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The Dual Claim
The Dual Claim
Author: Zoey Chayse

Chapter 1 Soraya

Author: Zoey Chayse
last update publish date: 2026-01-12 00:00:59

The chandeliers blazed with hundreds of candles, their flames mirrored in the polished marble until the ballroom looked like the inside of a star. Music drifted from the gallery, bright and full. Perfume, wax, and heat mixed in the air. A bell rang twice and the hall quieted.

Alpha Corren rose from his chair at the head table. He was older than I remembered—hair gone silver, shoulders still straight.

“Welcome, allies and honored guests. As the Moon turns through her twelve faces, each of the Twelve Allies stands in turn to serve as host before the full moon. Tonight, it is Silverpine’s honor to celebrate the banquet of The Luna’s Calling.”

Applause rippled through the room, soft and polite. He lifted his glass in salute, then nodded to the dais.

Elder Galdo stood. His voice carried calm authority. “We thank Luna for her bounty and the strength she gives our hunts. May our alliances hold, our hearths stay full, and our hearts remain ready for her choosing, and our appetites sated from the feast before us. Blessed Be.”

 “Blessed Be,” everyone replied in unison.

Servers moved between the rows, the scent of roasted meat and spiced fruit filling the hall. I copied what the others did—napkin in lap, hands folded, wait until the Alpha lifted his fork.   

Don’t drop anything, she told me with a lopsided grin. I didn’t argue.

I tried to eat slow, careful not to spill on my gown. No one spoke to me, but I caught a few sidelong glances from the next table. I wasn’t sure if they were pity or curiosity.

The servers quietly came in and took our plates then withdrew again.

Once the tables were cleared, the Pack Priestess stepped forward, her ivory robes flowing over the dais steps. Candlelight caught the faint shimmer of silver thread at her sleeves.

Her eyes were bright with love and faith as she lifted her hands toward the open skylight. “We stand in the days of Luna’s swelling light,” she said, “the time between shadow and fullness. When her face is nearly whole, she turns her gaze upon us and marks those she would see run beneath her silver crown. One week from now, when her light completes, the chosen will run as one, and balance will be kept among the Twelve.”

She lowered her hands. “The goddess watches. Let us begin.”

High Elder Selwyn rose next. His robes were plain gray, his expression measured, but his voice carried the weight of habit. “First, the pack daughters of their first year will test the bond with Alpha Corren’s son, Lucien.

If no bond awakens, you will leave the stage and join the unbonded Alphas and other unbonded males. Next, the first-year daughters of our allies. If Luna does not call for their bond, all remaining unbonded may mingle as the Moon allows.”

Chairs scraped. Girls began to line up near the dais, their families whispering. I rose too, already moving toward the end of the line. I knew my place. Wanes always went last.

Wane—the word they used for orphans the pack took in, protected but never quite full pack.

Every eighteen-year-old girl in Silverpine stood in line, waiting for the elders to call them up for their chance to be pack Luna. Mothers tugged at hems, adjusted jewels. Nervous laughter bubbled behind painted lips.

I had no one. No jewels to fuss with. No father to glare at boys staring too long. No mother to calm my nerves with a touch. I just stood alone in a dress that pinched under the arms and sagged at the hem.

My gown was a hand-me-down from some first year long gone, pale silver satin that ran a fraction short at the ankles if I stood straight. I stitched the hem by hand in Wane Hall two nights ago, the fabric finer than anything I’d ever worn.

While trying to look and feel like I fit in with the rest of the pack hoping for an awakening bond, I heard the not-so-subtle whispers around me.

“Look,” someone said, not even trying to keep it soft. “A Wane in a silk dress.”

“She should’ve stayed in the hall where she belongs,” another voice murmured, bright with amusement.

I kept my eyes on the chandeliers. If I stared long enough, I could pretend I wasn’t the girl at the end of the line, and that I belonged here, even if no one else believed it.

On the dais, at the top of the carved stone steps, stood the man who would decide the fate of every unbonded woman in line.

Lucien Veyrac.

