When nineteen-year-old Lyra Grayson moves to the remote town of Red Hollow, all she wants is a quiet place to escape her chaotic past. But peace is the last thing she finds. Lyra is sarcastic, skeptical, and allergic to bullshit—but nothing can prepare her for finding out that her new town is crawling with werewolves. Especially when the brooding, volatile Alpha, Kael Thorn, claims she's his fated mate. But there’s a catch: Lyra was born under a blood moon, a cursed omen among the wolves. Her very existence could destroy the balance between clans—or forge a new reign entirely. As Kael wrestles with his beast, and Lyra struggles with terrifying new powers that emerge each full moon, they're hunted by a rogue pack—and haunted by a dark prophecy written in blood. With enemies around every corner, secrets buried deep in the woods, and a bond that defies reason, Lyra must decide: Will she run from the monster she’s becoming—or embrace it?
View MoreIf someone had told me six months ago that I’d be packing up my dead mother’s vintage Camaro and driving to a town called Red Hollow—a name that sounds like it was yanked straight out of a horror movie, I probably would’ve laughed in their face.
Okay, maybe not laughed. More like snorted and flipped them off.
But here I am. Windows down. Hair tangled in the wind. Sunglasses on despite the overcast sky. And a playlist full of angry indie girl anthems blasting through blown-out speakers. It’s giving "main character with trauma and a tragic backstory," I know.
I didn’t choose this town. My aunt did. She claims it’s peaceful, quiet, a good place for “healing.” But so far all I’ve seen are miles of pine trees, gas stations that look like serial killer hubs, and a general store where the cashier stared at me like I was the Antichrist wearing eyeliner.
So yeah. Healing. Sure.
I pull up to the cottage my aunt left for me. It's cute in a “cozy murder scene” kind of way. Ivy climbs up the faded brick walls, and the wooden porch creaks like it hasn’t seen a soul in years. I park the Camaro, take a deep breath, and step out, instantly regretting my decision to wear Converse instead of boots. The ground squelches. Great. Mud. Just what I needed to complete my sad-girl aesthetic.
The air smells like wet leaves and something else, metallic. Like rust. Or blood. Probably rust. Hopefully.
Inside, the cottage is dusty but livable. There's a fireplace, old furniture, and a massive antique mirror that I immediately throw a bedsheet over because I've watched enough horror movies to know how that ends.
By sundown, I’ve unpacked most of my clothes, eaten half a pack of gummy bears, and officially confirmed that the Wi-Fi is nonexistent. As in, I’m stuck with books and my own thoughts.
Kill me now.
I light a few candles, not because I’m romantic but because the electricity’s flickering like I summoned a demon just by existing. I’m halfway through reading the first page of some book titled Folklore of the Moonbound Clans (a.k.a. “Who Left This Cursed Shit In My Living Room?”) when I hear it.
A howl.
Long, low, and so close I drop the book and freeze.
“Okay,” I whisper to no one, “it’s just a dog. A weirdly emotional dog. Who probably needs therapy. Like me.”
But then another howl follows it. And another. A chorus. Closer.
I walk to the window and peer out. The forest is right at my backyard. Literally, trees start where the grass ends. And just beyond them, I see movement. Fast. Dark. Shifting.
I blink. Nothing.
I slam the curtains shut and lock the front door. Twice.
The next morning, I convince myself it was just nerves. Moving into a strange place with no human interaction and too many squirrels could mess with anyone’s brain. I decide to explore the town and check out the local college I’ve enrolled in, Red Hollow Community College. Again, the horror movie vibes are immaculate.
The campus is small. Like, blink-and-you-miss-it small. Old buildings, creepy statues of wolves, and staff who look like they’ve seen things. I’m in line at the admissions office when I feel it, eyes on me.
I glance back, and that’s when I see him.
Tall. Broad-shouldered. Dressed in all black like he’s in a biker gang that only recruits people with absurd bone structure. His hair is messy, dark brown, and his jawline could slice bread. But it's his eyes that make me pause.
They’re gold.
Not brown. Not hazel. Gold. Like molten metal catching sunlight that doesn’t exist.
Our eyes lock. He doesn’t look away. Neither do I.
"You're staring," I say aloud before I can stop myself.
His lips twitch. Not quite a smile. More like he’s amused. Or annoyed.
"You're new," he replies, voice deep, low, like a warning wrapped in velvet.
"And you’re dramatic."
He raises an eyebrow, but doesn’t say anything else. Just turns and walks away.
I stare after him, heart inexplicably pounding. What the hell was that?
The lady at the desk clears her throat, pulling me back to reality. “That’s Kael Thorn,” she mutters, like she’s letting me in on a deadly secret. “You’d do well to stay away from him.”
“Because...?”
She leans in. “Because he’s dangerous.”
I nod slowly. “Cool. Adding him to my ‘probably a vampire’ list.”
She doesn’t laugh.
