Accueil / Werewolf / MOONBOUND: THE HUMAN HEART / Chapter 2 – Silvermoon Academy

Share

Chapter 2 – Silvermoon Academy

last update Date de publication: 2026-04-25 21:47:17

The gate loomed above us like the jaw of some ancient beast.

Black iron, twisted into the shapes of wolves mid-howl, their metal mouths frozen open in eternal silence. Beyond it, a driveway stretched into darkness, lined with trees that seemed to lean inward, watching.

Lukas had already stepped off the bus. He didn't look back at me. Didn't need to. His warning still buzzed in my ears like poison.

You should be afraid.

I grabbed my suitcase and followed.


The building emerged from the fog like a ghost taking shape.

Gothic. Massive. The kind of architecture that belonged in old European paintings—spires that pierced the clouds, arched windows glowing with amber light, stone walls covered in climbing ivy that looked centuries old. A clock tower rose from the center, its face illuminated by the moon, the hands frozen at midnight.

Silvermoon Academy.

The name was carved into a stone arch above the main entrance, the letters filled with what looked like real silver.

I stopped walking. My suitcase wheels caught on a crack in the cobblestone path, and I just… stood there. Staring.

This wasn't a school. This was a cathedral. A fortress. A place that had existed for centuries before I was born and would exist for centuries after I was dust.

"First time?"

The voice came from behind me. I turned.

The girl from the bus—the one with the braided blonde hair and the porcelain face—was looking at me with an expression I couldn't read. Not friendly. Not hostile. Curious, maybe.

"Yeah," I said. "Is it that obvious?"

She smiled, but it didn't reach her eyes. "You're the only one who brought a suitcase like that."

I looked down at my bag. Cheap nylon. Bright purple. A gift from my mother two birthdays ago, already fraying at the seams.

Around me, other students were unloading sleek black luggage—leather, metal corners, monograms I couldn't read. One boy carried nothing but a small wooden chest engraved with runes.

"Oh," I said.

"Yeah," the girl replied. "Oh."

She walked away without introducing herself. I watched her go, her silver uniform jacket catching the light, and felt something heavy settle in my stomach.

I didn't belong here.

I'd known that before I got on the plane. But now, standing in the shadow of this impossible building, surrounded by students who moved like they'd been born to walk these grounds, the truth hit me like a physical blow.

What am I doing here?


The orientation was held in the Great Hall.

I'd never seen anything like it.

The ceiling was so high it disappeared into shadow. Chandeliers made of antlers and black crystals hung from invisible chains, casting pale light across rows of wooden benches. A massive fireplace dominated one wall, large enough to stand inside, flames roaring despite the fact that no one had added wood since I'd arrived.

And everywhere—everywhere—were eyes.

Hundreds of them. Blue, brown, green, gray, amber. Some human. Some not. They watched me as I walked in, as I found a seat in the very back row, as I tried to make myself small.

It didn't work.

Whispers followed me like a shadow.

"Is that her? The human?"

"I heard she doesn't even know what she is."

"Pathetic. She won't last a week."

"Look at her. She's so… soft."

That last one came from a boy with sharp cheekbones and a cruel smile. He was sitting three rows ahead, but he turned around to look at me as he said it, his eyes dragging over my body like he was cataloging every flaw.

I looked away.

My face was burning. My hands were shaking. I pressed them between my thighs to hide the tremors.

Don't cry. Don't cry. Don't let them see you cry.


Headmaster Aldric Vane stood at the front of the hall.

He was old—older than anyone I'd ever seen. His hair was white as snow, his face lined like ancient parchment, but his eyes… his eyes were young. Sharp. Gold-flecked and alive in a way that made my skin crawl.

He didn't use a microphone. He didn't need to. When he spoke, his voice filled every corner of the hall, vibrating in my chest like a second heartbeat.

"Welcome," he said, "to Silvermoon Academy."

The room fell silent. Even the flames in the fireplace seemed to still.

"For three centuries, this institution has trained the finest young shifters in the world. Here, you will learn control. You will learn strength. You will learn what it means to carry the blood of the wolf."

His gaze swept across the room—and stopped on me.

I felt it like a hand around my throat.

"This year," he continued, "we welcome an unprecedented class. Students from seventeen countries. Bloodlines that span continents. And one student who carries no wolf blood at all."

The whispers exploded.

"I told you. Human."

"Disgusting. She shouldn't be here."

"How did she even get in?"

Headmaster Vane raised his hand. Silence fell again.

"Ela Demir is here under the Sacred Blood Accord," he said. "Her presence is not a mistake. It is not an accident. She has as much right to be here as any of you."

He paused.

"Whether she has the strength to stay—that remains to be seen."


The rest of orientation passed in a blur.

Rules. Schedules. House assignments. Something about lunar cycles and monthly rites and forbidden territories I was definitely going to accidentally wander into.

I didn't retain any of it.

All I could feel were the eyes. Always the eyes. Boring into the back of my head, sliding across my skin like insects.

When the headmaster finally dismissed us, I grabbed my suitcase and fled.


