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Primal Mark: The Curator’s Forbidden Fate

Rosi_Rosė
28
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The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 28 chs / week.
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Synopsis
Marcella is a curator who lives for the past, but her future is rewritten the night a legendary, "erased" necklace is stolen from her exhibit. The theft plunges her into a world of ancient mystical beings and lethal secrets. When she crosses paths with a dominant, enigmatic man who is revealed to be the King of Werewolves, a single night of passion triggers a dormant birthmark on her arm, unlocking an ancient power within her. ​Now the target of a deadly prophecy, Marcella must navigate the dangerous politics of the supernatural world. She is more than just a curator; she is the living key to a prophecy that could save or destroy the werewolf lineage. To survive, she must master her new gifts and decide if she can trust the King who claims her as his own.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1

The museum was relatively busy, with people going in and out nonstop. The sound of footsteps echoed off marble floors, and murmurs of conversations blended with the faint hum of air conditioning. I sipped my warm cup of coffee, letting the taste calm me down while I sat behind the staff desk, just… watching.

This was my break — my little slice of peace in the middle of chaos.

Being a curator was my passion, my dream job. I worked surrounded by history, by artifacts that carried stories from centuries ago. It wasn't your typical office job. No dull paperwork, no sitting in one spot staring at a computer screen all day. Just me, the past, and the stories people left behind.

Sometimes I liked to imagine the lives behind each item on display. What they saw. What they felt. Who they loved.

Yeah, maybe that was too sentimental for a museum curator, but whatever. History isn't just facts. It's emotion, too.

I looked at my watch. My break was almost over. Ten more minutes, then back to the floor.

---

By the time the last of the crowd began to leave, the sun outside had dipped low, bathing the museum in a soft orange glow. Closing time. Finally.

I rubbed my eyes and leaned against the counter, feeling my shoulders ache from standing all day. Today had been rough — busloads of tourists, impatient questions, kids running around touching things they weren't supposed to.

This was the part of my job I hated the most: socializing. I could spend hours cataloging items, researching, and arranging displays, but dealing with people? Ugh. That was the real challenge.

Still, today wasn't all bad. There was something to look forward to — the new artifact.

It had just arrived that morning: a necklace from a lost civilization. The reports said it was once worn by a queen, a woman so mysterious that even her name had been erased from history. I'd read about it, studied the mythology around it. There were stories about how it glowed under the moonlight, and how people who touched it dreamed of strange, ancient places.

Nonsense, probably. But still… I couldn't wait to see it with my own eyes.

It wasn't just any exhibit. It was mine. I'd spent weeks planning the layout, writing the descriptions, setting the lighting just right. It felt like my biggest achievement so far.

---

The museum was quiet now. Most of the staff had gone home, the lights dimmed in the public areas. Only the faint buzz of the security system and the click of my heels echoed through the halls as I checked the last display notes for the night.

I smiled, satisfied. "Everything looks perfect," I whispered to myself.

Then—

Blaring alarm.

The sudden noise nearly made me drop my tablet. The shrill, piercing sound echoed through the halls, and my heart jumped into my throat.

"What the hell—"

The sound came from the new exhibit.

My blood went cold.

No. No, please no.

I broke into a run, my shoes clattering against the polished floor. My lungs burned, but I didn't care. A sick feeling twisted in my stomach, one that told me this wasn't just a malfunction. Something was wrong.

---

"Julian!" I shouted as I turned the corner, spotting one of the night guards sprinting in the same direction.

He looked panicked, his flashlight bouncing in his hand.

"Julian, what's going on?" I demanded, breathless.

He looked at me, his face pale. "Marcella—there was a break-in! The necklace is gone!"

For a second, everything in me just froze. The words didn't even make sense.

Gone?

No, that couldn't be right.

I pushed past him, ignoring the way he called my name. My heart pounded so loud I could barely hear anything else.

---

When I reached the exhibit, the sight hit me like a punch to the gut.

Glass everywhere. Shattered display lights. The metallic smell of blood from a guard's small cut, maybe. The air was thick, heavy — like the room itself knew something had been violated.

And there it was: the case that should've held the necklace. Empty.

The spot where the artifact was supposed to rest was nothing but broken glass and a hollow space.

I felt my knees weaken. My hands trembled as I walked closer. I couldn't believe it. I'd poured everything into this project — late nights, endless research, every ounce of effort I had.

Gone. Just like that.

The necklace wasn't just a piece of jewelry. It was proof — proof that my hard work meant something. That I belonged here. And now…

I swallowed hard, trying to keep it together.

That's when I saw it.

A small piece of paper lying inside the case, half-covered by shards of glass. I leaned closer and gently picked it up. The letters were made from what looked like magazine clippings.

> Just like taking candy from a baby 🙂

A smiley face. A damn smiley face.

My stomach turned.

"Who the hell would—" I whispered, but my voice cracked.

A chill ran down my spine so fast I almost dropped the note.

Something about it felt… wrong. Not just a random theft. Not a coincidence.

Like whoever did this knew me.

Knew this mattered to me.

The alarms were still blaring, lights flashing red across the room, and I just stood there, staring at that note, trying to make sense of any of it.

My hands started shaking. I sank to my knees, glass crunching beneath me. The sound felt distant, like I was underwater.

This couldn't be real.

I pressed my palms to my eyes, forcing down the tears that threatened to spill. My body ached, my chest hurt, and my mind was spinning.

"Why me?" I whispered. My voice broke.

The room felt cold, almost unnatural. For a second, I swore I saw something—a faint shimmer in the air, like light bending where it shouldn't. It was gone when I blinked, leaving me wondering if I imagined it.

But that feeling in my gut? It didn't go away.

Whatever had just happened here… it wasn't ordinary.

And somehow, deep down, I knew this was just the beginning.