APKDock Logo
Chapters
share
Marked By Moonlight  Novel Cover

Marked By Moonlight

In Ebonridge, eighteen is the age of revelation. While most find they are mundane, Amara Vale’s contact with the Moon Stone triggers a dormant, forbidden werewolf lineage. This awakening alerts the forest's hidden predators, making her an unavoidable target. As old secrets surface and threats loom, Amara is caught between the legacy of her absent father and the primal magic in her blood. She must now fight to define her own fate.
Chapters
share

Chapter 50

Morning arrived slowly, as if the world itself hesitated to move forward.

The sky was pale and colourless, stretched thin above the land. No one spoke as the camp stirred. Even the most restless among them moved with restraint, as though any sudden motion might shatter something fragile that could not be repaired.

She rose before being called.

Sleep had not truly come. It had hovered at the edge of her awareness, never fully claiming her. Every time her eyes closed, she saw the elder turning away. She felt the threads recoil as he vanished into the dark. Absence pressed heavier than presence ever had.

The circle was smaller now.

That truth sat heavily in her chest.

She stepped outside the shelter and inhaled the cold morning air. The land felt unsettled beneath her feet, not hostile, but alert. It remembered the fracture. It always would.

The leader approached quietly, standing beside her without speaking for a long moment.

"They are already whispering," he said finally.

"I know," she replied.

Fear had changed shape overnight. It was no longer loud or frantic. It had become careful. Calculating. The most dangerous kind.

"They are not questioning you," the leader continued. "Not directly. They are questioning the idea of permanence."

She closed her eyes briefly. "That is worse."

Permanence required faith. Faith required trust. Trust, once broken, did not return easily.

They gathered everyone once the sun rose high enough to cast long shadows across the camp. No speeches were prepared. No dramatic gestures. This was not a moment for performance.

She stepped forward anyway.

"We lost two people," she said plainly. "Not to death. To believe."

No one interrupted her.

"That hurts," she continued. "It should. If it does not, then we are already lost. But hear this clearly. Leaving did not make them free. It made them vulnerable. And it made us visible."

A murmur passed through the group.

"The claimants will act now," she said. "Not today. Not tomorrow. But soon. Because they have learned something important."

She paused, letting the weight of the words settle.

"They have learned that fracture is possible."

The leader spoke then. "Which means unity is no longer optional."

Some faces hardened. Others softened.

"What does that mean for us," someone asked.

"It means no more silence," she answered. "No more pretending fear does not exist. If you doubt, speak. If you have a question, ask. If you are afraid, say it. But do not let those thoughts fester in the dark where they can be shaped by someone else."

The threads hummed faintly in response. No approval. Alignment.

They broke camp shortly after.

Movement was necessary. Stillness invited thought, and thought invited doubt. The land ahead rose gently, dotted with scattered stone and scrub. It felt less heavy than the basin behind them, but not forgiving.

As they travelled, she walked among the group rather than at the front. She listened. She answered. She did not rush conversations or dismiss concerns. Leadership, she was learning, was less about direction and more about presence.

By midday, the heat pressed down hard. They stopped near a shallow ridge where the ground dipped enough to provide shelter from the wind.

It was there that the first consequence arrived.

Not an attack.

A sign.

One of the scouts found it while circling the perimeter. He did not shout. He did not panic. He stood still and waited for her to approach.

The mark was carved into stone.

Simple. Precise.

Deliberate.

She felt the threads recoil the moment she saw it.

"They were here," the scout said quietly.

"Yes," she replied. "And they wanted us to know."

The leader joined her, studying the symbol. "This is not a threat."

"No," she agreed. "It is an invitation."

Or a warning.

The distinction mattered less than the intent behind it.

"They are closer than we thought," he said.

"They always were," she replied. "We just refused to see it."

That night, they posted a double watch.

She sat near the edge of camp again, gaze fixed on the horizon. The Alpha did not appear. That absence felt intentional.

She understood it now.

He was no longer guiding her.

