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DAWN OF THE BLUE MOON

Erine_Capariño
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Synopsis
In the land of Aldoria, bloodlines dictate fate, and love is a dangerous mistake. Gabriel Corvin, a vampire prince, has spent centuries haunted by a promise he never fulfilled. Once a human general, he died on the battlefield and was reborn into immortality, only to return and find the woman he loved had chosen another life. Sapphira Ashwyn was never meant to exist. Rejected by the wolf pack before her birth, feared for her blue eyes and a prophecy tied to her blood, she grew up hidden among humans, unaware of the danger surrounding her existence. When fate draws them together, memories long buried begin to stir. As ancient prophecies awaken and old enemies move in the shadows, Gabriel and Sapphira must choose between obedience and defiance, survival and sacrifice. Some beginnings are born from death. Some loves are reborn under a Blue Moon.
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Chapter 1 - CHAPTER 01: Rebirth and the Blue Moon

The white snow covering the battlefield turned crimson, when Gabriel realized he was dying and losing the war.

A heavy kind of silence followed, the kind that came after the sound of swords piercing flesh,

after screams had been torn apart, and after prayers had gone unanswered. Smoke clung to the air,

thick and bitter, and the ground beneath him was soaked with blood that was no longer just his own.

He lay on his back, staring at a sky that had begun to darken long before the sun should have set.

Around him, his men fell one by one. He watched them die the way a man watched waves crash against rocks,

powerless to stop what had already been decided.

A sword pierced the chest of the soldier nearest to him. Another was dragged across the dirt,

another had his head torn out, his fingers clawing at nothing as his throat was cut. Gabriel tried to move,

but his body refused him. Pain flared and then dulled, spreading like ice through his veins.

His hand tightened around the torn silver cross pendant pressed against his chest.

It had been whole once. Clean and blessed. A promise he carried into war because Camilla had pressed

it into his palm with trembling fingers and a smile she tried to make brave.

"You must promise me," she had said. "Please... come back. Come back to me alive."

His vision blurred, and then she was there.

Not in the battlefield, not in blood or smoke, but in light. Camilla stood before him exactly as she had the day he left, her blue eyes warm and bright, her lips curved into a smile that broke something open inside his chest.

"Gabriel," she whispered.

He tried to speak her name, but his mouth filled with blood.

The enemy leader stepped into his line of sight, towering over him with a raised sword.

The man's armor gleamed with stolen light, and his eyes held no mercy.

"This ends now," the man said.

The blade rose higher.

Then the sky changed.

A sound swept across the battlefield, low and unnatural, like wings cutting through the air. The enemy soldiers froze.

Some dropped their weapons. Others turned and ran without a word, their screams swallowed by the growing darkness.

Bats filled the sky, a living shadow that blotted out the dying sun.

Gabriel's breath came shallow and broken, and in that thin space between life and death,

then a voice reached him.

"Do you want to live?"

"Do you want revenge?"

"Just tell me... I can give that to you."

It was not loud, yet it echoed inside his skull.

"Do you desire strength and power?"

Gabriel forced his eyes open.

Before him stood a silhouette cloaked in black, tall and unmoving, with eyes that burned red like dying embers.

Around them, women knelt among the fallen, their mouths stained crimson as they fed without shame or restraint.

Fear should have claimed him.

Instead, something colder settled in his chest.

"I need to live," Gabriel whispered, blood slipping past his lips.

"I need to win this war. I promised my king. I swore to Camilla, I will return."

The figure stepped closer, and the scent of iron and night wrapped around him.

"Then accept," the voice said softly. "And you will survive."

Desperate, Gabriel did not ask the cost and he nodded.

Death did not take him... It abandoned him.

His body burned as if fire had been poured into his veins. Bones snapped and reset,

the sound sharp and unforgiving. His spine arched as his heart stuttered, seized,

and then began to beat again, this time stronger, louder, violent in its return.

When he finally opened his eyes hours later, the moon had fully risen.

He was no longer the man who had fallen.

The air around him felt heavier, bending as if responding to his presence.

His skin had turned pale beneath the moonlight, his features sharpened into something unnaturally precise.

His dark hair spilled loosely around his face, darker than before, as though night itself had claimed it.

When he looked down at his reflection upon hi sword, red eyes stared back at him,

burning, hungry, and not human. Immortal and unstoppable.

