Home / Werewolf / Bound moon / Night of Teeth

Share

Night of Teeth

last update publish date: 2026-06-30 04:33:29

Serafine woke to someone kicking her cot.

“Up. Kitchens. Now,” a sour-faced woman snapped.

She rolled off the thin mattress, back aching from the hard wood, and pulled on the gray servant dress. No time to wash. No breakfast. She followed the line of sleepy workers down a narrow hall lit by weak torches. Her feet already hurt inside the stiff shoes.

The kitchen was chaos. Fires roared. Pots banged. Servants shouted orders over the noise. A big man with burn scars on his arms shoved a heavy bucket of potatoes into her hands.

“Peel. Don’t stop until they’re gone.”

Serafine sat on a low stool and got to work. Her small knife flashed as she sliced skin off each potato. While her hands moved, her eyes moved faster. She counted the knives on the table. Noted which doors led outside. Watched how the guards changed shifts every twenty minutes at the back entrance.

Hours passed. Her fingers turned raw and red. The dress stuck to her back with sweat. Still she kept peeling, listening.

A group of soldiers stomped through for food. One of them laughed loudly. “Heard the king’s new wife is actually some cellar rat. Bet she won’t last a week.”

Another guard snorted. “Lord Vincent already has bets going. Says she’ll break by full moon.”

Serafine kept her head down, but she memorized their faces. Especially the tall one with the scar across his neck. He looked mean.

By midday they sent her to the armory yard with a tray of water skins. Snow fell lightly as she crossed the open ground. Guards trained with swords and axes, their steel ringing loud. She moved between them, offering drinks, eyes scanning everything.

That was when she saw him.

Lucian stood at the far end, shirtless despite the cold, swinging a heavy practice blade. Sweat glistened on his muscles. His movements were fast and brutal, but every few swings his left arm twitched hard. Like it wasn’t listening to him. His jaw clenched in pain.

He looked up and caught her staring.

Serafine quickly looked away and kept walking. Her heart beat faster.

As the sun dropped behind the mountains, the bell she had heard last night rang again—this time louder and longer. Shouts exploded from the outer walls.

“Attack! Blood Moon scouts!”

Chaos ripped through the yard. Guards grabbed weapons. Lucian roared orders, his voice cutting through the noise like a whip. Serafine ducked low and ran toward the kitchen building, tray still in her hands.

She never made it.

A side gate burst open. Dark shapes poured in—wolves half-shifted, eyes glowing yellow. One of them slammed straight into a guard near her, teeth tearing into flesh. Blood sprayed across the snow.

Serafine dropped the tray and ran.

A rough hand grabbed her braid from behind and yanked her backward. She hit the ground hard. A huge man with Blood Moon markings on his armor stood over her, grinning.

“Well, well. Smells like the new queen,” he growled. “Alpha Cassian will pay good gold for you.”

He reached down.

Serafine didn’t think. She snatched a fallen dagger from the snow and stabbed upward as hard as she could. The blade sank into his thigh. The man howled and staggered back.

She scrambled to her feet and ran again.

All around her, fighting exploded. Steel clashed. Wolves snarled. A guard went down screaming right beside her. Serafine dodged a swinging axe, slipped on bloody snow, and crashed into a weapons rack.

Her hand closed around a short sword. It felt heavy and strange in her grip. She had never fought before. Never even held a real blade. But the fear in her chest turned sharp and hot.

Another attacker lunged at her. She swung wildly. The sword hit his arm with a meaty thunk. He cursed and backhanded her across the face. Pain burst behind her eyes. She tasted blood.

“Serafine!”

Lucian’s voice roared across the yard. He was cutting through the enemy like a storm, blade flashing. But more attackers kept coming. One of them threw a net over him from behind. He roared in rage as silver threads burned his skin.

Serafine’s vision blurred. The binding spell on her wolf felt like it was cracking, burning inside her ribs. Something old and powerful pushed hard against her skin, begging to be let out.

The big man she had stabbed earlier limped toward her again, eyes full of murder. “You little bitch—”

Power exploded out of her.

A bright silver light burst from her hands. The short sword glowed white-hot. The man flew backward like something invisible had punched him. He slammed into the stone wall and didn’t get up.

Every wolf in the yard froze for half a second.

Lucian stared at her, eyes wide with shock. The silver light touched him too—soft, warm, soothing. For a moment the pain lines on his face smoothed out. The twitch in his arm stopped.

Then the light faded.

Serafine dropped to her knees in the bloody snow, gasping. Her whole body shook. The sword clattered beside her. She felt empty. Raw. Terrified.

Lucian threw off the net with a snarl and stormed toward her. Blood streaked his chest. His eyes burned with something wild.

Before he reached her, a new voice cut through the noise.

“Retreat!” one of the Blood Moon attackers shouted. “The silver witch is real!”

The surviving attackers melted back into the darkness. Lucian’s guards chased them, howling.

Lucian stopped right in front of Serafine. He was breathing hard. His hand reached down, grabbed the front of her gray dress, and hauled her up like she weighed nothing.

“What are you?” he demanded, voice rough. His face was inches from hers.

Serafine could barely speak. Her lip was split. Her hands glowed faintly silver for another second before going dark.

“I… I don’t know,” she whispered.

Lucian’s grip tightened. For a moment she thought he might kiss her or kill her—she couldn’t tell which. His eyes dropped to her bleeding mouth.

Then alarms rang again. Louder this time.

More attackers.

Lucian cursed and shoved her behind him, shielding her with his body as fresh waves of enemy wolves poured over the broken gate.

“Stay close,” he growled without looking back. “If you die tonight, I’ll bring you back just to punish you.”

