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Shadows of the MoonBlood

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Chapter 1 - The Night I Stopped Being Human

The rain in Lagos never asked permission.

It slammed down in sheets, turning gutters into rivers and roads into mirrors that reflected broken neon. Elara Adebayo ran through it anyway, sandals slapping puddles, phone clutched like a lifeline even though the screen had cracked two streets back.

She was late.

Her auntie's birthday jollof wouldn't wait, and neither would the lecture about "a twenty-four-year-old still running errands like a child." But the danfo had broken down on Ikorodu Road, and now she was cutting through the edge of the Ebute Metta forest reserve — a stupid, reckless shortcut everyone knew to avoid after dark.

Especially tonight.

The blood moon was out.

A low, coppery disc that made the street dogs howl longer than usual and the okada riders cross themselves twice.

She smelled it before she saw it.

Not wet earth or diesel or roasted corn.

Something primal.

Iron and musk and lightning-struck sandalwood.

Her feet slowed.

Her heart didn't.

A shape moved between the trees — too big for a dog, too graceful for a man.

Eyes caught moonlight. Amber. Burning.

Elara froze.

The thing stepped forward.

It was a wolf.

But not like any wolf in National Geographic.

Shoulder height to her chest, fur black shot through with silver, scars crisscrossing its muzzle like war paint.

When it exhaled, steam curled from its jaws.

She should have screamed.

Instead she whispered, "Ẹ jọ̀wọ́… don't."

The wolf tilted its head — almost curious.

Then it lunged.

Not to kill.

To claim.

Teeth sank into the meat of her shoulder — not deep enough to tear artery, just enough to mark.

Pain exploded white-hot, then flipped into something worse: heat.

A golden thread snapped taut inside her chest, connecting to… something. Someone.

The wolf released her and backed away, eyes wide like it hadn't meant to go that far.

Then it melted into shadow and was gone.

Elara dropped to her knees in the mud.

Blood soaked her Ankara top.

But the wound was already closing — impossibly fast.

And the scent… that sandalwood-storm scent… was everywhere.

Inside her.

She staggered home somehow.

Auntie screamed, poured Dettol, called her dramatic.

Elara smiled through chattering teeth and said she'd fallen.

That night the fever came.

By morning her senses were knives.

The neighbor's generator roared like jet engines.

The neighbor's wife's perfume made her gag from three flats away.

And under it all — that scent.

Pulling her back toward the forest.

She fought it for three weeks.

Took extra shifts at the boutique. Avoided mirrors because her eyes kept flashing silver.

Ate raw meat straight from the fridge when no one was looking.

Then the full moon after the blood moon rose.

She couldn't fight anymore.

She went back to the reserve.

He was waiting.

Kael Okafor stood barefoot in the clearing, shirtless, the scars on his torso telling stories older than Lagos itself.

Alpha of Ironfang.

Twenty-eight.

Unmated — officially — because the pack needed the alliance with Zara's family.

But the moon didn't care about politics.

The moment Elara stepped into moonlight, the bond locked.

Kael staggered like he'd been shot.

His wolf rose so fast his eyes bled amber.

"Mate," he growled — half awe, half horror.

Elara's new wolf howled inside her skull. Mine.

She took one step toward him.

He took one step back.

"You're human," he said. Voice like gravel. "Bitten. City-scent. No pack."

"I didn't choose this," she snapped. Voice shaking but not weak. "But I feel it. Don't you?"

His jaw worked.

"I feel it."

A beat.

"And I can't have it."

The words hit harder than the bite.

"What?"

"I have a duty. Zara. The council. A bitten rogue as Luna?" He laughed — bitter. "They'd tear us both apart. You'd be dead in a week. I'd lose everything I've built."

Elara stared.

The golden thread in her chest twisted — painfully.

"So reject me," she said quietly. "Say the words."

Kael looked at her — really looked.

At the mud on her legs.

The blood still staining her shirt from three weeks ago.

The fire in her eyes that hadn't been there before the bite.

His wolf screamed inside him. No. Claim. Protect.

His human mouth said:

"I, Kael Okafor, Alpha of Ironfang, reject you, Elara Adebayo, as my mate."

Pain.

Not metaphorical.

Her sternum cracked open — invisible claws ripping.

She dropped.

Couldn't breathe.

Kael turned away.

Shoulders rigid.

Walked into the trees.

Behind him, Elara screamed — not human anymore.

Fur erupted. Bones reshaped.

Black-silver wolf stood where the girl had been.

She didn't chase him.

She ran the other way.

Deeper into the night.

Deeper into Lagos.

Deeper into whatever came next.