Mag-log inIn a world where werewolves rule from the shadows and humans live in carefully crafted ignorance 17 YrAria Blackwood receives an invitation that will shatter everything she believes to be true. Selected for the prestigious Crimson Moon Academy—a place where the "fortunate few" humans are groomed to become mates for powerful werewolf alphas-Aria thinks she's escaping her cursed life as the town outcast. Born with strange silver eyes and raised by a grandmother who speaks in riddles, she's spent years hiding abilities she doesn't understand. But Crimson Moon Academy isn't the paradise promised in the glossy brochures. It's a hunting ground where humans are prey, alphas are predators, and survival means playing a game with rules written in blood. Worse still, Aria catches the attention of the Shadow Princes—four ruthless alpha heirs who rule the academy with iron claws Kaine, the Northern Prince, whose icy demeanor hides a dangerous obsession. Zephyr, the Southern Prince, whose charm is as lethal as his bite. Raven, the Eastern Prince, who sees through every lie and keeps darker secrets. Lysander,the Western Prince, the cruelest of them all, who views humans as toys to break. Each wants to claim her.Each wants to destroy her. And each holds a piece of the puzzle to her true identity—an identity that could either save their world or burn it to ash. As Aria uncovers the academy's bloody secrets and her own forbidden heritage, she realizes she's not just another human lamb led to slaughter. She's something far more dangerous. Something that was never meant to exist. The alphas wanted a prey to hunt.Instead, they awakened a predator But in a game where trusting anyone means death, and her own blood might be the deadliest betrayal of all, Aria must decide: Will she embrace the monster within.
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Silver Eyes The letter arrived on a Tuesday, which should have been my first warning that everything was about to go straight to hell. I stood at our broken mailbox, the cream-colored envelope pristine against my dirt-stained fingers, while the rest of Pine Hollow's residents pretended not to stare. They'd been doing that my whole life—staring but not quite staring, whispering but not quite whispering. You'd think after seventeen years, I'd be used to it. You'd be wrong. "Aria Blackwood," I read aloud, tracing the elegant calligraphy with my thumb. No one in Pine Hollow received mail with such beautiful writing. Hell, most of us were lucky if the bills arrived without coffee stains. The return address made my blood turn to ice: Crimson Moon Academy. "No," I whispered, my hands starting to shake. "No, no, no." But there it was, the official seal pressed into blood-red wax—a crescent moon wrapped around a wolf's head. Everyone knew what that meant. Every human between seventeen and nineteen knew what that meant. I'd been selected. "Aria!" Mrs. Chen called from her porch, her voice pitched high with false excitement. "Is that what I think it is? Oh, how wonderful! Your grandmother must be so proud!" Proud. Right. My grandmother would probably cackle herself into a coughing fit when she heard about this. Nana had a weird sense of humor about the world's cruelties. I shoved the letter into my jacket pocket and headed home, ignoring the sudden burst of whispers that followed me down the street. The news would spread through Pine Hollow within the hour. By dinner, everyone would know that Aria Blackwood—the weird girl with the silver eyes who lived with her crazy grandmother—had been chosen for Crimson Moon Academy. Lucky me. Our house sat at the very edge of town, where the forest pressed close enough to scratch at our windows during storms. It wasn't much—two bedrooms, a kitchen that leaked when it rained, and a living room full of Nana's "collections." Herbs hung from every ceiling beam, crystals cluttered every surface, and books written in languages I couldn't read lined the walls. The whole place smelled like sage and something else, something wild that I could never quite identify. "Nana?" I called, closing the door behind me. "You home?" "In the kitchen, child." I found her standing over the stove, stirring something that bubbled and hissed in her favorite cast-iron pot. Her silver hair was braided down her back, and she wore one of her many flower-print dresses that had probably been fashionable fifty years ago. She didn't look up when I entered, but I saw her shoulders tense. She knew. Somehow, she already knew. "The letter came," I said, pulling it from my pocket and tossing it onto the kitchen table. "Hmm." She kept stirring, the wooden spoon moving in slow, deliberate circles. "Took them long enough." I froze. "What do you mean, 'took them long enough'? You knew this would happen?" "I suspected." She finally turned to face me, and her eyes—the same strange silver as mine—held a sadness that made my chest tight. "Sit down, Aria. We need to talk." I remained standing. "About what? About how I've just been selected to be some werewolf's chew toy? About how I'm supposed to be grateful for the 'honor' of attending their twisted academy?" "About