LOGINAmanda woke with a jolt, her breath sharp in her throat. For a moment she thought the dream had followed her into waking, the silver wolf bowing, the whisper of Luna-born echoing in her bones. But this time it wasn’t the dream, it was real. The locket around her neck was glowing. A soft, silvery pulse, faint at first, then stronger, spilling across her sheets like liquid moonlight. Amanda scrambled upright, clutching it in her fist. The metal burned hot against her palm, though not enough to hurt, more like it was alive, thrumming in rhythm with her heartbeat. Her chest tightened.
"What are you?", she whispered into the empty room. The glow dimmed slightly, then flared again, as if answering. Amanda yanked it off and dropped it onto her desk. The silver crescent spun once before settling, still glowing faintly. She pressed her hands over her face. "This isn’t happening." "This isn't happening." She chanted in her head but it was. She couldn’t deny it anymore. --- By the time daylight crept through her curtains, Amanda already had her laptop open, eyes glazed over from scrolling through endless tabs. Werewolf lore, human myths, half truths and strange websites that looked like they were made in the early 2000s. She chased every thread that might explain what the rune stone, and now the locket had done. Her searches spiraled beyond werewolves: humans with mythical abilities, moon blessed mortals, silver marked bloodlines, I mean her stepbrother was a werewolf, anything goes right? Most of what she found was garbage: message boards where people claimed to turn into owls, blog posts about crystals and moon energy. But buried between the noise were fragments that made her pause. Some humans, born of unusual parentage, could wield fragments of the supernatural. There were once priestesses who channeled moonlight, humans whose power rivaled even the strongest of wolves. They were rare, feared and hunted. She sat back, her stomach churning. It was ridiculous. She was human, ordinary, she’d grown up in New York with her mom, barely scraping by in a tiny apartment. No glowing stones, no magic necklaces, certainly nothing supernatural. "So why were these strange things happening to her?", a small voice whispered inside her. She slammed the laptop shut. "I’m normal", she whispered fiercely, as if the words could make it true. "I’m just… me", she added but even as she said it, her gaze drifted back to the locket. It still pulsed faintly in the morning light. --- At school, the whispers hadn’t died down. If anything, they’d grown sharper. Amanda kept her head down, ignoring the way conversations dropped when she walked past, ignoring the way eyes followed her. By lunch, she was ready to scream. Instead, she found Stacie sitting at their usual table, waving her over with a bright smile. Amanda slumped down across from her. "Don’t tell me you haven’t heard", she said as she sat down. Stacie had not gone on the field trips for reasons she had told Amanda but she must have forgotten with everything else going on. But Amanda knew she was lying right now. "Heard what?", Stacie asked, feigning innocence, but her eyes darted nervously. "Everyone thinks I bewitched the rune stone, or Skylar, or both", she answered simply. Stacie winced. "Yeah, people talk", she agreed softly, her voice almost apologetic. Amanda rubbed her temples. "You know this is all insane, I'm not like you guys, I’m human and I certainly don’t have, whatever they think I have", she said frustratedly. Stacie leaned in, lowering her voice. "But you can't tell me you aren't the least bit curious, aren’t you? About why it happened?", she asked. Amanda froze and hesitated, the memory of the locket glowing flashed through her mind. "It's a mystical thousand years old stone, Amanda", she added. Her throat tightened, "…maybe", she admitted finally. Stacie hesitated, then glanced around before speaking. "Look, Amanda… I like you, like really really like you. I want to be your friend, I haven't had much of that all my life. But if you’re going to start digging into things you don’t understand, I wouldn't be much of a good friend if I don't at least warn you to be careful", she said. Amanda frowned. "Careful how?", she asked. "You know how the pack feels about witches, that’s bad enough. But if there’s one thing we fear more than witches… it’s the unknown. Something we can’t explain", Stacie said softly. Her words hit Amanda like ice water. Stacie sighed. "If the stone reacted to you, people will try to find a reason. And if they can’t… they’ll make one. So don’t give them more to whisper about. Don’t let them catch you researching or… glowing", she advised. Amanda swallowed hard. "Glowing?", she asked nervously. "Just- Don’t tell me you haven’t noticed anything weird. You look… different, like something’s humming around you", Stacie bit her lips. Amanda’s hands curled into fists under the table. "I don’t want this, I didn't ask for any of this", she said. "I know, but wanting doesn’t change what is", Stacie's voice softened. Amanda looked away, fighting the burn in her chest. --- That night, Amanda sat at her desk again, the locket was glowing again, faintly on the wood. She stared at it, at the way it pulsed like it had its own heartbeat. Stacie’s warning echoed in her ears. If there’s one thing they fear more than witches, it’s something they can’t explain. Amanda lifted the locket and let it dangle from its chain. Silver light shimmered across her walls. For the first time, a thought crept in that she’d been pushing away since the ridge. "What if I’m not fully human?" Samuel’s probing questions pressed down on her. The locket pulsed once more, as if answering the question she hadn’t dared to ask out loud. Amanda shivered, and for the first time in her life, she wasn’t sure who or what she was.Gym training at Moonridge High was something Amanda had learned to