MasukNaeva Quinn
I wasn’t going crazy. At least, I didn’t think so. But I also didn’t think wolves just showed up in people’s yards for fun and then vanished without a trace. That morning, I skipped breakfast and grabbed my laptop. I searched: Snowridge wolf sightings. Not much came up. A few grainy pictures from years ago. One article from the late '90s said, “Wolf population near extinction in Snowridge area.” Another article said they were “pushed out by noise, construction, and human expansion.” But that made no sense. The town was still surrounded by dense forest. And if wolves were really gone, why did I see one last night? Why did it look straight at me like it knew me? At school, I visited the small library tucked behind the auditorium. Dusty, cramped, but quiet. I flipped through an old book on local wildlife. One page stood out: > “Wolves were once deeply tied to Snowridge, often seen near the lakes during winter. Disappeared around 1974. Some believe they were hunted. Others claim they never left.” There were old newspaper clippings taped to the back of the book. A headline read: “Strange Sounds Echo Through Woods: Locals Blame Ghost Wolves.” Okay, definitely not helpful. But I took notes anyway. Something in me felt pulled to this. My blood felt warm in my veins in a way it never had back in Vancouver. My senses were sharper. I could hear distant footsteps in the hallway, smell someone’s peppermint gum from across the room, and sometimes, I swore I heard howling late at night. But when I’d check, nothing. Something was happening to me. And it started the second I got to Snowridge. I was still thinking about it when I walked into Room 201 for tutoring. The energy hit me the moment I stepped in. Heavy. Like walking into a room right after a fight. Camden was seated near the window, chewing his pen cap like he wanted to break it. Theo looked up and nodded. Cassian gave me a small smile. Jax greeted me with a wink and a, “Hey, killer,” like he hadn’t been in the same awkward conversation I overheard yesterday. Then, there was River. He was already staring. I sat down slowly. The folder in my hand felt so heavy. I pulled out their assignments and passed them around. “Today’s just a quick review,” I said, trying to sound normal. “Nothing too much.” They started working, some of them more focused than others. Theo breezed through his worksheet like always. Cassian struggled with one question and asked me to help. Jax doodled in the margins of his page. Camden didn’t speak at all. Then River spoke. “You smell different today.” Everything stopped. Theo looked up in surprise. Jax blinked. Camden snapped his pencil in half. I blinked back at River. “Excuse me?” He didn’t flinch. “You just… do.” Camden stood up. “Enough.” River looked at the table. “Sorry,” he muttered, not sounding sorry at all. My chest tightened. “What is wrong with you guys?” I asked. “You act like I walked into your territory or something.” No one answered. Camden grabbed his bag and stormed out, slamming the door behind him. “Smooth,” Jax said to River, shaking his head. River didn’t say another word. By the end of the session, my hands were cold. Not from the temperature. From the tension. I needed answers. After the last period, I walked around the back of the school, heading toward the gym. The snow crunched under my boots. The sun was already dipping low, painting the ice with streaks of orange. Then I saw River. He stood by the fence, shirtless. In the snow. Steam rose off his skin. I stepped closer, confused. “River?” He didn’t turn. Suddenly, his body shifted—spine stretching, arms twisting. His back hunched. Bones cracked. Fur sprouted along his arms. His face lengthened, mouth opening in a soundless growl. His eyes—those same silver eyes shone through the half-transformed shape. I couldn’t breathe. My feet locked in place. He looked at me, part-wolf, part-boy. And then in a blink, he was gone. Vanished. No snow disturbed. No trace left behind. I stumbled back with a pounding heart beat. This was real. It wasn’t a dream. It wasn’t a story. Something supernatural was happening here. And I had just seen it with my own eyes. That night, I couldn’t sleep. Every time I closed my eyes, I felt it again. River’s body shifting, the silver eyes, the bones cracking like twigs. It wasn’t a hallucination. I knew what I saw. But when I finally drifted off, my mind didn’t rest. I was standing on a frozen lake. Snow stretched for miles. The sky was dark but full of stars, more than I’d ever seen. My breath fogged in the air. I was barefoot. The ice didn’t hurt—it felt natural and familiar. Then I heard bowling. Five wolves stood at the edge of the lake, their bodies tense, glowing faintly under the moonlight. They didn’t move, just circled slowly, steady too. Watching me. My heart pounded really fast. I tried to speak, but no words came. I looked down. My reflection stared back from the smooth, frozen surface but it wasn’t my face. Not fully. My eyes were glowing. Gold. Burning bright like fire trapped behind glass. I stumbled back. The wolves moved closer, forming a tight circle around me. One black. One gray. One golden-brown. One pure white. The last was silver-eyed. I could recognise that it was River. They didn’t snarl or growl. They bowed. All five of them. And somehow... I bowed back. I jolted awake, sat up, chest heaving, sweat chilling my skin despite the cold night air. My room was dark, quiet, and safe. Yet every nerve buzzed like I was still on that lake. I pressed a hand to my racing heart, trying to slow it down. Five wolves, golden eyes, a silent pledge—none of it should be real. I rubbed my temples, but the picture refused to fade. Something inside me answered their call, a low hum behind my ribs. I didn’t know the rules or the reason, but I knew one thing: those wolf voices were bound to me, forever, maybe.TheoThe weekend had been nothing like what we had looked forward to. It stretched longer than it should have, weighed down by uncomfortable situations.Naeva’s reaction to everything—the confusion, her kidnapping. Everything kept playing in my mind, twisting me up. I had almost started questioning the prophecy.I sat staring at my palms, empty now. The latest traces of light from the spell were gone, faded.Each of us had two. That was all. I had used my first on Camden, when we almost lost him. And the second, the last one, I spent to drag Naeva out of that darkness to bring her back from where she was held.There was nothing left to use. That was all.I should have been afraid. But a strange calmness wrapped around me instead. Like maybe it was worth it. Maybe she was worth it. I couldn’t leave her helpless.