the truth," she said quietly. "About what you really are." The words hit me like a physical blow. "What I really am? I'm human, Nana. Just like you. Just like everyone in Pine Hollow." She laughed, but there was no humor in it. "Oh, child. Is that what you think? That you're just like everyone else?" She moved closer, reaching out to cup my face in her weathered hands. "Have you never wondered why your eyes are silver when everyone else's are brown or blue or green? Why animals follow you through the forest? Why you can sense things others can't?" I jerked away from her touch. "Stop it." "Why you heal faster than you should? Why you're stronger than any seventeen-year-old girl has a right to be?" "Stop it!" "Why you dream of running on four legs under the full moon?" The words exploded out of me: "Because I'm a freak! Okay? I'm a freak, and everyone knows it, and now I'm going to be shipped off to some academy where they'll probably use me for entertainment before some alpha decides I'm worth keeping as a pet!" Nana's expression didn't change. She simply walked back to her pot and resumed stirring. "You're not a freak, Aria. You're something far more dangerous." I laughed bitterly. "Dangerous? I can't even stand up to Jenny Patterson and her stupid friends at school. How am I dangerous?" "Because you're not supposed to exist," she said simply. "You're an impossibility. A miracle. A mistake. Call it whatever you want, but the fact remains—you are something that hasn't walked this earth in over two centuries." My mouth went dry. "What are you talking about?" She turned off the stove and faced me fully. "Your mother wasn't human, Aria. Neither was your father. Well, not entirely." The room spun. I grabbed the back of a chair to steady myself. "My parents died in a car accident when I was a baby. You told me—" "I told you what you needed to hear to stay safe." Her voice was gentle but firm. "Your parents were killed, yes, but not in any accident. They were hunted down and executed for the crime of creating you." "Creating me?" My voice came out as a whisper. "What am I?" Nana was quiet for a long moment, studying my face as if memorizing every detail. Finally, she spoke: "You're a hybrid, Aria. Part human, part werewolf, and part... something else. Something ancient. Something that was supposed to have been wiped out in the Great War." I sank into the chair, my legs no longer able to hold me. "That's impossible. Hybrids can't exist. Everyone knows that. The biology doesn't work. Werewolves and humans can mate, but they can't create... whatever you're saying I am." "Not naturally, no," Nana agreed. "But your parents found a way. They used old magic, forbidden magic. Blood magic. And they paid the ultimate price for it." My mind raced, trying to process her words. "Why? Why would they do that?" "Because they believed you were the answer to a prophecy," she said. "A prophecy that speaks of a silver-eyed child who will either unite the races or destroy them all." I laughed, high and hysterical. "You're insane. You've finally completely lost it." "Have I?" She walked to one of her many bookshelves and pulled out a leather-bound journal. She set it in front of me, opening it to a page covered in unfamiliar symbols. But as I stared at them, something strange happened. The symbols began to shift, rearranging themselves into words I could read: *When moon bleeds red and silver eyes wake, The boundary between worlds will break. Born of three bloods, raised in disguise, The forgotten one will rise. Four princes will hunt, four hearts will claim, But only one will speak her true name. In the academy where lambs are led, The hunter shall become the hunted instead.* My hands trembled as I pushed the journal away. "This is crazy." "This is your destiny," Nana corrected. "And now that you've been selected for Crimson Moon Academy, it's begun." "I won't go," I said firmly. "I'll refuse. I'll run away." "You can't. The selection is binding. If you refuse, they'll send hunters. If you run, they'll track you. The only way forward is through." She sat down across from me, taking my hands in hers. "But you won't be going there as a lamb, Aria. You'll be going as a wolf in sheep's clothing." "I don't know how to be a wolf," I whispered. "No," she agreed. "But you're about to learn."Chapter 7: The Hunt BeginsThe morning of the Hunt dawned blood-red.I hadn't slept. How could I, after everything Zephyr had revealed? The leather book lay hidden under my mattress, its secrets burning through my mind like acid. Moonsinger. The word echoed with every heartbeat, foreign yet familiar, like remembering a dream upon waking.Sophie was already up, practically vibrating with nervous energy. "Today's the day," she said, her voice pitched higher than usual. "Are you ready?""As ready as anyone can be for being hunted by werewolves."She laughed, but it came out shaky. "At least we'll be together. Safety in numbers, right?"I wanted to tell her the truth—that there was no safety here, that we were all pawns in a game we didn't understand. But looking at her hopeful face, I couldn't. Let her have this morning of ignorance. Reality would crush her soon enough.Breakfast was a tense affair. The dining hall buzzed with anticipation and fear in equal measure. The werewolf student
