Teilen

The Luna on a Chain
The Luna on a Chain
Anna Bajanova

Chapter 1

last update Zuletzt aktualisiert: 22.12.2025 23:02:30

Raindrops streamed down the windows, tracing simple, delicate paths.

The rain had started so suddenly that I had to go back for my umbrella. The car keys were missing, which meant I’d have to pick my friend up from the hospital on foot—or sacrifice a few hundred for a taxi.

Opening the umbrella, I stepped out of the building and walked briskly down the sidewalk. Puddles had already formed underfoot, threatening to seep into my black pumps. The shoes were definitely a poor choice for the day, but I was already running late, and there was no time to turn back.

A sudden idea crossed my mind—to take a shortcut. My legs acted on it immediately, carrying me into the courtyards between the apartment blocks.

How quickly I came to regret that decision. The puddles here were enormous, some so wide I had to jump over them. During one of those leaps, one of my heels gave way and snapped.

“Of course,” I muttered in frustration, limping onward.

But fate clearly wasn’t finished with me yet. Out of nowhere, a gust of wind tore the umbrella from my hands, sending it flying into the unknown. I watched it disappear, cursed under my breath, and broke into a run toward the hospital.

By the time I stepped inside, I looked like one of their patients—limping, drenched, and sneezing.

Maya spotted me immediately and followed my path from the door to the waiting area with a bewildered stare. I collapsed onto a soft couch and let out a breath of relief.

“Vera, what happened to you?” my friend asked, looking me over from head to toe.

“My heel broke on the way, and then the umbrella flew off.”

“You walked here? What about the car?”

“I can’t find the keys. We’ll take a taxi back.”

She gave a crooked smile.

“The discharge papers aren’t ready yet. We’ll have to wait a bit.”

I sighed in annoyance and leaned back against the cushion. After flipping through a few magazines on the table, I began to fidget. My clothes clung to my body—cold and uncomfortable. Lucky me.

Then the woman at the reception window stirred, glanced up, and called Maya over. Finally. While my friend signed her papers, I pulled out my phone and ordered a taxi.

When I looked up again, she was still busy writing something, and behind her stood a tall, broad-shouldered man. Darkness seemed to coil around him, and the air itself felt charged with danger. I narrowed my eyes, studying him—wide, muscular shoulders, black wavy hair. But his face—I couldn’t see it. He leaned slightly toward Maya, as if… smelling her. Odd, to say the least.

Then his hands, clasped behind his back, began to change. My heart dropped to my heels when I saw black, sharp claws glinting where his fingers had been.

A werewolf.

Panic seized me.

“Maya!” I shouted. The man straightened instantly, as if nothing had happened. “Come on, let’s go! The taxi’s here.”

Maya grabbed her documents and hurried toward me. We had to leave—fast—before that flea-bitten creature caught our scent.

We walked out without looking back. Still, curiosity got the better of me, and I glanced over my shoulder. The hall was empty. Only the nurse remained behind the reception glass.

Once outside, we got into the car and drove home. We had plans for a girls’ night—wine, laughter, and secrets to share.

And as soon as the house filled with the cheerful chaos of preparation, the stranger from the hospital slipped from my mind.

Two of Maya’s friends came over that evening. I didn’t know them well, but I welcomed the chance for pleasant company. The girls had been friends since university and eagerly reminisced about old times.

Apparently, Maya had been quite the heartbreaker back then—chased by hordes of boys—though she herself had loved someone who never loved her back.

Hearing those fragments of her past was oddly comforting. They kept trying to draw me into their confessions too, but my own secrets were buried deep—locked behind seven keys.

After plenty of drinks and laughter, we sent the girls home in a taxi and finally went to bed.

“Stop!”

The scream tore through the darkness, sharp enough to split it open.

It felt like it came from my throat—and yet it wasn’t me at all.

Around me stretched nothingness, thick and suffocating, as if I stood inside a storm cloud. The air pulsed. Every breath burned; every sound was swallowed by the dark. Then, slowly, out of that void, a shape emerged—a massive gray wolf, his fur rippling like smoke. His eyes glowed with an unnatural yellow light, fixed on me—unblinking, ancient.

