Follow
Chapters
Share
The Moon The King was Missing Novel Cover

The Moon The King was Missing

Lia, daughter of an alpha and his moon, grew up relegated to the kitchen by the same pack that ordered her parents killed. The night she nearly died, her wolf side awakened: she could distinguish false scents, read the forest, and sense the Stone when someone was lying. Kael, King of the Alphas, rescued her. He smelled her and knew: she was his destined mate. To protect her, Kael invoked the Law of the Stone and faced Argon, the tyrant who had kept her subjugated, in a duel. But a conspiracy was already underway: the mercenaries Black Iron and Mara used silver traps and a scent silencer to plant her trail, break her protection, and return her to being "No One." Lia must choose: hide under the King's wing or fight by his side. She has a gift no one else possesses. She can uncover evidence, force the Stone to speak, and reclaim her name. Kael can win battles. Only Lia can dismantle the conspiracy that haunts her. Will they be able to break the chains of fear and betrayal... or will pack warfare claim them first?
Chapters
Share

Chapter 5

Argon wouldn't give up, he wasn't willing to leave without Lia, and so he challenged Kael.

"Enough of this theater," Argon growled. "Come, King. Let's speak in another language."

"Not yet," the woman with black eyes interjected. "The question that decides the claims is still missing."

She turned to me.

"Do you see?"

I didn't look at Argon. I looked at Kael. He was a step away. He wasn't touching me. He didn't need me.

I looked back at the woman.

"I don't see a partner in him," I said, referring to Argon. "I see danger. I see lies."

"Fine," the woman said. "There's no right to claim based on the bond."

Argon smiled again, without showing his teeth.

"There's still the other one," he said. "The old one."

Kael took a step. And the forest supported him.

"I accept," he replied. "On the stone. If one of us surrenders, the other cannot kill him. Whatever happens in the duel, neither of us can lay a hand on Lia."

Argon raised an eyebrow.

"Are you afraid of getting your hands dirty?"

"I fear the custom of calling carnage victory," Kael said. "The fight must be clean and honorable."

The Council nodded in unison.

"So be it," the woman said. "You exchange places. Without using swords, daggers, or any other forged weapon. Without teeth in the throat."

Mikel took my elbow with the respect of someone asking permission and led me outside. Eidan and Ares stood behind me.

Argon took off his shirt. Kael ripped his open.

They both placed their right palms on the stone.

"I swear," Kael said.

"I swear," Argon repeated.

The first clash wasn't spectacular. It was sharp. Shoulder to shoulder, weight to weight. Argon pushed, trying to unbalance him. Kael took a half step and twisted his hip, deflecting the force.

Second clash. Argon threw a punch to the ribs. Kael lowered his forearm, blocked, and responded with a clean heel strike to the calf. No claws. No fangs.

"Breathe, King," Argon spat. "You'll need it."

My wolf bristled inside me. I wanted to advance. Ares barely grazed my shoulder with his knuckles, reminding me where I was.

Third clash. Argon changed his rhythm, quickly, a punch above and a sweep below. Kael fell to his knees and smiled. He caught the wrist that was coming for his face, twisted it, and Argon landed with his mouth on the stone with a thud.

The circle didn't applaud. The stone did.

Argon reared up with a growl and, for a heartbeat, bared his claws. Cursing under his breath.

"No claws," the woman reminded him.

Fourth clash. Kael advanced this time: he took two steps, one short and one long, and pushed him. Argon stumbled back three times. The edge of the circle stopped him. He looked at us. He looked at me. He smiled with his eyes.

"Surrender," Kael said, without hatred. "And I'll let you go back to your kind."

"I wasn't born to give in. I was born to reclaim."

"Reclaim dignity," Kael said.

Argon broke the rhythm and went in low, straight for the waist. Kael had him on top of him for a couple of seconds. It was enough time for Argon to attempt a blow to the windpipe. The stone burned. The blow stopped a millimeter short without anyone touching it.

"You've been warned," said the white-haired man.

Argon roared. Kael took the roar as a signal, freeing himself with a hip twist and a precise shove. Argon stumbled. Kael didn't follow through. He waited.

"Enough," said the woman. "Either you give in, or you'll break."

Argon wiped his mouth with the back of his hand. There was blood. He grinned, showing his teeth.

"I won't give in."

"Then listen," I interjected without asking permission. "If you fall, I'll see you. I'll remember you, fallen, defeated."