Serafine grabbed the short sword again, fingers slippery with blood. Her body felt strange—stronger, buzzing. The silver magic inside her stirred again, hungry.

The night was far from over.

And something ancient had just woken up inside her.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • Bound moon   The Shadow Throne

    The throne room was no longer a place of pageantry; it was a command center. I sat on the obsidian chair, my fingers tracing the cold carvings of the Draven crest. Below me, the castle was a hive of frantic activity. The remnants of the Royal Guard, having witnessed the collapse of the silver-filtration systems and the submission of their King, were terrified into a fragile, hollow loyalty. They didn't serve me because they loved me; they served because they feared the silver light that now permanently hummed beneath my skin.Diacina stood at the base of the dais, her eyes scouring the reports brought in by the scouts. "Vincent’s network is unraveling, but it’s messy. He had agents embedded in every major pack from here to the coastal border. If we purge them too quickly, we risk total societal collapse. We lose the silver mines, and we lose the tax base.""Then don't purge them," I said, my voice echoing off the high, vaulted ceiling. "Re-educate them. Make them understand that their

  • Bound moon   The Ashmoor Reckoning

    The march back to Blackthorn was not a journey; it was an extraction. We moved through the mist-choked valleys of the borderlands, a procession of ghosts and soldiers. Lucian walked at my side, his presence a constant, vibrating frequency that set my teeth on edge, but he did not speak. He did not command. He moved as an extension of my will—a lethal, tempered blade that waited for my signal.Diacina led the vanguard, her eyes sharp, scanning the treeline for the traps Vincent would have undoubtedly laid for our return. She was different now—hollowed out, perhaps, but focused. The cowardice that had once defined her had been burned away by the reality of the hunt.We reached the outskirts of the Blackthorn woods by the third day. The castle loomed in the distance, a jagged, dark silhouette against the blood-red sunrise. It looked smaller than I remembered, less like a fortress and more like a decaying cage."Vincent has mobilized the garrison," Diacina reported, kneeling in the moss.

  • Bound moon   The Sovereign’s Choice

    The dust from the shattered cliffside hung in the air, a gritty veil between us. Lucian stood amidst the rubble, his presence so heavy it seemed to bleed the color from the night. His armor was gone, replaced by a simple, soot-stained tunic that clung to his broad, scarred chest. He looked like a man stripped of his crown, yet he had never looked more dangerous.He wasn't the feral beast from the armory. He wasn't the cold, calculating King of the cathedral. This was something else—a man who had burned his own kingdom to the ground just to stand on the ashes."You look well," he said. His voice wasn't a roar. It was smooth, conversational, and utterly terrifying. He took a step forward, his boots crunching on the stone.The Unbound warriors shifted, their blades angled to strike, but Lucian didn't even glance at them. His focus was a physical weight on my skin. He was tracking me—not with his wolf, but with the raw, possessive instinct of a man who had finally found his center."Stay

  • Bound moon   The Sovereign of Shadows

    The delta was a tomb of smoke and silence. Beneath the collapsed granite, the feral beast that had once been the Alpha King clawed at the stone, his muffled, rhythmic thuds against the rock face the only reminder that he was still alive.I stood on the bluff as the sun began to sink below the North Sea, casting long, bruised shadows over the wreckage. My army—the Unbound—watched me. Their pale eyes were no longer filled with suspicion. They were filled with the kind of primal devotion usually reserved for the legends of the old world."The vanguard is retreating to the secondary command post at the border," the Unbound scout reported, kneeling before me. "Vincent is with them. They are regrouping, but they are terrified. They have seen the silver light, and they have seen the King fall."I walked toward the makeshift command tent they had erected near the cliff's edge. I felt the weight of the child—the secret leverage of my existence—pressing against my resolve. If I had been weak, t

  • Bound moon   The Delta Siege

    The roar that tore through the coastal air was not merely sound; it was a physical force. It shattered the remaining glass in the discarded armor of the fallen retrieval team and sent a flock of gulls screaming into the grey horizon. Lucian was no longer hunting; he was asserting his domain.I stood on the northern lip of the delta, my hands buried deep in the pockets of my cloak. The Unbound had moved with supernatural speed, turning the narrow neck of the river into a defensive fortification. They had rigged the high-pressure gas valves—the same ones Vincent used to power the estate’s furnaces—into a makeshift explosive perimeter."He’s leading the cavalry on the main road," the scout reported, his breathing shallow. "He’s not waiting for his infantry. He’s closing the distance at a sprint.""Good," I muttered. "He's predictable when he's desperate.""Serafine," the High Priestess whispered, appearing at my side. "If you kill him, the Ashmoor Kingdom will collapse into civil war. Vi

  • Bound moon   The Bluff's Edge

    The wind off the North Sea had turned bitter, carrying the scent of impending snow. I stood on the edge of the bluff, my silhouette framed by the jagged black pines. Below me, the terrain was a natural kill box—a narrow, rising trail hemmed in by sheer granite walls on one side and a two-hundred-foot drop into the churning surf on the other."They’re close," one of the Unbound scouts whispered from the darkness behind me. His voice was as dry as parchment. "Twenty men. Heavily armed. They are moving with military precision.""They aren't scouts," I corrected, my eyes fixed on the distant, flickering torchlight moving through the valley floor. "They’re a retrieval team. Lucian doesn't send scouts to recover his Luna."The revelation sat heavy in my chest. If this was his personal detail, they would be equipped with high-grade dampeners—silver-mesh nets and sonic emitters designed to shatter a wolf's inner ear and suppress magic."Position the Unbound along the ridge," I commanded, my v

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status