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Marked by Moonlight

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In Ebonridge, the forest is never just a forest. It is alive, aware, and bound by rules no one dares to break especially the rule about never crossing its edge.Amara Vale has always believed she is ordinary. That belief ends the night she turns eighteen, when a village ritual reveals the truth buried in her blood: she is part of a f*******n werewolf lineage tied to the guardians of the living forest.Pulled into a hidden world that has existed beneath her life, Amara discovers the wolves of Ebonridge are not monsters, but protectors bound to something far older than the village itself. At their center stands the Alpha,ancient, calm, and connected to her in ways she does not yet understand. He does not seek to control her. He waits for her to understand who she is becoming.But the truth unsettles everything. Fear spreads through the village. Her mother’s secrets begin to surface. And the forest itself seems to be calling her deeper into its grasp.Caught between two worlds, Amara must learn to control a power she never asked for and decide what strength truly means,domination, or balance.As tensions rise and unseen forces stir, she stands at the edge of a choice that could change both the village and the forest forever.And the forest is listening.

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Chapter 1:The Mark
On my eighteenth birthday, the moon felt like a silent witness, hanging heavy and bright over Ebonridge, almost as if it was poised for something big. I leaned against my window frame, a weird, restless energy buzzing just beneath my skin. It wasn't exactly fear, more like the whole world was holding its breath, just waiting. A dog barked somewhere far off, then silence. Even the night seemed super hushed, expectant. The forest bordering the village looked eerily dark, its shadows stretching like grasping fingers under the moonlight. For just a second, I thought I saw something move among the trees, something tall, unnaturally still. My breath hitched, but when I blinked, it was gone. 'Just nerves,' I told myself. Then, the drums started. Slow, deep, and steady. Each beat seemed to vibrate right through the village, settling into my bones. The Call. We all knew about it, though no one ever talked about it straight-up. You just waited for your turn, hoping it would skip you. My hands clenched into fists. A soft knock on the door. "It's time," my mother's voice, steady enough, but her eyes were anything but. They scanned my face with an intensity that made my throat go dry. I nodded, following her downstairs, my legs feeling kind of disconnected. Outside, torches cast a flickering glow on the village square. Old stones, etched with symbols no one remembers, were scattered everywhere. The villagers stood back, murmuring, their stares feeling like a physical weight. The elders, faces completely blank, formed a circle around the Moon Stone. It pulsed with a faint, inner silver light, and as I got closer, that strange buzzing in my chest got stronger, pulling at me. One by one, the other young people touched the stone. Nothing happened. They were sent away, their relief practically radiating off them normal, safe, regular. My heart hammered with each step they took away. Then it was my turn. The silence in the square felt suffocating. I glanced back at my mother, her lips a thin, white line, her hands clasped tight. Turning back to the stone, I reached out. The second my fingers made contact, a jolt of heat shot up my arm, exploding in my chest like wildfire. The stone flared, blindingly bright, and the drums cut off mid-beat, plunging the square into a heavy silence. From the depths of the forest, a long, low howl answered. Suddenly, my senses went into overdrive. I heard the crackle of torches, the sharp breaths of the crowd, the rustle of leaves miles away. It felt like the whole forest was awake, breathing. I stumbled back, clutching my chest, a burning sensation spreading under my skin. Elder Corvin stepped forward, his face pale as a ghost. "She carries the mark," he announced, his voice heavy. "The bloodline we prayed for would never come back." A wave of hushed whispers rippled through the crowd in fear, shock and dawning recognition. My stomach churned. Even though I didn't get his words, my body did. My heart pounded, wild and erratic. Then, a whisper in my mind, not a sound, but a thought: Run. My mother’s hand found mine, her grip firm, grounding. But her face was pale. At the edge of the forest, amber eyes gleamed between the trees, watching. They weren't angry, not threatening. They were just waiting. I should have been terrified. A part of me was, my breath catching, my hands shaking. But beneath the fear, something ancient, something familiar, stirred inside me, as if it too had been waiting. "Whatever happens tonight," my mother whispered, her voice trembling just a bit, "do not go into the forest." Footsteps circled the square, slow, deliberate. A low growl vibrated through the night air. A tall shadow flickered past a nearby wall. And in that moment, it all became terrifyingly clear; They hadn't come to hurt me. They had come for me.

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