Alice lay flat on her back, staring at the ceiling in Mira’s bedroom. The faint glow from the streetlamp outside slipped through the curtains, leaving silver streaks on the walls. The world outside felt calm, but inside her chest it was chaos. She couldn’t stop seeing Liam and Kane in the woods—fangs bared, claws flashing in the moonlight. The snarls, the breaking branches, the sharp smell of blood—it wouldn’t leave her.
Sleep refused to come. Every time she shut her eyes, the memories came back: Liam’s face twisting as he shifted, Kane’s warning voice, the truth she had stumbled into. “You’re restless,” Mira’s voice cut into the silence. Alice turned her head. Mira was lying beside her, resting on one elbow, studying her with concern. Her dark hair spilled across her shoulder, and in the dim light, her eyes looked softer than usual. She didn’t look like the popular, untouchable girl everyone feared at school. Right now, she looked almost gentle. “I can’t sleep,” Alice admitted quietly. Mira shifted closer, their arms brushing. “You don’t have to keep holding it all in. I can tell something’s eating you up.” Alice’s throat tightened. She wanted to bury it, to keep it hidden like always. But before she could stop herself, the words slipped out. “I saw something, Mira. In the woods.” Mira’s gaze sharpened. “Something?” Alice sat up, clutching the blanket like a shield. “I’m not imagining it. I know what I saw. Liam and Kane… they’re not—” She couldn’t even finish the word. Mira didn’t flinch. She leaned in, her voice calm. “Werewolves.” Alice froze. “You knew?” Mira nodded. “I’ve always known.” The room seemed to tilt. Alice had been carrying this heavy secret, and Mira already knew? “How?” Alice whispered. Mira gave a small, bitter smile. “Because I pay attention. Things don’t add up here unless you look past the lies. Liam and Kane? They’ve been hiding things for a long time. I figured it out ages ago. I was just waiting for you to realize it too.” Alice pressed a hand to her mouth. Relief and betrayal crashed together inside her. “And you never told me?” “I didn’t think you were ready,” Mira said. Then she reached out and took Alice’s trembling hand. “But now you are.” Alice blinked at her. She expected to feel exposed or scared, but instead she felt… lighter. Like she didn’t have to carry it all by herself anymore. “Mira…” Alice’s voice shook. “There’s more. My dad… my family… we’re hunters. Werewolf hunters.” Mira stiffened for just a second, then let out a quiet laugh. “Of course you are.” Alice frowned. “You’re not scared?” “Scared? Please. Nothing about you scares me.” Mira tilted her head, a sly smile forming. “It actually makes sense. You’ve always walked like you’ve got a knife hidden under your skin. Now I know why.” Alice’s chest tightened. She’d always hidden that part of herself, afraid of rejection. But Mira didn’t back away. She leaned closer. “I told you, you don’t have to face this alone. Whatever you’re feeling—I’m here.” And for the first time since the woods, Alice believed her. Later, when the room was darker and quieter, Alice whispered, “What do I do, Mira? About Liam. About Kane. About everything. My dad can’t find out—he’ll kill them. But if I keep quiet, I’m betraying him too.” Mira sat at the foot of the bed, looking thoughtful. “Secrets never stay buried, Alice. They’ll come out eventually. You need to stop running. Go with your father on the next hunt. Face it. If you hide, this will eat you alive. But if you step into it, you’ll be in control.” Alice stared at her. “You want me to… hunt?” “I want you to see for yourself,” Mira said firmly. “You won’t stop being afraid until you face it head-on. If Liam and Kane are what you say, then you need to know what that means for you.” Alice’s stomach twisted. The thought terrified her, but Mira’s words sank deep, sounding more like a promise than advice. “You think I can handle it?” Alice whispered. Mira tucked a strand of hair behind Alice’s ear and smiled. “You’re stronger than you think.” The next night, Alice stood at the forest’s edge. Moonlight painted the trees silver. Her father, Samuel Ashford, stood tall beside her with a rifle slung across his back and a silver knife strapped to his leg. His presence was so firm and cold, even the forest seemed to bow away from him. “You sure about this?” he asked. Alice nodded, even though her stomach churned. “Yes.” They moved into the woods. Every crack of branches and rustle of leaves made her heart race. Samuel moved like a hunter, steady and quiet. Alice followed, clutching her crossbow, Mira’s words echoing in her head. Face it head-on. Take control. Hours passed. Shadows shifted. The night grew colder. Then—movement. A snarl tore through the silence. The rogue wolf burst from the trees, huge and fast, eyes glowing gold. Samuel fired instantly, grazing its shoulder. The beast howled and lunged. “Stay back!” Samuel shouted, swinging his silver blade. Alice froze, panic locking her body. The fight was brutal—claws slashing, teeth snapping inches from Samuel’s throat. She lifted her crossbow, but her hands shook too hard to aim. The wolf’s gaze snapped to her. “Alice!” her father shouted. She fired. The bolt cut its side, but it only enraged the wolf. With terrifying speed, it pounced. She tried to dodge, but its claws tore across her ribs. Pain exploded through her body. She screamed and fell hard onto the dirt. Samuel roared in fury. He drove his knife deep into the wolf’s chest until the beast collapsed with a final snarl. Alice barely noticed. She lay bleeding, gasping, the world fading. Her father scooped her up, shouting desperately, “Stay with me, Alice! Don’t you leave me!” Everything went black. When she woke, sunlight was spilling through her window. For a moment, she thought it had all been a nightmare. Then she looked down. Her shirt was ripped and stained with blood—but her skin was smooth. No wound. No scar. Nothing. Alice gasped, stumbling back in shock. Her father stood in the doorway, pale and shaking. But instead of relief, his