CHAPTER ONE: Christmas Eve Under a Broken Moon
(Expanded, emotionally rich, Dreame-style opening)
Christmas Eve smelled like cinnamon, pine, and betrayal.
Aria Collins stood frozen outside her apartment building, the cold biting through her coat, her breath fogging the glass door in front of her. Inside, laughter spilled into the hallway, soft, intimate, familiar.
Too familiar.
Her fingers trembled as she tightened her grip on the grocery bag she’d carried all the way home. The wine bottle inside clinked faintly, mocking her.
She hadn’t meant to come home early.
She had planned a surprise, his favorite dinner, candles, a stupid red ribbon she’d tied around herself like some cliché holiday fantasy. She had even convinced herself that Christmas could be different this year.
That he could be different.
Through the glass, she saw them.
His hand on her waist.
Her best friend’s fingers tangled in his hair.
Their mouths pressed together like they’d done it a hundred times before.
Something inside Aria cracked.
Not loudly. Not dramatically.
Just a quiet, devastating break that echoed straight into her bones.
She didn’t scream. Didn’t cry. Didn’t confront them.
She turned and walked away.
The city was alive with holiday magic, strings of lights wrapped around lampposts, carols floating from cafés, couples huddled together against the cold. Everyone looked like they belonged somewhere.
Aria didn’t.
Her phone buzzed in her pocket. She ignored it.
By the time she realized where she was going, the streets had narrowed, the buildings thinning until only trees surrounded her. Snow crunched beneath her boots as she stepped into the forest bordering the town.
The air changed instantly.
It felt heavier. Charged.
The moon hung low and unnaturally bright, bathing the forest in silver light. Aria slowed, an uneasy chill crawling up her spine.
“This is stupid,” she whispered. “You’re just upset.”
A growl answered her.
Low. Deep. Dangerous.
Her heart slammed into her throat as she turned.
Between the trees, something moved.
Eyes glowed silver—intelligent, predatory.
A massive wolf stepped into the moonlight, its dark fur dusted with snow, its presence overwhelming. This was no animal she’d ever seen.
Her legs buckled.
She fell backward, palms scraping against ice as terror stole her breath.
“No,” she whispered. “Please—”
Before the wolf could reach her, another presence collided with it.
A roar shook the forest.
The world blurred—movement too fast, power too raw. A flash of silver light exploded through the trees, forcing Aria to shield her eyes.
When the light faded, the wolf was gone.
In its place stood a man.
Tall. Broad. Bare skin gleaming under the moon as if carved from shadow and light. His silver eyes locked onto hers, blazing with something fierce and ancient.
And unmistakably relieved.
“You crossed the boundary,” he said, voice rough with emotion. “I felt you.”
Aria swallowed hard. “You were a wolf.”
“Yes.”
Her breath came out shaky. “I’m officially hallucinating.”
He stepped closer, kneeling before her, his warmth melting the cold between them.
“No,” he said softly. “You’re awakening.”
Her pulse raced as his gaze softened, reverent.
“I’ve searched for you for years,” he continued. “Across seasons. Across moons.”
Her chest tightened. “Why?”
His voice dropped to a whisper.
“Because you’re mine.”
The moon above them pulsed brighter.
And Christmas Eve became the night her life—and heart—were claimed by destiny.