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I absolutely detest moving. It's not just the logistics; the boxes, the sore back, the chaotic scattering of your life across cardboard containers. It's the brutal, soul-crushing certainty of starting over. And new schools? They are the ninth circle of social hell. You walk in, and immediately, you're the anomaly, the "new girl," subjected to that invasive, dissecting gaze, like you're some pathetic, blinking specimen wheeled out for general public viewing, a low-budget circus act that nobody paid to see.
But here we are. According to my mother, Silver Ridge is some sort of mythical panacea, the geographical cure-all that's going to mend our frayed lives.
"New town, new start, a clean slate, Evie!" she chirps, rolling out every tired platitude known to mankind. That relentless, forced optimism is so thick and sticky that I genuinely worry about contracting secondhand cheerfulness poisoning. I just about want to gag on her determinedly bright outlook.
The car, an aging sedan that's seen more cities than I care to count, swings abruptly onto Main Street, and the tiny town vibe doesn't just tap me on the shoulder, it hits me with the force of a poorly secured wall. It's utterly, sickeningly quaint.
Picture storybook shops with faded, pastel paint; handcrafted wooden signs creaking and swinging in the mild, perpetual breeze; and worst of all, perfectly innocent-looking children on bicycles who pause mid-pedal to gawk. They look like they've never seen a vehicle that wasn't a farm truck, let alone a stranger who wasn't related to the mayor.
I press my forehead to the cool glass, gripping the canvas strap of my backpack until my knuckles are white, treating it like the sole lifeline in a sea of rural conformity.
Fantastic!
Small towns. The birthplace and central distribution hub of gossip that will precede the actual unpacking of my socks.
And then, there's the school; Silver Ridge High. The main structure is a formidable block of red brick, looking wonderfully, authentically untouched since the mid-nineteen seventies. It has that institutional, slightly weary charm that somehow perfectly encapsulates the town's slow pace. Ivy, thick and green, claws its way up the exterior walls, and a grand, albeit slightly leaning, clock tower looms overhead a tower I'd bet a year's allowance hasn't kept the correct time in a decade.
But the architecture is secondary to the occupants.
The students.
They clock my arrival the instant the car door opens. I feel the collective thousand-yard stare of acute curiosity, that immediate, unsettling focus. I can practically feel the air vibrating with the low hum of whispers, a sound I can almost, almost discern, but which I instinctively refuse to acknowledge.
I yank the car door shut with unnecessary force, the sound echoing in the sudden silence of the drop-off zone.
Yep, I think grimly.
Here comes the parade of judgmental eyes.
I quickly pull my hood over my head, retreating further into the voluminous, insulating anonymity of my oversized jacket, and mutter a low, theatrical incantation to myself.
"Well, Evie, you desperately wanted a fresh start. Let's just see if you can manage to survive the first five minutes without a full-scale panic attack."
Stepping inside is a shock to the senses. I am immediately enveloped in that profoundly depressing, ubiquitous high school aroma: a vile cocktail of stale cafeteria air, disinfectant attempting to mask decades of grime, and the unmistakable, lingering scent of old gym socks left forgotten in a locker.
Perfect. Just truly, tragically perfect.
My mom gives a final, shaky wave from the edge of the now-deserted parking lot. I return it with all the genuine enthusiasm of a tired zombie at a blood drive.
~
Navigating the over-crowded hallways is less a walk and more a chaotic, disorienting nightmare.
I stumble awkwardly, nearly shoulder-checking a row of lockers, desperately trying to dodge a succession of overly perky, brightly smiling kids whose eyes scream, "I have nothing better to do with my utterly perfect life than silently grade your clothing choices."
Predictably, inevitably, my cumbersome backpack swings out like a clumsy weapon, whacking into some poor, unsuspecting soul, and I hear a sharp, mocking snort of a laugh directly behind me. Classic.
"Watch it, newbie," a low voice mutters, dripping with practiced condescension.
I glance up, my stomach clenching.
He's there.
Tall, undeniably cute, possessing a slightly smug tilt to his mouth, and casting a maybe-too-intense, too-interested kind of glance.
His eyes, I notice, are a startling shade of golden.
Damn it.
He didn't even need to say a single word more, the damage was already done.
I instantly felt that strange, unwelcome tug deep in my chest, the conflicting urge that makes me simultaneously want to sprint in the opposite direction and yet also punch something extremely hard.
Yeah. That's an absolutely great first impression, Evie. Way to remain invisible.
PI forcibly shove the entire unsettling sensation down into the deepest, darkest corner of my mind, labeling it firmly as nothing.
It is absolutely nothing. Just hormones, maybe even my period. Just stress. Just a stupid high school boy.
~
The rest of the inaugural day drags by in a hazy, punishing blur. It's a relentless montage of bored teachers introducing themselves with forced cheer, the embarrassing shuffle for hall passes, a cafeteria that smells distinctively of disappointment and burnt pizza, and enough continuous, low-level whispering to make me feel like a taxidermied exhibit in a very sad museum.
By the agonizing moment the final bell shrieks its release, I'm mentally, emotionally, and physically ready to collapse into a heap of exhausted misery. I can't even confirm if I've managed to acquire a single tentative friend yet, or if I've simply generated a solid list of people who will likely glare at me with righteous fury for the remainder of the semester.