He didn’t move. He only watched, and somehow I knew he wasn’t an ordinary creature. There was intelligence in that gaze, and something else—sorrow. For a moment, I even thought he might speak. But instead, the scene shifted, flickering like a broken film reel.

Now he stood sideways, his whole body taut, ready to spring. His lips curled back, baring long white fangs. Opposite him stood a young man—barely more than a boy—with fear frozen on his face. I wanted to move, to call out, to stop what was about to happen, but my body was no longer mine.

“Wait!” my voice rang out again from somewhere in the darkness.

The wolf lunged.

A flash of light—then pain seared across my cheek, dragging me back to reality. I gasped, sitting upright. The scream still echoed in my throat, leaving it raw.

Maya sat across from me, glaring. The pale light of early dawn bled into the room, turning everything faint and unreal.

“Why are you screaming like a lunatic?” she snapped. Her tone carried that strange blend of worry and irritation only she could manage. She’d seen this before—far too many times.

“Bad dream,” I whispered, my voice hoarse.

My hand went to my face. My cheek throbbed and felt warm to the touch—probably red. I half-smiled despite myself. “Nice way to wake me up.”

“Want me to lie down with you?” Maya’s voice softened.

I nodded. She slid under the blanket beside me, the warmth of her presence oddly grounding.

“Maybe you’ll finally tell me what it is,” she murmured. “What you keep dreaming about. You scream like someone’s killing you.”

For a long moment, I stared at the ceiling. The room still felt too bright, the dream too close. My chest rose and fell in uneven breaths, and the image of those yellow eyes hovered just behind my eyelids.

“Every night,” I said at last, my voice barely above a whisper, “I dream about the death of the man I loved.”

Maya inhaled sharply. I felt her turn toward me, searching for words—but there were none.

So we lay there in silence, side by side. The morning light slowly painted the room gold—soft and forgiving, as if pretending none of it had happened. My heartbeat finally slowed, though the ache in my chest remained—familiar and unrelenting.

Outside, a bird began to sing. I closed my eyes, and for a moment, the sound almost made me believe I could fall asleep again.

Lies dieses Buch weiterhin kostenlos
Code scannen, um die App herunterzuladen

Aktuellstes Kapitel

  • The Luna on a Chain   Chapter 192

    EpilogueIn the southern part of the Dominican Republic, summer was especially merciless, yet the light, humid breeze drifting in from the Caribbean Sea softened the edge of that oppressive heat. Slipping out to the beach early in the morning, I decided to be alone for a while and indulge in a bit of quiet reflection about life. The barely audible wash of the waves sounded like a soothing melody—exactly what I needed right now.A couple of days ago, I found out that I was truly pregnant, and suddenly far too many thoughts were crowding my mind. Owning a home—our own home—had become essential to me, a place where these two little troublemakers would grow up. Arthur stubbornly refused to talk about our future, sending me off to the beach to “rest” every single time I tried to bring it up. I had already figured out that we were on our honeymoon—but what would come after that?Lately, Arthur had been spending an alarming amount of time with his laptop and phone. Since he mostly spoke in t

  • The Luna on a Chain   Chapter 191

    The road felt far too familiar. That route had etched itself into my memory forever, yet now I couldn’t, for the life of me, understand why we were heading toward the Abramov mansion. Arthur gazed lazily out the window while Lena murmured something incoherent in her sleep. I was the only one sitting rigidly, as if perched on needles, and eventually I couldn’t bear it any longer.“Why are we going there?” I asked.“You’re going to deliver a gift to your friend from me.”It didn’t take long to realize what he meant. The only thing he could possibly offer was the pendant.“Is this some kind of joke?” I looked at him skeptically. “You were planning to take it away. And now you just want to hand it over?”Arthur glanced at me, clearly confused by the direction of the conversation.“I can’t take him,” he said calmly. “I don’t have time to watch over a child right now. I already have to protect this girl. The baby will be safer with his mother.”“I don’t understand you. Protect your mate fro