The dormitory was called Moonshadow Hall.

It was smaller than the main building, older, tucked behind a grove of birch trees that glowed white in the darkness. The windows were narrow, the stone walls covered in moss, and the door groaned when I pushed it open like it was complaining about having to let me in.

My room was on the third floor. Number 317.

I climbed the stairs—no elevator, of course—and fumbled with the key until the lock clicked open.

The room was small but beautiful.

A single bed with dark gray sheets. A wooden desk beneath a window that faced the forest. A wardrobe carved with wolf motifs. A fireplace that was already lit, casting warm shadows across the floor.

Someone had left a plate of food on the desk. Bread, cheese, an apple, a glass of water.

I sat down on the bed and stared at it.

They expect me to fail.

That's what the headmaster meant. That's what the whispers meant. They didn't think I belonged here, and they were waiting for me to prove them right.

I picked up the apple. Took a bite.

It was the sweetest thing I'd ever tasted.


I must have fallen asleep.

I didn't remember lying down, but suddenly I was horizontal, my cheek pressed against the rough fabric of the pillow, my shoes still on, my suitcase still open on the floor.

The fire had died down to embers.

The room was cold.

And someone was watching me.

I felt it before I opened my eyes—that primal awareness, the same one that had woken me the night the wolf appeared at my window. A presence. Heavy. Hungry.

I opened my eyes.

He was standing in the doorway.

Not Lukas. Someone else. Someone taller, broader, darker. His hair was the color of winter wheat, almost white-blonde, falling across a face that looked like it had been carved from ice and anger. High cheekbones. A jaw sharp enough to cut. Lips pressed into a thin, unforgiving line.

But it was his eyes that stopped my heart.

Blue.

Not the soft blue of summer skies. Not the warm blue of shallow seas.

Ice blue. The blue of glaciers. The blue of something ancient and cold and utterly without mercy.

He was looking at me like I was a bug he wanted to crush.

I sat up so fast my head spun.

"Who are you?" I asked. My voice came out smaller than I wanted. Smaller than I was.

He didn't answer. Just stood there, filling the doorway with his impossible height, his arms crossed over a chest that strained the fabric of his black uniform.

"Wrong room," I tried again. "You must have the wrong—"

"You're the human."

His voice was low. Rough. Accented—Russian, maybe, or something close to it. And flat. Completely flat, like he was stating a fact he found personally offensive.

"I—yes. I'm Ela."

"I know who you are."

He took a step into the room.

I pulled my knees to my chest, pressing myself against the headboard. Every instinct I had was screaming at me to run, but there was nowhere to go. He was between me and the door.

"You shouldn't be here," he said.

"That's what everyone keeps telling me."

"Everyone is right."

He took another step. The firelight caught his face, and I saw something move beneath his skin. A ripple. A shift. Like his bones were rearranging themselves under his flesh.

My breath caught.

"What are you?" I whispered.

He stopped two feet from the bed. Looked down at me. And for a moment—just a moment—something flickered in those ice-blue eyes. Something almost human.

Then it was gone.

"Stay out of my way," he said. "Stay out of everyone's way. And maybe—maybe—you'll survive the semester."

He turned and walked out without closing the door.

I sat there, shaking, listening to his footsteps fade down the hallway.

Nikolai.

I didn't know his name yet. But I would. I would learn it the way you learn the shape of a knife that's been pressed against your throat.


I couldn't sleep after that.

I lay in bed, staring at the ceiling, replaying the way he'd looked at me. The contempt. The warning. The something else underneath, the thing that had flickered and died before I could name it.

The fire had gone out completely now. The room was dark except for the moonlight filtering through the window.

I should close the curtains.

I should lock the door.

I should do a lot of things.

Instead, I just lay there, frozen, waiting for morning.


The bed shifted.

I sat up, heart hammering.

Something was wrong. Something was in the bed with me. Something cold and wet and—

I threw back the covers.

And screamed.

The sound tore out of my throat before I could stop it, raw and animal, bouncing off the stone walls.

There was a wolf in my bed.

Not a full-grown wolf. Not the massive gray beast from my window in Istanbul.

pup. A baby wolf, its fur still soft and dark, its eyes still closed.

Its throat had been cut.

Blood soaked my sheets, dark and thick, spreading across the mattress like spilled wine. The pup's body was still warm. Still limp. Still fresh.

Someone had put it here while I was asleep.

Someone had watched me lie next to a dying animal and done nothing.

I scrambled off the bed, stumbled backward, hit the wall. My legs gave out. I slid to the floor, my hands pressed over my mouth, my whole body shaking.

The door was still open.

The hallway was dark.

And somewhere in the shadows, I heard a sound.

Laughter.

Soft. Distant. Cruel.

I pressed my back against the wall and pulled my knees to my chest, and for the first time since I'd arrived at Silvermoon Academy, I let myself cry.

Not because I was scared.

Because I finally understood.

This wasn't a school.

This was a battlefield.

And someone had just drawn first blood.