Then he stepped forward, and every eye followed. Taller than anyone else on the stage, his shoulders were broad enough to make the space feel smaller. The black jacket fit like a glove, seams stretched over his biceps, every button closed, every line deliberate.

His golden hair caught the light, falling in loose waves to his collar. His eyes were liquid heat.

He didn’t walk; he swaggered.

Lucien’s eyes darted to a table next to the head table. A woman in red sat there, flanked by an older man and two identical younger clones of the older one. All of them bore resemblance to each other.

Her crimson gown was bright, more daring than any of Silverpine’s girls. The tilt of her chin and the calm way she held her shoulders marked her for what she was—Alpha-born.

The men flanking her tried to appear casual, but their every move was protective, from the arm on the back of her chair, to the constant scanning of the room from the other. They were family, protecting their own away from home.

For me, Wane Hall was home, but it never felt like one. Home meant parents who wanted to know your every move, shared meals, questions about your day. Wane Hall was a place to sleep, eat, and shower. Warm enough to live in, but never warm enough to feel loved.

“By law and by bond,” Elder Ansel intoned, “we witness Luna’s Calling. Let those who have come of age this year step forth when called.”

Someone squeezed my hand by mistake and yanked it back when they realized whose fingers they’d grabbed.

I pretended not to notice.

The first name carried easily through the hush. A girl in ivory moved like a trembling candle toward the steps.

Lucien descended one step to meet her. He placed two fingers lightly on her wrist and closed his eyes.

I held my breath along with half the room.

Nothing changed. No invisible thread pulled them together. No air snapped like a struck string. He opened his eyes, the corner of his mouth polite and unmoved, and shook his head.

Lucien’s eyes zeroed in on the lady in red again.

“Rejected,” someone breathed, not unkindly.

The girl turned on a caught sob and stumbled back to her family. Her mother caught her and guided her toward the remaining eligible males.

The elder called the next name.

A girl in sea-glass blue. Then a girl in violet.

They walked away from the dais with faces tight, searching the crowd for their family to offer comfort or for a mate who might be waiting somewhere beyond the line.

Lucien looked away before he touched the next wrist. Another tiny shake of his head. Another ripple through the crowd.

The ritual moved on. One young woman after another.

Each time, he glanced back at the woman in crimson silk…again. Hunger flickered in his eyes.

“Next.”

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  • The Dual Claim   Chapter 177 Soraya

    The nursery didn’t feel right. I know Halia gave me her suggestions as a mother and grandmother, but the more I looked at it, something felt off.I couldn’t pinpoint it, though.I dragged the new glider Gabriel bought for me, and the baby swing, and the stroller, and the car seat, into the center of our room so I could look at Kali’s room without all the extra clutter.“Ah,” I sighed. “That’s it. The crib should be on that wall and the dresser where the crib is.”The crib was on wheels, so that was easy enough to roll out of the way. Once that was done, I lifted one corner of the bureau and inched it out, then walked to the opposite side of the waist-high set of drawers to repeat the process.I would move it little by little.Just as I had the second corner lifted, Elara swept into the room and shrieked like only Elara could.“What are you dooo-ing!” she cried, rushing over to me as if I’d fallen down a cliff. “Are you alright?

  • The Dual Claim   Chapter 176 Gabriel

    Life was relatively quiet since the New Moon Dinner.Too quiet. It felt like the calm before the storm, but I knew the storm was right at our doorstep.Bear’s wolves had settled in without incident. Bear and Maw themselves adjusted easily to life outside their frigid lands. After the email exchange with the High Council, they decided to make the trip back to Wintermere after the dinner with the other Packs, just to keep up appearances.They were due back in a couple of days. Maw wanted to be here before Sori went into labor.Sid hadn’t uncovered where the HC spies were around town yet, but he was mostly sure it didn’t come from inside the Pack. Unless they didn’t use Coralridge servers for communication. He said that wouldn’t be unusual to use something like public WiFi to further mask their back and forth.