Argon looked at me as if he were seeing me for the first time. He didn't like it.

"King," he growled. "Last time."

Fifth clash. This time, Kael didn't wait. He entered with a twist and a shoulder lock that turned Argon's body into a lever against itself. It was clean. And that was the end.

Argon fell backward. Kael followed and pinned him down, placing his weight on precise points.

"Yield," Kael demanded, taking a deep breath.

Argon looked at his men. He searched for looks of humiliation among ours and found none.

"I yield," he said almost inaudibly.

We all took a deep breath.

Kael stepped back immediately and helped him to his feet. Argon half-heartedly accepted his hand, rage clenched behind his teeth. He didn't look at the Council. He looked at me.

"You haven't won," he murmured, just enough for those very close to me to hear. "The wolves remember. So do I."

"They remember the truth. And today it spoke."

Argon gestured to his men. They retreated as they had come: black against ochre, their shadows dissolving among the tree trunks. Only when the last one was lost did the woman speak.

"It is recorded. Protection granted. Claim denied. Duel concluded. The border is warned."

Mikel exhaled through his nose. Eidan's shoulders slumped. Ares ran a hand through his hair, relieved.

Kael turned to me.

"Are you alright?"

"Yes," I said, and my wolf, behind me, added a short, happy howl.

"I want to say something," I asked.

The Council nodded. Kael did too.

I stepped into the center.

"My name is Lia, daughter of Helena and Íñigo. I am one of those who see. And today I saw again."

A silence fell. And then, a murmur that wasn't from people: leaves, branches, earth, wind. As if the land accepted me.

Kael smiled for the second time that day.

"Come. There's bread."

I laughed involuntarily. My body was craving rest and soup.

We moved away from the circle. Halfway there, a strange smell cut through the air: old iron, smoke. Kael stopped. Mikel raised his head like a dog. The forest tensed.

"Do you smell it?" I whispered.

Kael nodded.

"Yes," he said. "This isn't over."

And the night revealed what was to come.