Arriving at our new place, I dump my heavy bag unceremoniously onto the threadbare rug.
Our apartment isn't much to brag about. It's cramped, but tolerably cozy, and already overflowing with the impossible, multiplying stacks of boxes that never seem to actually get smaller. It's ours, though. Mom drifts into the doorway, her smile wide and slightly strained, looking like she's patiently waiting for me to launch into an impromptu musical talent show.
"Settling in okay?" she asks, the hope shimmering faintly in her voice.
I manage to give her the most perfectly nonchalant, exaggerated shrug my body can muster.
"Sure," I deadpan.
"Nothing quite like a fresh start to make you feel completely terrified and profoundly invisible all at once. It's a new personal record."
She lets out a short, genuine, relieving burst of laughter, and for a fleeting moment, I allow my rigid face to smile back. My mother's relentless optimism can be utterly maddening, but she's the only one in this whole world who truly seems to get the messy, complicated core of me. Or, at the very least, she is the only one who bothers to expertly pretend she does.
As soon as she leaves for her late night shift, I settle onto the edge of my bed, staring blankly at the stacks of cardboard I haven't had the energy to touch. Deep within me, my wolf stirs, a familiar, low, and persistent itch that I can never quite reach to scratch.
This routine is agonizingly familiar; I've attempted this a thousand times before. I close my eyes, trying to concentrate, focusing all my will, desperately attempting to reach her or maybe it's him? Or perhaps the thing is just me? I honestly don't know the answer anymore.
Nothing.
There is only silence, and the cold, desolate ache of failure that settles over my chest like a sheet of ice.
I shift my gaze to the window. The vast expanse of woods that begins right at the edge of the town is already profoundly dark, yet somehow intensely inviting. There is undeniably something out there. I can feel it, a powerful, magnetic pull calling me, almost like it already knows my name, like it's been patiently waiting for this very arrival. But I forcefully rationalize the feeling away.
It's nothing. Just nerves. Definitely nothing but my overactive imagination.
Still, I can't stop myself from taking one final, long, searching glance before I finally crawl under the covers. A faint, almost illusory golden light seems to flicker deep within the trees, and somewhere, in the deepest recesses of my mind, I catch a breathy whisper I've never recognized before.
You belong here. But not yet.
I shudder involuntarily, pulling the blankets up over my head, attempting to create a fortress of fabric against the unknown.
Yeah, Evie, I think, addressing the ceiling. New town, new school, but the same old me; outcast, invisible, hopelessly, fundamentally different.
But maybe, just maybe, this time, things could actually be... different.
Or, perhaps, I'll just focus on surviving the first week without completely making an embarrassing fool of myself.
One day at a time, Evie. One day at a time.
There’s this sharp, electric feeling in the woods at twilight. Honestly, it just flips reality on its head. The world I know—the safe, everyday stuff—slips away, and what’s left buzzes with danger and magic so thick you can almost taste it. Even the trees feel like they’re holding their breath, caught in this heavy silence, waiting for someone—no, something—to finally break the spell.And, judging by the wild, painful pressure squeezing my chest, that “someone” is definitely me. Lucky me.Tonight, my usual anchors are useless. Schoolwork? Forget it. My math homework looks like someone spilled ink on it. I can’t focus. Dinner? Might as well be cardboard. There’s a hunger inside me that has nothing to do with food. Even Maya’s endless chatter—normally a lifeline, with her weird art projects and crazier school board conspiracy theories—just bounces right off my wall of nerves.My wolf isn’t just restless tonight. She’s pure chaos, pacing under my skin, whining and desperate, clawing for
I've developed a, well-tested theory about small towns. They are fundamentally not small at all. They possess an intense, magnifying complexity, operating less like normal cities and more like intricate, self-contained snow globes.From the outside, the entire scene looks meticulously picturesque, perfectly arranged, and benignly charming. But the second you actively choose to shake it, the second an outside element, like me, enters the carefully controlled environment, the entire world erupts into a violent, chaotic storm. Suddenly, the swirling glitter catches the light, and everyone sees exactly what you are hiding.Right now, standing on the edge of social obscurity, I feel undeniably like I am the central, inconvenient, attention-grabbing glitter storm in someone else's tiny, painstakingly curated, perfect little world.Today's torture is gym class. Naturally.Because what conceivable setting could offer a more effective, comprehensive venue for a loud, public humiliation in fron
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There is a deceptive quality about small towns.They market themselves with glossy postcards and romanticized notions of quaintness, suggesting nothing but cozy streets, sun-dappled squares, and genuinely friendly, overly helpful neighbors. But you soon learn the truth.Silver Ridge has a distinct flavor.It's not the sugary-sweetness of a tourist destination; it's more akin to a square of exceptionally dark chocolate, the expensive, high-quality kind that carries an underlying, deep current of bitterness, the taste that sneaks up on the back of your throat long after the initial bite. And right now, in the late afternoon sun filtering across the pavement, that complex, unsettling flavor smells undeniably like trouble.The kind of trouble that promises to rearrange your life in ways you didn't consent to.All through the final, excruciatingly slow class period which was a boring lecture on the historical significance of the quadratic equation, naturally and through the noisy, chaotic
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