Continuez à lire ce livre gratuitement
Scanner le code pour télécharger l'application

Latest chapter

  • MOONBOUND: THE HUMAN HEART   Chapter 32 – Blood Oath

    The knife gleamed in Nikolai's hand, curved and sharp, the blade catching the moonlight that streamed through the window. Ela looked at it, then at his face, at his gold eyes burning with desperation and grief and a love so fierce it had curdled into something almost unrecognizable. She wanted to feel something. Fear, maybe. Or pity. Or the echo of the bond that had once tied them together. But there was nothing. Just the hollow. Just the emptiness. Just the cold, quiet peace that had become her entire existence.Nikolai stepped toward the bed. Sasha was still on the floor, gasping for breath, his hands clutching his throat. He tried to stand, to intervene, to stop whatever madness was about to unfold, but his legs would not hold him. The silver burns on Nikolai's wrists had healed, but the scars were still there, pale and rais

  • MOONBOUND: THE HUMAN HEART   Chapter 31 – The Love Triangle

    The days that followed were strange and uncomfortable for Ela. She remained in Lukas's private quarters, not because she wanted to be there but because she did not have the energy to leave. The hollow inside her was still there, vast and cold, and every movement required a effort that she could barely summon. Lukas was attentive in his own way, bringing her food and water, sitting with her in the evenings, reading aloud from books she did not listen to. But she could feel his impatience growing beneath the gentle surface. He wanted more from her. He wanted her to feel something for him, to choose him, to bond with him. And she could not give him what he did not have.Sasha visited her every day. He did not ask permission. He did not knock. He just walked into her room as if he belonged there, as if the walls had been built arou

  • MOONBOUND: THE HUMAN HEART   Chapter 30 – New Mate

    Ela could not process what was happening. One moment she had been sitting on the stone bench, staring at the fountain, lost in the hollow emptiness that had become her entire existence. The next moment, a stranger was holding her hand, pressing his lips to her knuckles, telling her that she belonged to him. She looked at Sasha's face. At his ice-blue eyes, so similar to Nikolai's but somehow different. Colder. Wilder. More dangerous. His hair was not white-blonde like Nikolai's. It was black, dark as ink, falling past his shoulders in tangled waves. His skin was pale, almost luminescent, and it was covered in tattoos. Intricate patterns, ancient symbols, images of wolves and moons and things she did not recognize. He was beautiful, in a way that made her uncomfortable. Not soft like Kai. Not polished like Lukas. Not broken like Nikolai. He was something else entirely. Something primal. Something that had been forged in fire and ice and ha

  • MOONBOUND: THE HUMAN HEART   Chapter 29 – The Stranger

    The days blurred together for Ela. She stayed in Lukas's private quarters, in the room he had given her on the first night, and she did not leave. She did not want to leave. The world outside was full of pain and betrayal and memories she could not escape. But inside these walls, there was only silence. Only emptiness. Only the hollow place where her heart used to be. Lukas brought her food and water, and she ate and drank because her body needed fuel, not because she wanted to. He sat with her in the evenings, reading aloud from books she did not listen to, telling stories she did not hear. He was gentle and patient and kind, everything she should have wanted, everything she should have been grateful for. But she felt nothing. Not gratitude. Not affection. Not even resentment. Just the hollow. Just the endless, silent void that had consumed everything she used to be.

  • MOONBOUND: THE HUMAN HEART   Chapter 28 – Broken Bond

    The silence in the ritual chamber was suffocating. Ela stood in the center of the room, surrounded by the ashes of the burning photograph and the fading glow of the symbols on the walls. The red candles had gone out, and the only light came from the narrow shaft above, where the moon had already begun to move past its alignment. She felt hollow. Not empty, not exactly, but hollow. Like someone had reached inside her chest and scooped out everything that mattered, leaving behind only the shell of who she used to be. She pressed her hand to her sternum, where Nikolai had lived inside her for so long, and she felt nothing. No warmth. No pull. No tether connecting her heart to his. He was gone. The bond was gone. And she did not know who she was without it.Nikolai was on his knees on the cold stone floor. He had fallen when the ri

  • MOONBOUND: THE HUMAN HEART   Chapter 27 – The Ritual

    The hidden ritual chamber was beneath the oldest part of the academy, deeper than the cage where Nikolai had been chained, deeper than the archives where Ela had found the truth about her mother. It had been sealed for centuries, locked away by the Council after the last Blood War, when the old magic was declared too dangerous to be used. But Lukas Brandt had found it. He had been preparing for this moment his entire life, and he knew every secret passage, every hidden door, every forgotten room. He had mapped the darkness beneath Silvermoon Academy like a second home.The chamber was circular, carved from black stone that seemed to absorb the light. The walls were covered in symbols, ancient and twisted, written in a language that predated human civilization. In the center of the room stood an altar, also black, stained with d

Plus de chapitres
Découvrez et lisez de bons romans gratuitement
Accédez gratuitement à un grand nombre de bons romans sur GoodNovel. Téléchargez les livres que vous aimez et lisez où et quand vous voulez.
Lisez des livres gratuitement sur l'APP
Scanner le code pour lire sur l'application
DMCA.com Protection Status