dread. Not just because it was grueling, every drill designed to test agility and stamina as if preparing soldiers instead of students, but because it was where she was most exposed. Out on the field, there was no hiding behind books or hallways. Everyone watched, everyone judged and Tessa thrived on it. It'd been weeks since the incident at the ridge, the whispers had reduced drastically but they were still there, shadows in the hallways. But at least life was a bit liveable now, somewhat.Amanda was already breathless, her uniform clinging to her with sweat as she pushed herself through the final set of sprints. When she bent over to catch her breath, she heard Tessa’s laugh, sharp as glass."Careful, Amanda", Tessa drawled, striding past with her perfect posture and hair that never seemed to frizz."Wouldn’t want you collapsing again. Or are you hoping the stone will light up under your feet this time too?", she tau
Amanda woke with a jolt, her breath sharp in her throat. For a moment she thought the dream had followed her into waking, the silver wolf bowing, the whisper of Luna-born echoing in her bones. But this time it wasn’t the dream, it was real. The locket around her neck was glowing. A soft, silvery pulse, faint at first, then stronger, spilling across her sheets like liquid moonlight. Amanda scrambled upright, clutching it in her fist. The metal burned hot against her palm, though not enough to hurt, more like it was alive, thrumming in rhythm with her heartbeat. Her chest tightened."What are you?", she whispered into the empty room.The glow dimmed slightly, then flared again, as if answering. Amanda yanked it off and dropped it onto her desk. The silver crescent spun once before settling, still glowing faintly. She pressed her hands over her face."This isn’t happening.""This isn't happening."She chanted in her head but it was. She couldn’t deny it anymore.---By the time daylight
Dinner at the Blackthorne estate was usually a stiff, awkward formal affair, but tonight the tension could have split the long mahogany table in two. The chandelier overhead gleamed, servants moved like shadows pouring wine and setting silver trays, but none of that polished elegance could disguise the storm simmering beneath the surface. Amanda sat beside her mother, silently pushing roasted carrots across her plate. She hadn’t had an appetite since the ridge, the whispers at school still rang in her ears, and the weight of her latest dream pressed heavy on her chest.Samuel cut into his steak with slow, deliberate motions. His silver hair glinted under the light, his sharp gaze shifting from Amanda to Skylar, who sat rigid across the table. His gaze lingered on the two of them. His expression was calm, but the weight behind his silver eyes made Amanda’s stomach twist. Finally, he set down his fork with deliberate care."I think there is something we need to discuss", he said finally.
Amanda got ready for school sluggishly, dragging her feet very unwilling to go. If she could stay home without arousing her mother's suspicions she would have done so immediately. She knew everyone would be talking about how she collapsed yesterday, it would be the hot gossip and she was not looking forward to that. But she forced herself through her morning routine and headed to the garage where Skylar was waiting as usual, leaning on his car, phone in one hand furiously typing, keys swinging on the other. He looked up as she approached and opened the door and slid in without another word. Amanda took in a deep breath and slid into the passenger seat.Whispers trailed Amanda down the corridors, sharp and stinging, impossible to ignore."She touched the rune stone and it nearly exploded", someone said in a hushed whisper."I heard wolves howling the moment she did it", another agreed."But how? She's human isn't she?""I don't think she’s just human. No one normal could’ve done that",
The world didn’t just explode, it ignited the moment Amanda’s palm pressed against the rune stone, the glowing carvings burst into blinding light. The once faint gold turned molten silver, lines of fire racing through every rune until the entire stone blazed like a beacon against the twilight sky. A thunderous boom echoed, though no one had struck the stone. Wind surged across the clearing, whipping hair and snapping uniforms. The trees on the ridge bent low as if bowing. In the distance, a chorus of wolves howled, sharp and urgent, their voices rolling across the mountains like a warning.Amanda gasped as power, a force like she had never felt before lanced through her body, hot and unbearable, crawling through her veins like liquid lightning. Her knees buckled, but she couldn’t let go. Her hand was fused to the stone, her chest heaving as though she was being pulled apart from the inside. Students screamed, one stumbled backward and fell. Even the cocky ones froze, staring wide-eyed
The dream returned again.It began the same way it always did: with silver fog curling around her bare feet, a forest bathed in moonlight and a whisper that wasn't a sound but a sensation crawling under her skin. Then she saw it, the wolf, massive, silver as starlight. Its fur shimmered like frost and its eyes… glowing gold, impossibly familiar. It didn’t chase her, it circled, watched, waited and when it finally moved, silent as breath, it bowed its head to her. Aria jolted awake, gasping.Her sheets were tangled around her legs, and a fine sheen of sweat coated her skin despite the cold air in the Blackthorne estate. The dream had been too real, again. She glanced at her laptop that was sitting half open on the other side of the bed. All it took was one tap for her to see the last open page on her browser, yet another website that talked about werewolves and other mythical creatures of the night. It'd been three days since she saw Skylar changing, 'shifting', like all the websites c