  • The Dual Claim   Chapter 175 Lucien

    The workers quickly pocketed their cash and practically ran out of the villa at the end of their workday. It was the start of the weekend and I’m sure they wanted to go spend it much faster than they earned it.I was thoroughly impressed by their workmanship. I couldn’t tell exactly where I’d put the hole in the wall. Bina would be pleased when she got back from the ragtag coven meeting she was now a part of.Her magick was getting stronger. Still nothing new on the scrying front, but that was what it was. She even paired up with one of her friends and tried, the crystal still pointed right to where we were.I grabbed a couple of beer bottles from the fridge and made my way back out to the patio. The sun neared the horizon, casting the sky in reds, yellows, and oranges.I handed a bottle to the old grizzled wolf shifter, Lin

  • The Dual Claim   Chapter 174 Gabriel

    I sat down at the table while the applause still roared for my lovely mate, whose cheeks were a bright red from embarrassment.I purposely didn’t tell her about the speech, letting her think the only fanfare was the receiving line. It was a simple speech, but it still made her blush.Mission accomplished.We sat in tables of six in one section of the room, leaving the rest for mingling and dancing once the dinner was over. Nothing elaborate, just enough time for the Twelve to get their time in with our new Luna, and each other.Halia intentionally seated Kane’s party with us primarily to keep them away from the prying Alphas of the Twelve so they could at least enjoy dinner before the grilling started.“I’m glad Rodgrick didn’t push it and try to tag along,” I began as the servers swarmed the

  • The Dual Claim   Chapter 173 Soraya

    This was it, the moment I’d been dreading for weeks.Maybe he won’t recognize me.I wanted to hold on to that thought, but knew the likelihood of that was slim to none.I heard Seith call out. “Kane, welcome to Coralridge.”“Seith, good to see you, man,” the deep voice replied.It was then I realized it wasn’t Victor I should have dreaded; it was Kane. I remembered that voice from inside the SUV when they snatched me off the street.He was there.I swallowed hard.I wanted to run, plead illness, go to bed.But I couldn’t do any of those things without calling more attention to myself.“May I introduce you to our Alpha and

  • The Dual Claim   Chapter 172 Soraya

    I smoothed the front of my gown, trying to get my pulse under control. This was my first official event as a hostess and Luna.Everyone had arrived by noon, but settled into their rooms for the afternoon to rest before the party. Except for Silverpine, they were arriving right before the festivities started.I’d been practicing my ‘nice to meet you’ expression for when Victor passed through the receiving line. I decided to go with a black wig to completely change my hair from the blonde waif that he rescued or the red dye the matron left at the safehouse.Elara offered to make me an herbal tea to help me relax, but I was too close to my due date for me to feel comfortable ingesting anything.I reached for my moonstone jewelry in the safe, remembering when Gabriel gave it to me. I’d bought him some moonstone cufflinks around the same time. Neither of us knew the significance of the moonstone and the Luna-kissed at the time.I

  • The Dual Claim   Chapter 35 Soraya

    My stomach churned and roiled before I even opened my eyes. Oh Luna, not again. Please!I knew I had to move, but I couldn’t. I started to sob.I felt everything come up, and all I could do was open my mouth. It all spilled out over me.It was freaking disgusting. I

    last updateLast Updated : 2026-03-22
  • The Dual Claim   Chapter 34 Lucien

    I woke up more tired than when I found this cave last night. Hour after hour we searched, but neither I nor Auron could pinpoint the scent.I’d be hot on the trail, then nothing. Literally nothing, like the scent just vanished.It wasn’t like the rain washed it away, because I was t

    last updateLast Updated : 2026-03-22
  • The Dual Claim   Chapter 37 Gabriel

    Zevir had been silent too long. My wolf loved to talk. Morning, noon, and night. He had opinions on everything. Even if it was only a chuff or chortle.Why so quiet wolf?Nothing much to say human. Besides, this tracking is infuriating. One minute it’s there and the nex

    last updateLast Updated : 2026-03-22
  • The Dual Claim   Chapter 38 Lucien

    Faster, Auron growled, still pacing.I was already short of breath, so I wasn’t expending more energy by talking.But he persisted with his growling and snarling.I’m going as fast as I can. I’m naked, close to freezing cold. I have no shoes and the terrain is sl

    last updateLast Updated : 2026-03-22
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