MasukSeventeen-year-old Elara Ward has spent her life being forgotten and shuffled between foster homes and small towns that never remembered her once she’s gone. But the dying town of Willowmere is different. The air hums with whispers, the lake no longer reflects the moon, and something ancient is stirring beneath the willows. When Elara follows a strange light into the woods one blood-red night, she crosses the veil and a boundary between the human world and the Lumenwild, a realm of living moonlight and haunted shadows. There, she’s marked by an ancient power known as Moonfire, a symbol burned into her skin that pulses with the rhythm of the twin moons above. Saved by four mysterious men who are named Cael, their golden-eyed Alpha; Kian, the lightning-tongued rogue; Auren, the silent watcher; and Nyx, the shadow who walks between worlds and Elara learns that her arrival has reignited a prophecy buried in legend. The Riftborn, creatures of bone and smoke, are returning, and the mark she bears is both a weapon and a curse. In the heart of the Lumenwild’s glowing forest lies the Sanctum, a stronghold where wolves walk in light and the Moon’s will is law. There, Elara begins to uncover the truth, her crossing was no accident. The veil didn’t just let her in but it had called her home. As the moons draw closer and the bond between Elara and the wolves deepens, she must choose whether to embrace the power that could heal a broken world… or unleash the one that could end it. Because the Moon is awake again and she remembers her chosen.
Lihat lebih banyakPrologue - The Moon’s Forgotten Pact
Before the forests of Willowmere had names, and before mortals learned to build walls against the dark, there was only the Moon and the Wild. The Moon was light, gentle, patient, and eternal. The Wild was hunger… the heartbeat beneath every root and bone. They were lovers once. Their union birthed life, but also death, for neither could live without devouring the other. So the Moon tore herself in two…. one half to rule the heavens, the other to guard the earth. Her silver tears fell upon the soil, and where they touched, the first wolves rose from shadow. The Moon named them her children, creatures of instinct and loyalty, built to hold the balance between light and chaos. But the Wild wanted them too. It whispered into their dreams, promising freedom from the Moon’s law, urging them to bite the hand that made them. For centuries, the wolves lived between worlds….loyal and cursed, divine and doomed. ---------------------------------------------- When humans came, they found a land still humming with that power. They built their homes beside the river that glittered with silver sediment and named the place Willowmere. They thought the shimmer in the water was beauty. It was a warning. The wolves watched the settlers from the treeline, unseen but listening. The Moon whispered to one family, the first Alpha pair, and offered them a covenant. “Guard the veil between my realm and theirs,” she said, “and I will bless your blood. Forget me, and I will take it back in silver and flame.” They agreed, and the First Moon Pact was born. Five bloodlines were bound that night beneath a bleeding moon: The Drakens, sworn to strength and rule. The Vareks, sworn to deception and shadow. The Wrens, sworn to heal and to bind. The Veyrs, half-born of the Wild, sworn to guard the dark. Together they kept the peace for centuries, renewing the oath each century with ritual blood and moonfire. So long as the pact was honored, the veil stayed strong. But mortals are forgetful things. _____________________________________ As the years passed, they stopped singing the old songs. The Moon’s temples fell to ruin, her name swallowed by sermons and fear. The wolves faded into legend, the packs into families, and the pact into superstition. Then the forgetting began. First came the fog, rolling off the river thick as smoke. Those who walked in it sometimes vanished, and sometimes returned with empty eyes, unable to recall their own names. Next came the silence, birds stopped migrating, insects stopped singing, and the lake stopped reflecting the sky. And finally came the light…. small orbs drifting through the trees, guiding the curious to their doom. The scholars who still believed called it “the Moon’s Hunt.” The old bloodlines knew better. It was punishment. Every hundred years, when the veil grew too thin, the Moon demanded balance. Those with her blood, pure or diluted, were called into the Lumenwild, the in-between world where her light still ruled. There they would fight, bleed, and kill until one survivor remained. That soul became the next Keeper of the Veil. But the last Hunt broke the rules. The Alpha of that era, a Draken by name, defied the Moon. He tried to destroy the Lumenwild, and to free his people from her curse. His betrayal fractured the balance entirely. The veil tore. The Riftborn were born…. monsters made of bone and moonlight, corrupted by both realms. The goddess turned her face away. The Wild claimed what was left. Since that night, Willowmere has been sick. The fog that hides its streets is the veil’s breath leaking through the cracks. Every birthmark shaped like a