Chapter 6: Night LessonsThe knock on my door came at exactly 9:45 PM.Sophie was already asleep—she had an almost supernatural ability to fall unconscious the moment her head hit the pillow. I'd been sitting on my bed, fully dressed, debating whether to actually go to Zephyr's room or risk whatever consequences would come from refusing.The knock decided for me.I opened the door to find a werewolf girl I didn't recognize. She was beautiful in that casual way all werewolves seemed to be, with auburn hair and amber eyes that glowed in the dim hallway light."Zephyr sent me," she said, sounding bored. "Follow me.""I didn't agree to—""Follow me, or I drag you. Your choice."I followed.She led me through corridors I hadn't seen before, up stairs that seemed to spiral forever, past paintings whose eyes definitely moved. The boys' wing was different from ours—darker, more oppressive, with an underlying scent of danger that made my instincts scream."Word of advice," the girl said as we
Chapter 5:The Hunt BeginsI barely slept that first night.Sophie snored softly in the bed across from mine, apparently able to find peace despite everything. But every time I closed my eyes, I saw golden ones staring back. Felt phantom breath on my neck. Heard that chorus of howls calling to something primal inside me.When the morning bell rang at six AM sharp, I was almost grateful for the excuse to stop pretending."Rise and shine!" Sophie chirped, already bouncing out of bed. "First day of classes! Aren't you excited?""Thrilled," I muttered, dragging myself to the small bathroom attached to our room.The uniform waiting in our wardrobe was a surprise. I'd expected something traditional, conservative. Instead, it was modern and form-fitting—black pants, a crimson silk shirt, and a black blazer with the academy crest embroidered in silver thread. A wolf and a human, circling each other eternally."We look amazing," Sophie gushed, admiring herself in the mirror. "Like we actually
Chapter 4:First BloodDinner was torture disguised as a meal.The food itself was incredible—roasted meats, fresh vegetables, fruits I'd never seen before, desserts that looked like edible art. But eating while being watched by predators killed any appetite I might have had. Every bite felt like performance art. Every movement was scrutinized."Don't look at them," Sophie whispered, though she was stealing glances herself. "I heard if you make too much eye contact, they take it as a challenge.""Or an invitation," the girl across from us added. She had red hair and more freckles than skin. "I'm Mia, by the way. Mia O'Brien.""Aria," I replied, though my attention was on the strange tingling at the back of my neck. Someone was watching me still, I could feel their gaze like fingertips trailing down my spine."Did you see the one with white-blonde hair?" another girl gushed. "I heard his name is Lysander Westbrook. His family basically owns the Western Territories.""The one with silve
Chapter 3:Through the VeilThe landscape changed dramatically in the fifth hour of our journey. The normal forest gave way to something older, darker. Trees that seemed to touch the clouds. Shadows that moved independently of the wind. And a mist that clung to everything like a living thing."We're entering the Territories," Professor Blackthorne announced. "You may experience some discomfort as we pass through the barrier. This is normal."Discomfort was an understatement. The moment we crossed whatever invisible line separated the human world from the werewolf territories, pain shot through my skull like someone was trying to crack it open from the inside. I bit my lip hard enough to taste blood, determined not to make a sound.But I wasn't the only one suffering. All around me, students groaned, gasped, and cried out. Jenny actually whimpered, pressing her palms against her temples. Even Ethan went rigid beside me, his knuckles white as he gripped his book.Only I seemed to notice
Chapter 2:The Last SupperThe next three days passed in a blur of preparation and revelation. Nana barely let me out of her sight, cramming seventeen years' worth of hidden truths into seventy-two hours."Your mother was part of an ancient bloodline," she explained, grinding herbs at the kitchen table while I practiced what she called "suppression techniques"—basically, how to hide what I really was. "The Moonsingers. They were the first of our kind, able to shift between human and wolf form at will, not bound by the moon like modern werewolves.""If they were so powerful, what happened to them?""Fear happened," she said simply. "The werewolves feared them because they couldn't be controlled. The humans feared them because they were too powerful. So both sides united, just once, to wipe them out. They thought they succeeded.""But my mother survived?""Your mother's line hid for generations, diluting their blood with humans until the power seemed gone. But it was only sleeping, wait






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