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The Crescent Betrayal

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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: Wild Eyes

Maya Chen POV

The wolf's golden eyes met mine—and for a moment, I forgot how to breathe.

I'd treated plenty of wild animals in my six years as a vet. An owl with a shattered wing. A badger that nearly bit off my finger. Once, a raccoon so angry it peed on my scrubs twice. But nothing had ever looked at me the way this wolf did. Not like prey. Not like a threat. Like... it knew me.

Rain hammered the windows of Pine Ridge Veterinary Clinic, the wind shaking the glass with every gust. I worked under the familiar glow of my old desk lamp, trying to ignore the flickering overhead lights and the shadows curling at the edges of the room.

The wolf lay still on the examination table, his breathing shallow but steady. Three deep slashes carved into his left flank, each one unnaturally even. Not a bite. Not a bear attack. Something deliberate.

"What did this to you?" I murmured, not expecting an answer.

Mrs. Henderson had found him sprawled in her garden around 3 a.m. and came pounding on my apartment door like the apocalypse had started. She was shaking. Said the wolf had just appeared—no sound, no struggle, just blood on the roses.

A normal vet would've called wildlife control. Euthanasia, probably. But something in this wolf pulled at me. Not out of pity. Not out of duty. Something deeper. Something I didn't have words for.

I threaded the suture needle. My hands were calm, but my skin buzzed with static. Ever since I touched him, a strange warmth had started in my fingers, crawling up my arms. Not unpleasant, just... weird.

His fur was impossibly soft. Like silk. That alone should've set off alarms—this wasn't any kind of wild I'd ever seen.

"Easy, handsome," I whispered. "I'm going to fix you up, alright?"

His chest rose and fell.

Then, just as I leaned in to close the first gash, his eyes snapped open.

My breath caught. Golden. Alive. Terrifying and beautiful.

Most wolves look through you. This one looked into me.

I should've backed off. Should've reached for the tranquilizer gun on the wall. But I didn't move.

We just... stared at each other.

"I'm not going to hurt you," I whispered, more to convince myself than him.

He didn't growl. Didn't move. Just watched.

I finished stitching in silence, hands moving on autopilot. The weirdest part? I didn't feel afraid. A wolf—awake, injured, unrestrained—was letting me work like I was something familiar. Like he knew me.

"There," I said softly, tying the last knot. "You're going to be alright."

The lights went out.

Total darkness.

I froze. The backup generator should've kicked in—it always did during storms. But this time, nothing. Just the sound of rain and the hum of the wind outside.

Then came the growl.

Low. Rumbling. Not directed at me.

I turned. The wolf was on alert, ears forward, eyes locked on the front door.

My skin prickled.

Then came the sound—slow, deliberate scratching. Not frantic. Not animal.

Deliberate.

"Dr. Chen?" A woman's voice floated through the front door. Sweet, smooth—too smooth. "I think I hit something. I saw your lights on before they went out. Can you help?"

I moved toward the wall beside the window, peering out. No headlights. No car engine. No silhouette.

And the wolf on the table was now standing—tall, tense, massive.

The scratching grew louder.

"Dr. Chen," the voice sang again, syrupy with concern. "It's suffering out here. Won't you open the door?"

Something in me screamed: Don't move.

My phone was dead. No signal, no light, not even a flicker.

The wolf turned his head to me, his eyes catching what little ambient light remained.

In my head—clear as if someone whispered—it came: Don't trust her.

I stiffened.

The voice outside changed. Lower now. No more sweetness.

"I know you're in there," she hissed. "I can smell your fear."

The scratching stopped.

Silence.

Then—

The door exploded.

Wood, glass, and metal shattered inward in a roar of destruction. I stumbled backward, heart hammering, as something stepped through the wreckage.

She might've once been human. Maybe even beautiful. But what entered the clinic wasn't either.

Eyes like coals. Claws where fingers should be. A mouth too wide, filled with teeth too sharp.

"Hello, Maya," she said, and her smile made my stomach turn. "We've been looking for you for a very long time."

The wolf launched.

A blur of gray fur and muscle collided with the thing in the doorway, and they crashed to the floor in a snarl of claws and teeth.

I backed against the far wall, frozen in place. My brain screamed to run. My body refused.

As they fought, the impossible happened.

The wolf began to change.

I heard it first—bones cracking, joints snapping. Then his body began to shift. Legs stretched. Spine arched. Fur disappeared. Skin emerged.

Within seconds, the wolf was gone.

In his place knelt a man.

Naked. Bloodied. Breathtaking.

He was built like a soldier—broad shoulders, strong chest, every muscle honed for survival. His dark hair clung to his forehead, and when he looked at the creature still thrashing beneath him, his eyes were the same.

Golden. Familiar.

"Mine," he growled, his voice low and dangerous. "You don't touch what's mine."

My mind spun. I pressed harder into the wall. He looked at me now.

Recognition. Not just awareness. Not just instinct.

Something deeper.

"Hello, Maya," he said, and despite everything, his voice softened. "My name is Kai Blackwood. And I'm afraid your life just changed forever."

I tried to speak. Nothing came out.

The woman—or whatever she was—shoved him off. Blood streaked her face where his claws had caught her.

She hissed, low and furious. "Too late, Alpha. The Shadow Council knows where she is now. She's theirs. Claimed by prophecy."

Then she dissolved—smoke and shadow, vanishing into the air like a nightmare slipping through fingers.

Silence. Just the sound of my breathing. His.

Kai turned back to me, rising slowly.

He was tall. Towering, really. And strong in a way that had nothing to do with muscles.

But it was the look in his eyes that made my heart stutter.

Not threat.

Not fear.

Desperation. And something dangerously close to devotion.

"Maya," he said gently, taking a step forward. "We need to talk."

"You… you were the wolf," I whispered, my voice barely working. "You turned into—into—"

"A lot of what you thought was impossible is about to become very real."

He paused, watching me carefully.

"That creature? She's a Shadow Wraith. They hunt for the Council. And they've been searching for you since the day you were born."

My mouth went dry. "Why me?"

"Because of the dreams."

I froze.

He saw it.

"You've had them, haven't you?" he continued. "Wolves under the moon. A silver-haired woman calling your name. Visions you thought were nightmares."

I couldn't speak. Couldn't lie.

He nodded.

"You're the last of the Lunar Bloodline, Maya. The Moon Child. And whether you want it or not… you've just stepped into a war that's been waiting for you your entire life."

Thunder crashed above us.

In the lightning's flash, I saw something in his eyes that made my breath catch.

Love. Or maybe something older. Wilder.

Claim.

He took another step. "So, I'll ask once," he said quietly. "Are you ready to find out who you really are?"

Something howled in the distance.

And in that moment, I knew.

Whatever came next—I wasn't going back to normal.