrating the murder of Alpha Gideon, the only father figure I ever had, just to keep our bloodline enslaved to this sick narrative.
I refused to be a ghost in someone else's happily ever after.
Why should my family die and my soul be erased just to serve a predetermined fate?
Instead of crying like the prophecy demanded, I tore my own soul apart to shatter the ancient Scroll of Fate, destroying the entity itself.
Opening my eyes again, I was back to being a ten-year-old child.
It was the exact day my lifelong trauma began.
"Do as I say, Elara. Do not make any more trouble for me."
My mother was trying to force me to take the blame for a bully, just to save her own reputation.
This time, I am writing the script.

9.4
I was lying in a sterile hospital room, dying of cancer, with only a fake infertility report to keep me company.
Right before my heart monitor flatlined, a stranger walked in and handed me a medical file.
He told me that my fiancé, Garret, had zero sperm viability. The baby my adoptive sister, Beryl, was carrying wasn't his.
When Beryl got pregnant years ago, my adoptive parents forced me to break my engagement and take the blame for being barren.
I was discarded by Garret, mocked by Beryl's triumphant smiles, and kicked out of the house.
I was left to rot alone in a hospital bed while they lived the perfect life stolen from me.
My entire existence had been a cage built on a single, disgusting lie.
The anger burned away my despair. Why was I the only one who didn't know?
Why did I let them use me as a maid and a shield for their filthy secrets?
As the darkness swallowed me, I prayed for just one more chance.
I opened my eyes to the sound of my adoptive mother yelling my name.
The calendar on the wall read March 15, 2019—the exact day they forced me to give up Garret.
This time, I didn't cry or beg.
"You want Beryl to have Garret? Fine," I told my shocked adoptive parents. "But I want a cash buyout, and we are legally severing this adoption."
Then, I set my sights on Douglass Ward—the stranger from the hospital room.

9.2
Fael rejected Seraphine's bond and left her bleeding in the rain. She should have died that night. Instead, she was saved by Darius Varyn, Fael's banished uncle and sworn enemy. In the forbidden North, Darius offered her something Fael never did: acceptance, protection, and a chance to be the Luna she was always meant to be.
Six years later, Seraphina has built a life with Darius and raised her son, Aurelian, in peace. Until Fael returns with a devastating prophecy. Forced to return to the place of her greatest trauma, Seraphina must navigate political schemes, a mistress bent on destroying her, and two Alphas fighting for the throne. But when a shocking truth about Aurelian's bloodline is revealed, and a piece of her past comes back for her, the tides grow thicker.
And when her power awakens, the prey becomes the predator.