He was watching what she chose to become.

The threads hummed softly, shifting as the group settled. Some slept easily. Others did not. She could feel the tension in those who lay awake, thoughts looping endlessly.

She stood and moved quietly through the camp, stopping beside one of the younger scouts.

"You are afraid," she said gently.

He swallowed. "Yes."

"Of what?"

"Of choosing wrong."

She considered that. "So am I."

He looked up at her, surprised.

"But we do not get certainty," she continued. "We get responsibility. And that means making choices without knowing how they will end."

He nodded slowly.

When she returned to her place, she felt something shift again.

Not inside the camp.

Beyond it.

A pressure. Distant. Measured.

The claimants were moving.

She closed her eyes and reached inward, grounding herself in the threads that remained. They were thinner now, strained by loss and doubt. But they were still connected.

Still alive.

Still capable of holding.

The realisation settled deep in her chest.

This was no longer about preventing fracture.

It was about deciding what survived it.

When dawn came again, she would lead them forward. Not toward safety. Not toward certainty.

Toward consequence.

And she would do it with open eyes.

Because whatever broke next would reveal what truly remained standing.

You may also like

After My Alpha Betrayed Me, I Found the Lycan King Novel Cover
7.9
Cast aside and shattered by the Alpha who betrayed her trust, a heartbroken werewolf faces a bleak future. Her fate shifts dramatically when she encounters the legendary Lycan King, whose presence sparks a deep, unexpected connection. As she navigates the scars of her past, she is drawn into a realm of ancient power and intense passion. Now, she must find healing while embracing a grand destiny that far exceeds her wildest dreams.
After My Alpha Rejected Me for My Mother’s Killer Novel Cover
7.8
Elara's world collapses when Alpha Kaelen, her fated mate, chooses to sever their sacred bond. In a cruel twist, he replaces her with the woman who took Elara’s mother’s life. Now an outcast facing immense pack betrayal and political schemes, Elara struggles to survive the agony of rejection. Surrounded by enemies, she must find the strength to seek justice against her mother's murderer, who now holds power at the Alpha's side.
Dual Rebirth: Vengeance of the Discarded Daughter Novel Cover
9.5
Mocked as a magicless failure, Alina was betrayed by the Padillas. In her past life, she begged for mercy, only to be mutilated and murdered by her sister and fiancé. Now reborn, she realizes Karina has also returned. When her father demands she sign her life away to the brutal Aethelgard Order, Alina doesn't weep. She signs the contract with her own blood, planning to use the lethal faction to unleash a monstrous vengeance on those who discarded her.
No Bride for My Alpha Mate Novel Cover
9.2
Following her father's passing, Aria endures a miserable life controlled by her oppressive stepmother. When the formidable Alpha Kaelen visits her pack to find a wife, Aria is concealed to prevent them from meeting. Despite being hidden, Kaelen feels a powerful, fated connection to her. As hidden truths about her heritage come to light, Aria faces a choice: embrace her destiny with the Alpha or escape the pack's cruelty forever.
Reborn in Fire Novel Cover
8.6
For two years, Ryland Payne humiliated me by parading his secretary at every event while I bore it in silence. My restraint shattered at our son's memorial when he arrived with her wearing the locket I designed for my dead child. After a violent confrontation, the world branded me a murderer, blaming my past recklessness for our son's death. I am done being the villain in his story. Ryland, I am finally leaving you and this nightmare behind.
Reborn Luna: Rejecting My Cruel Alpha Novel Cover
7.0
Betrayed by her fated mate, Ryker Blackwood, the wolf-less Luna was cast into a dungeon while he chose the cruel Lilith Vane. After their unborn pups died and Ryker dismissed her agony, she perished in despair. Suddenly, she wakes up at seventeen, moments after Lilith pushed her into a lake. Facing Ryker’s sneers once more, she refuses to beg. This time, she will sever their bond, awaken her hidden Alpha bloodline, and exact revenge for her past life's suffering.