You may also like

Alpha’s Vow: Reclaiming his lost Luna Novel Cover
8.7
Alpha Kaelen is left shattered when his fated mate, Elara, vanishes during a brutal siege on their pack. Presumed dead by many, he refuses to abandon hope, fueled by a sacred vow to find her. Years later, a mysterious warrior with Elara’s eyes appears, but she remembers nothing of their past. Kaelen must battle rival packs and internal treachery to reclaim his lost Luna and unlock the secrets behind her disappearance before they lose everything.
Claimed By The Biker Kings: Their Forbidden Queen Novel Cover
8.9
Elena’s life shatters when she is thrust into the crosshairs of the Kings of Chaos, a notorious motorcycle club. Caught between two powerful, rival brothers who rule the streets with iron fists, she becomes a pawn in a deadly game of obsession and betrayal. As the mafia’s influence tightens and old secrets surface, Elena must navigate a world of violence. Can she survive being the forbidden prize in a war for ultimate control?
Flash Marriage To My Disabled Commander Novel Cover
9.3
Six years ago, my adoptive family framed me for commercial espionage, stripped me of my identity, and threw me out. Now, I finally returned to the Solis estate as a commercial pilot to take back what was mine. But the first thing my adoptive mother did was threaten me with that forged evidence again. She demanded I take my sister Kiana's place in a marriage contract with a disabled man, simply because Kiana refused to marry him. When I refused, Kiana ambushed me at the airport with a mob of reporters. She cried for the cameras, publicly accusing me of causing our father's and brother's deaths. She painted me as a ruthless monster who bankrupted the company and ruined the family. The crowd instantly turned on me, screaming that I was a murderer and a gold-digger. Kiana wanted to completely destroy my reputation so I would have no choice but to submit to her arrangement. I looked at her fake tears, feeling a cold, absolute fury. How dare she use the tragic deaths of the only family members who actually loved me as a prop for her sick show? They had ruined my life once, and now they wanted to bury me alive. I didn't hesitate. I slapped her hard across the face right in front of the flashing cameras. "That was for my father and brother." Then, my real fiancé, a decorated Delta Force commander, rolled through the crowd in his wheelchair. He tossed a classified Pentagon file to the reporters, completely clearing my name and exposing Kiana's lies. I married him to start my revenge, but as I stepped into his heavily secured penthouse that night, I realized my powerful new husband had been preparing for me for a very long time.
Forsaken for a Fake: The True Luna's Revenge Novel Cover
8.1
My husband, Alpha Kaeden, once looked at me with adoration. But after he brought Clemmie home, his eyes turned cold, glazed over by the "herbal tea" she fed him. Now, I lay chained to a steel table in the dungeon, the smell of my own burning flesh filling the air. Kaeden stood over me, indifferent to my screams. He ordered the guards to electrocute me through silver cuffs—the poison of our kind—even though he knew I was carrying his pup. But torture wasn't the end goal. I froze when I heard the doctor’s question. "The transplant carries risks, Alpha. Taking a heart from a living donor..." Clemmie didn't just want my husband; she wanted my heart to cure her "sickness" and steal my White Wolf power. I waited for Kaeden to refuse. Instead, he rubbed his temples and delivered my death sentence. "Harvest the heart. Dispose of the rest." "And the fetus?" the doctor asked. "Incinerate it." Those words killed me faster than the silver. I died on the operating table that night, my heart flatlining for three minutes to stage my death. Kaeden thinks I am ash in a jar. He thinks he saved his mistress. But when I opened my eyes in the safe house, they weren't brown anymore. They were glowing silver. Beside me, my daughter slept, alive and radiating ancient power. The weak Luna is dead. The White Wolf has risen. And I am going home to take back my pack.
He Came Back, I Broke Him Novel Cover
9.7
Eighteen months ago, the man I loved shattered my heart, claiming everything between us was a mistake. Now, he's back, a ghost of his former self, a rookie tryout in my pro esports team. And I will make him regret crawling back. Clifton, captain of a legendary esports team, was secretly battling a severe wrist injury that threatened his career, every match a fight against his own body. He pushed through the pain, ignoring doctors' warnings, desperate to maintain his god-like status. His world was already on the edge, but nothing prepared him for seeing Justice Terry again in the team basement. Justice, pale and trembling, his eyes wide with naked terror, was now a rookie tryout. Clifton had spent a year and a half trying to forget that rainy Chicago alley, the raw revulsion in Justice's eyes, the whispered "it wasn't real" that had left him heartbroken. Justice had vanished, and Clifton had erased every trace. Now, the boy who once looked at him like he was the sun was back, flinching at his touch, displaying a deep, primal fear. Amidst sponsor pressure and whispers of being "washed," Clifton saw Justice's return as a chance for vengeance. He publicly humiliated Justice on a live stream, forcing him into a suicide mission, then coldly benched him. Yet, the satisfaction never came. Instead, a hollow emptiness and a torrent of questions: What had truly happened in the past? Why was Justice here, and what trauma had carved such fear into his bones? Clifton, unwilling to be fooled again, swore to uncover every secret and every lie. He would force Justice to explain why he had returned, even if it meant tearing down everything they both had left.
Married To The Vulture Of Wall Street Novel Cover
7.8
I had exactly forty-five minutes to get married, or I would lose the voting shares needed to stop my father from laundering millions through our family foundation. Everything was riding on this one legal signature at the City Clerk’s office. But just as I reached the front of the line, my phone buzzed with a high-definition photo of my fiancé, Preston, tangled in sheets with a junior associate at a SoHo hotel. The man I was about to tie my life to was a fraud, and my deadline was ticking toward zero. When I shoved the evidence in his face, he didn't even flinch. Instead, he gripped my wrist until the bone ground together, whispering that I was just a "junkie" fresh out of a Swiss clinic and that no one else would ever marry a liability with a personality disorder. My father was already standing by with a fraudulent medical affidavit, ready to force me into a conservatorship and strip me of my freedom the moment the clock hit 5 PM. They had spent years using my fake "instability" as a leash, treating me like a broken doll while they bled the company dry. I was the only one with the evidence to take them down, yet I was being discarded like a sunk cost by the very men who were supposed to protect me. I looked at Preston’s smug face and realized I didn't need a husband; I needed a predator. I scanned the room and spotted Dominik Mack, the "Vulture of Wall Street," a man who specialized in hostile takeovers and stripping men like my father of everything they owned. I walked straight up to the most dangerous man in New York and offered him a business transaction. "Do you want to get married?" I asked. He looked at my trembling hands, then at the man chasing me, and adjusted his collar with clinical detachment. "Deal," he said. I didn't just find a groom; I found an accomplice. This wasn't a wedding anymore—it was a declaration of war.