  • The Luna on a Chain   Chapter 190

    I had expected to see a Gothic palace with grim gargoyles clinging to its façade—not an abandoned warehouse on the outskirts of the city. The place was desolate, steeped in an oppressive stillness. Even the blazing orange rays of the setting sun failed to bring it to life.The car came to a stop at the edge of the forest, offering a clear view of the half-ruined building.“Are you sure this is the place?” I asked as David unfastened his seatbelt.“Yes. This is where they keep those who displease the Werewolf Council. I’m going in. You stay here.”“Why would I do that? I’m coming with you!” I protested, tugging at the seatbelt latch. “What the hell? Is it jammed?”“Do you want to join the blonde in the back seat?”I stopped struggling and glanced over my shoulder at the sleeping girl.“No, I don’t. But I’m still coming with you.”“What part of ‘no’ don’t you understand? You’ll stay here—conscious or unconscious.”He opened the door and stepped out of the car.The moment he disappeared

  • The Luna on a Chain   Chapter 189

    “Maya, how are you?” Maura asked, her voice tight with concern.I sank into an armchair and let out a heavy sigh.“I’m fine… but I still don’t remember anything.”“Alright,” Egor said in a firm, commanding tone. “Your mate is Arthur Gromov. He’s being held at the Council right now, and from what we can tell, Ruslan managed to wipe his memory too.”“Who?” three female voices echoed at once.Had I heard that right—Gromov?“That’s impossible,” I snapped. “I wouldn’t go anywhere near Gromov even if you paid me.”“Egor, are you sure you’re not mistaken?” Maura asked, just as shaken.“No, I’m not. He claimed you as his mate, but the Council denied him. Maya, I don’t know what happened between you two all this time, but I can say one thing for sure: that guy loves you—deeply. And you… at the awards ceremony, when you won that culinary competition…”“Stop!” I cut the Alpha off. “I won a competition?”“Yes, but that’s not the point,” the werewolf went on. “That night I saw it—those sparks in b

  • The Luna on a Chain   Chapter 188

    "I truly didn’t tell him anything," I said, trembling as I felt Ruslan’s claws tear through the fabric of my T-shirt across my back."I wasn’t born yesterday. Was it really that hard to stay home?""What’s his name?" I asked, deciding to change the subject as I took a few steps back, clutching the shredded remains of my shirt to my chest.Either Ruslan didn’t hear me, or he chose to ignore the question. Turning my back on him was a fatal mistake.He looked like a beast driven mad with fury. Claws had burst from his hands, coarse wolf fur spreading across his skin. His eyes burned with a sickly yellow glow. But what terrified me most were his fangs — the same fangs that had already caused me unbearable pain."Ruslan, please, calm down. Let’s talk. Like normal people.""Talk?" He didn’t say it — he growled it, like a true predator, stepping forward and slamming me against the wall."I’m afraid of you.""Afraid?" A twisted grin stretched across his face — something that might once have r

  • The Luna on a Chain   Chapter 187

    Sometimes life turns into a vicious cycle of misfortune and relentless setbacks. I knew my memory had been erased—but I couldn’t grasp what, exactly, had been taken from me. The Maya staring back from the mirror was undeniably me, yet she felt like a stranger. My features had sharpened, shedding their girlish softness and fullness, becoming more refined, more feminine. My eyes seemed greener, my hair even more copper than before.My gaze drifted to the delicate sun-shaped pendant resting against my collarbone, set with a vivid red stone. I had no idea where it had come from, yet I knew—absolutely knew—that I was meant to wear it and never take it off. And then there was the mark on my neck. Or rather, I knew it had been there yesterday. Ruslan had sunk his wolf fangs into that spot so many times that now it was nothing but a blur of wounds and bruises, impossible to make out.A soft knock at the door pulled me away from my two-hour attempt to rediscover myself in the mirror. I had foo

Weitere Kapitel
Entdecke und lies gute Romane kostenlos
Kostenloser Zugriff auf zahlreiche Romane in der GoodNovel-App. Lade deine Lieblingsbücher herunter und lies jederzeit und überall.
Bücher in der App kostenlos lesen
CODE SCANNEN, UM IN DER APP ZU LESEN
DMCA.com Protection Status