“Hey, what’s going on?” Cassian’s voice came from the inn
Naeva QuinnI fell back to the floor, my palm throbbed in pain from the impact of the fall. My breath came out ragged, clouding the air before me. I pressed my injured hand against my chest.And realisation hit me, that this place was far more dangerous than I thought.“Theo,” I called again, my voice, a plea more than anything.Silence answered me.I swallowed, tried again, this time louder. “Theo!”Nothing.The room itself answered back—a voice that didn't feel human. low, taunting, followed by a ripple of laughter.“You still don’t understand, do you?” The voice said, dripping with mockery. “No one is coming for you. No one can hear you. Anyone here will only hear what I allow.” My heart sank as the new realization; the entire place was sound-manipulated. My voice won't leave here.Hope crumbled inside and melted inside me like ice.I slid back against the floor, my chest thudding, Was this how it ended? “What will you do now?” the voice came again, coaxed.Anger burned through t
Naeva Quinn When the car finally jerked to a stop, my chest dropped with the sudden silence. The noise from the road died and with it, the biting cold that had followed me all along seemed to disappear. The air here was different. Warm. Like the very walls were breathing heat back at me. Rough hands gripped me, dragging me from the back seat. My wrists burned against the rope, the knot too tight, unforgiving. I kicked out, my legs thrashing against solid bodies, but it did nothing. My feet scraped against hard ground, boots against gravel, then wood, then something smoother. I gave up the fight. Not because I wanted to, but because it was pointless. They were stronger, and I was wasting strength I might need later. Dialogue, I thought. Words could do what force could not. “You’ve got the wrong person,” I said, my voice sharp, stern, trying to hold steady against the storm building in my chest. No answer. Not even a whisper of acknowledgment. The warmth grew heavier the further th
Naeva QuinnTheo was left with no other choice but to let me go. I could see it in his eyes that he wanted to come with me, to keep me. But I had insisted. My heart was set on moving, and he respected it, even if I could feel his gaze burn into my back as I was walking away.The air was colder away from the mansion, sharper, like it wanted me to go back. But I didn’t stop. Step after step, I knew I would get home. Finally, I took a taxi, just as I turned the corner of my street, barely a stone’s throw from my house.My eyes caught a car parked. It wasn’t the one I had left in the morning. No, this one was familiar.“Wow.” I gasped, My breath hitched. It was Mrs. Ivy’s.“How?”“Why?”“What's she doing here?”That’s how I just knew I made the right decision, a voice whispered in my head. She was here, waiting for me, right at the moment I needed reassurance. That means she's who I needed.I hurried toward the car but it was empty. She wasn’t inside. She must be somewhere around or even
Naeva QuinnMy lips trembled. That face was impossible to mistake. It was her.I’d seen her before—once, twice, maybe more. Always in my dreams. The ones that clung to me long after I woke. She terrified me then, and seeing her now, real and solid, chilled me to the bone.What unsettled me most was how I couldn’t remember the dreams themselves, yet her face was carved into my memory like a scar.She crossed the space between us and pulled me into her arms. Her embrace was firm enough that I pushed her back, just enough to show I wasn’t accepting it. She steadied herself, smiled like she’d expected that, like she knew more than I did.“She’s the one,” she said, voice sharp and certain. “The Blessed One. Neava, you came just at the right time.”Blessed one? Me? The words didn’t even surprise me, it just felt wrong.I looked at the boys. None of them met my eyes. They fidgeted, pretending the air wasn’t thick with tension. I sat too, but my body refused to relax.The woman reached for the
Neava Quinn “That was a nice play for a newbie,” Theo said when I finally caught up with them. He threw a weak smile over his shoulder before he and the others disappeared around a corner. I stood there, blinking at the empty space where they had been. They didn't even wait to speak to me That’s when I saw Malik. He was standing with Mrs. Ivy. They were having a serious talk, too private for me to interrupt. Not like I would anyways. I wasn’t ready for another confusing talk or one of Mrs. Ivy’s mysterious smiles. So I changed direction fast, pretending I hadn’t seen them. The rest of the day moved slowly after that. I didn’t see the boys again, not even in the hallways before school ended. When I finally got home, Malik was already there. He was sitting stiffly at the desk across from my father. Both of their faces were serious, making the air in the room thick. “Sweetheart.” My mother came out of the kitchen. Her voice was gentle. “You must be hungry. You didn’t eat your breakf