A sudden thirst tore through him, so fierce it forced a growl from his throat.

He reached for the silver cross lying beside him, but the moment his fingers brushed against it,

pain exploded through his palm. His skin blistered instantly. With a sharp breath, he dropped it.

Refusing to leave it behind, Gabriel tore a strip of cloth from a dead soldier's cloak,

wrapped the cross carefully, and shoved it into his pocket.

He stood, unsteady and disoriented, with no sense of direction and no understanding of what he had become.

Panic surged, and he ran.

The speed shocked him. The battlefield vanished behind him in seconds as the forest swallowed him whole.

His chest burned, his throat screamed. He plunged his hands into a freezing river and drank, but the water did nothing.

The thirst only worsened.

Then he smelled blood.

A deer stood at the edge of the clearing. He did not remember moving, only the warmth flooding his mouth

and the horrifying relief that followed. When he pulled away, shame crushed him to his knees.

That was when Freyr appeared.

Freyr told him the truth of his existence, of the power now coursing through him,

and of the revenge waiting to be claimed. Gabriel resisted. He raged and begged for death instead.

He returned to the battlefield and fell to his knees among the frozen bodies of his men.

Then memory struck him like lightning.

The enemy would march again and will attack the kingdom.

The kingdom would fall, he would allow it to happen.

His fists clenched. He must come to them first.

Gabriel accepted his fate.

That night, he stormed the enemy's camp like a living nightmare.

He moved through shadows, resisting the scent of human blood with every breath.

Steel sang and bodies fell. Fear spread faster than fire.

The enemy did not stand a chance.

By the time the last body fell, the war was over.

The kingdom was saved. But when he returned, dawn betrayed him.

He hid with Freyr in the caverns that would one day become the Obsidian Citadel.

From the shadows, he watched Camilla walk through streets he could no longer tread.

He watched her wait. He watched her stop waiting, believing he was gone, and moved on.

And then he watched her marry another man.

Gabriel never touched her again.

The silver cross remained in his possession, untouched and unworn,

a relic of the man he used to be.

Time moved forward... Centuries passed.

Outside the Silverpine Range, at a humble home in Stonebridge under a sky washed pale by moonlight,

a baby girl was born with eyes as blue as forgotten promises.

Felicity held her close, tears streaming down her face as she whispered her name.

"Sapphira."

Randall stood guard at the door, his wolf instincts screaming as the air shifted.

In Lunaris Hollow, an elder wolf opened her eyes and gasped.

The vision struck her like a blade. Blue eyes. Blood entwined. There would be chaos.

"The child is an omen," she said. "She must not live."

The pack had already out casted Randall, but now they hunted him.

Randall fought for his family. He led Felicity and the child through the forest under cover of darkness

and hid them within the convent at Eldermere, where the walls were blessed and the prayers were thick.

And he never made it back.

The pack caught him before dawn and imprisoned him, erasing his name as if it had never mattered.

Felicity lived quietly after that. She raised Sapphira within the convent walls, teaching her how to pray,

how to keep her head down, and how to survive in a world that would never fully accept her.

Sapphira learned early not to ask about her father. She learned how to read people's expressions,

how to stay silent, and how to endure.

Ten years later, Felicity died quietly, her hand in her daughter's as the world slipped away.

Sapphira cried, but she stayed strong. She learned how to survive.

The Clifford family took her in. Nathan grew up beside her, her shadow and her shield,

the boy who noticed her differences and chose her anyway. They became inseparable,

bound by loyalty and unspoken understanding. The Cliffords loved her as their own,

despite knowing that one day the Blue Moon would rise and she would turn,

unaware of the storm sleeping beneath her skin.

Eleven years later, beneath a bluish full moon on her twenty-first birthday,

Sapphira turned for the first time.

Chained in a secret room, her screams echoed through the walls as Nathan watched in horror and awe,

his heart breaking and racing all at once.

Meanwhile, in Lunaris Hollow, the pack felt it. Whelan felt it.

And Randall in wolf form howled in his chains as moonlight slipped through the narrow window of his prison.

And somewhere within the Obsidian Citadel, Gabriel Corvin opened his eyes,

unaware that the dawn of the Blue Moon he had waited centuries for had finally begun.