face showed fear. “Alice,” he whispered hoarsely, his voice breaking. “What are you?” Alice stomach dropped.The night felt heavy as Alice slipped out of the house. The walls behind her no longer felt safe; every shadow reminded her of the truth she wished she hadn’t heard. Her father’s voice—angry, broken—still echoed in her mind, while her mother’s confession replayed again and again, cutting deeper each time.The Alpha of the Crimson Moon Pack…Alice hugged herself as she walked quickly down the lonely path away from the Ashford home. Her steps crunched on the gravel, her breaths uneven. Every part of her wanted to turn back, but she couldn’t. Not tonight. She needed answers. She needed Liam.By the time she reached the edge of the forest, her legs were weak from both fear and exhaustion. She stopped, staring into the dark woods. The cold air brushed against her skin, warning her to stay away, but her heart pushed her forward.Liam’s home sat deeper inside, close to the Crimson Moon Pack’s grounds. Alice had only been there once before, but it had left a mark. It felt strange, dangerous,
The Ashford home no longer felt like home. Since the night Samuel received the results from the clinic, the walls carried a tension that pressed down on everyone inside. The house was quiet—too quiet—but beneath that silence was a storm waiting to break.Samuel had lived his whole life with discipline. He’d fought monsters in the woods, bled alongside his brothers-in-arms, and stood his ground against death itself. But nothing had prepared him for this—the thought that the daughter he had raised, the girl he had held as a baby, might carry the blood of the very creatures he’d sworn to hunt.He sat at the dining table long after dinner plates had gone cold. His fists rested on the wood, knuckles white, chest heaving. Sophia stood across from him, her hands twisting nervously around the hem of her blouse. She had seen Samuel angry before, but this was different. His silence was worse than any outburst.Finally, he raised his eyes to her. They weren’t the eyes of the man she married; the
The morning after she healed, the Ashford house felt wrong—too quiet. Normally her dad filled the kitchen with noise: coffee brewing, chairs scraping, the radio. That day he just stood at the counter staring into a cup of cold coffee, shoulders tight, jaw set.Alice hovered by the doorway, stomach in knots. She wanted to say it was fine, just a scratch, don’t worry. But the words wouldn’t come out.Finally he turned and looked at her. His eyes — always sharp and in control — had something new in them. Fear.“You’re up,” he said flatly.Alice forced a smile. “Yeah. I feel… okay.”He looked at her too long, like he was checking for something hidden. Then he put his mug down, grabbed his jacket, and said, “I have work.”“Dad—” she started.“Stay home today.” His voice was low. It wasn’t mean, but it wasn’t a question either. Then he left and the door slammed.Alice’s heart beat hard. Whatever had changed inside the house was bigger than she thought.At school she drifted through classes
Alice lay flat on her back, staring at the ceiling in Mira’s bedroom. The faint glow from the streetlamp outside slipped through the curtains, leaving silver streaks on the walls. The world outside felt calm, but inside her chest it was chaos. She couldn’t stop seeing Liam and Kane in the woods—fangs bared, claws flashing in the moonlight. The snarls, the breaking branches, the sharp smell of blood—it wouldn’t leave her.Sleep refused to come. Every time she shut her eyes, the memories came back: Liam’s face twisting as he shifted, Kane’s warning voice, the truth she had stumbled into.“You’re restless,” Mira’s voice cut into the silence.Alice turned her head. Mira was lying beside her, resting on one elbow, studying her with concern. Her dark hair spilled across her shoulder, and in the dim light, her eyes looked softer than usual. She didn’t look like the popular, untouchable girl everyone feared at school. Right now, she looked almost gentle.“I can’t sleep,” Alice admitted quietl
Alice barely remembered how she stumbled out of the woods, branches clawing at her arms, her lungs aching with every ragged breath. Her mind spun in fragments—eyes glowing in the dark, snarls that cut through the silence, Liam’s face shifting into something inhuman.Her Liam.The boy who smiled at her like she was the only girl in the room, who leaned too close when he teased her in class, who felt like a stolen secret she wanted to keep forever. But now he wasn’t just Liam anymore. He was one of them.Her knees nearly buckled by the time she reached her street, and she pressed her palm against a fencepost, grounding herself against the spinning world.“Alice?”Her name shot through the fog in her head. She jerked her eyes up, panic surging—only to find Mira standing beneath the flickering glow of a streetlamp. Her books were clutched to her chest, her hair pulled into a loose ponytail, and her brows pinched together in worry.“Oh my God—you’re pale. What happened?”Alice opened her m
The figures vanished into the night.One second, Liam and Kane, stood facing each other, their bodies stiff like they were ready to fight. The tension was so strong it felt like the air itself was pressing down. The next moment, their shapes slipped into the darkness, disappearing too quickly to be natural. Alice’s breath caught in her throat.Every hunter instinct she had screamed that something wasn’t right.Her heart pounded, but her legs were already moving before her mind told her to stop. She followed their trail into the shadows, the ground soft enough to dull her footsteps. This was exactly what she’d been trained for, moving quietly, tracking signs no one else would notice, chasing in the dark. If not for that training, she might have stayed frozen on the sidewalk, pretending nothing had happened. But she couldn’t ignore it. Her gut told her it mattered.The trail wasn’t obvious. Just a strange ripple in the air, a faint heat in the breeze. She followed it into the woods behi