crescent, every dream of silver light, and every howl in the distance, were echoes of that broken promise. And deep in the woods, where the river runs like liquid glass, the Moon waits for a new heir. Someone born of all four lines. Someone who can restore what was lost. _________________________________ Centuries pass. The town forgets. The bloodlines thin. The Drakens still rule from the shadows, though they’ve forgotten why. The Vareks spin lies behind smiles, still feeling the echo of their trickster roots. The Wrens heal the body but not the soul. The Veyrs live on the outskirts, half-man, half-nightmare. And the memory keepers….have vanished. All but one. A girl no one remembers. A name fading like mist. A heartbeat that hums in time with the old song. When the moon turns red and the light returns to the woods, she will follow… not out of bravery, but loneliness. She will cross the veil without knowing what she is. And when she does, the Hunt will awaken again. The Riftborn will stir. The cursed bloodlines will rise. The Alpha, the Trickster, the Healer, and the Hunter will be pulled into her fate. The Moon will open her eyes once more. And the world will remember what it means to be hunted.The stronghold did not celebrate survival.It recalibrated.By midday, the corridors thrummed with a new undercurrent, and quiet, disciplined, razor-aware. This wasn’t relief. It was readiness sharpened by near-loss. The wards had shifted subtly, their resonance no longer layered in isolation but braided, each strand aware of the others. No single keystone. No solitary fail point.Exactly as intended.I stood at the upper balcony overlooking the inner ring, hands braced on cool stone, watching sentries move with synchronized precision. The door inside me remained settled, neither dormant nor restless. It felt… integrated. As if my body had finally accepted it wasn’t a vessel, but a partner.Behind me, footsteps approached, and unmasked, familiar.“You should be resting,” Kyren said.“I am,” I replied. “This is what rest looks like now.”He huffed softly and joined me at the railing. His wings were folded tight, feathers still faintly rimmed with residual silver from the moon’s touch.
The aftermath did not arrive gently.It crept in on trembling breaths and fractured stone, on the slow realization that the stronghold still stood only because we had refused to let it fall inward.Silas sagged against me, consciousness flickering like a candle in wind. I shifted, bracing his weight more fully, my knees protesting as the echo of moonlight faded from my veins. The door inside me closed, and not sealed, not locked, but resting, like an eye half-lidded and watchful.“Easy,” I murmured, smoothing a hand through Silas’s sweat-damp hair. His light still glimmered faintly beneath his skin, no longer wild, no longer tearing at itself.Kyren moved then, decisive as ever. He shed his wings and crossed the chamber in two strides, crouching beside us. His hands hovered for a fraction of a second before settling on Silas’s shoulders, careful, grounding.“You’re staying awake,” Kyren ordered, voice tight with barely leashed emotion. “You don’t get to check out after that.”Silas hu
The first scream tore through the wards just before dawn.It wasn’t a horn.It wasn’t a warning spell.It was pain.I was on my feet instantly, the door in my chest flaring sharp and alert, no longer dormant but aware. Kyren was already moving, wings snapping open as the stronghold shuddered, not outward this time, but inward, like something collapsing rather than striking.“That came from the inner sanctum,” Riven said, blades in hand before the words finished leaving his mouth.Silas was gone.The realization hit like ice water.We ran.Stone corridors blurred. Torches guttered as we passed, their flames shrinking away from whatever pressure followed in Silas’s wake. I felt it then, wrongness folding in on itself, not Voidbound, not divine, but something parasitic and desperate.A failsafe.“They seeded him,” I gasped as understanding locked into place. “One of them, when they touched the wards earlier.”Kyren swore viciously. “A tether.”“To us,” Ashen snarled. “To her.”We reached
I woke to quiet that felt earned.Not the fragile quiet of denial or shock, but the deep, exhausted stillness that follows survival. Stone beneath me radiated residual warmth from Ashen’s fire. The air smelled faintly of ozone, burnt shadow, and iron, battle’s afterimage lingering like a bruise.For a moment, I didn’t move.I took inventory instead.Heartbeat, steady, slower than it should have been.Breath, unlabored, but shallow.The door...There.Not ajar. Not shut. Present in the background of my chest like a star beneath cloud cover. Waiting, patient in a way that unsettled me more than hunger ever could.Kyren was closest. Curled around my left side on the cold stone as though comfort outranked dignity. One wing stretched protectively over my legs, the other slack with fatigue. His breathing was deeper than mine, a rare thing. He had spent himself without restraint.Silas knelt a few feet away, finishing a sigil circle that faded as he completed it. His light dimmed deliberatel












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