By noon, I’ve run into Kael three more times. Once at the library. Once near the parking lot. And once outside my English Lit class where he leaned against the wall like a damn Calvin Klein ad, arms crossed, watching me.
“Are you stalking me, or do you just have bad timing?” I ask.
He shrugs. “Maybe I’m making sure you survive your first week.”
“By lurking like a hot Grim Reaper?”
That almost earns a smile.
He steps closer, and suddenly I forget how to breathe. I can feel the heat coming off him. The energy. Like his presence shifts the air itself. My skin tingles.
“You smell different,” he murmurs.
I step back. “Okay, creepy much?”
He blinks slowly, and for a moment—just a moment—his eyes flash brighter. Like gold fire.
Before I can respond with more sarcasm, he turns and walks off again, leaving me standing there like an idiot who just got sniffed by a model with anger issues.
Later that night, I dream.
Not the kind of dream you forget when you wake up. This one is... vivid.
I’m in the woods, barefoot, running. The moon is full—huge. My lungs burn. My heart pounds. I’m not scared. I’m hungry.
A shadow runs beside me. A wolf. Massive. Black fur. Golden eyes.
Kael.
Except it’s not him. It’s more than him. It’s like his rage and darkness took form and grew fangs.
I wake up drenched in sweat, heart racing, nails digging into the bedsheet.
My hands hurt.
When I turn on the light, I freeze.
There are four deep scratches on the wall beside my bed.
Like claws.
The morning after the battle was everything I expected: brutal.I woke up feeling like I’d been tossed in a blender set to “pulverize.” My ribs ached, my limbs felt like they were made of stone, and my head throbbed with a dull, insistent rhythm that matched the pace of my regret. The bruises decorating my body looked like I’d lost a wrestling match with a brick wall, and the wall had held a grudge.Meanwhile, Kael looked like he’d just returned from a modeling gig. Shirtless, smug, and annoyingly perfect, he leaned against the kitchen counter sipping whiskey from a chipped mug. Because of course he was already drinking.“Morning, sunshine,” he drawled, eyes gleaming with mischief.I groaned and sat up slowly on the battered couch. “Sunshine? I look like a roadkill painting, Kael.”“You’re dramatic.” He took another sip. “And still better looking than most people at their best.”I glared at him. “Complimenting me while I look like a battered zombie? You must really want something.”He
The dawn was a liar.It promised light but left the world drenched in shadows.I woke tangled in Kael’s arms, the warmth of his body a stark contrast to the cold storm brewing outside.His steady breathing was oddly comforting, like a lighthouse in a sea of chaos.I traced lazy circles on his chest, trying to convince myself that for a few stolen hours, the world was normal.But the reality clawed its way back the moment my eyes opened.Kael was already awake, eyes sharp and alert.“Morning,” he murmured, voice rough but tender.I smirked. “Is it just me, or do you look like you haven’t slept since the rogue attack?”He chuckled darkly. “I’m not sure sleep is an option right now.”I sat up, stretching. The weight of responsibility settled over me like a lead cloak.“Then what do we do?”Kael’s expression hardened. “We hunt.”I frowned. “Hunt what?”“A lead. They left traces behind last night something they didn’t want us to find.”He pulled out a small, blackened shard metal twisted a
The moon hung low and heavy outside the Council hall, casting pale silver light that barely reached the shadows inside. Somehow, the room felt darker, as if the night had decided to swallow everything whole.Kael’s presence beside me was a steady, solid weight against the chaos swirling in my mind. His dark eyes, sharp as knives, flicked over every council member with suspicion and barely restrained fury.“You’re lucky they let you walk out of there,” Kael muttered, voice low enough only for me to hear.“Lucky? I’d say they’re lucky I didn’t tear them all apart on the spot,” I replied, the edge of sarcasm trying to cut through the tension.He chuckled, a brief, rough sound that made my chest ache. “That’s why I’m here. To make sure you don’t become a one-wolf wrecking crew.”Before I could respond, the grand doors slammed open.Two guards burst in, faces pale and urgent.“Alpha Kael! The Council is under attack!” one gasped. “We’ve spotted a rogue faction. They’re....”A piercing scr
The Council chamber is colder than I expected.Not temperature-wise, though it’s chilly in that crypt-vibes, zero-soul kind of way but emotionally. Every set of eyes I pass as I walk down the stone aisle to the center dais is void of warmth. Hungry. Calculating. Watching me like I’m a bomb someone forgot to disarm.I feel like I’m wearing a “Hi, I’m Potential Doom!” sticker on my forehead.Kael walks beside me in full alpha mode back straight, expression unreadable, dressed in the kind of crisp black shirt that says “yes, I murder things but make it fashion.” His hand occasionally grazes the small of my back like he’s trying to protect me without being obvious.It doesn’t help.My spine tingles with every step toward the ancient circle of high-backed chairs.Twelve alphas. Twelve thrones. Twelve people deciding whether I live, die, or become their magical pet project.“Lyra Thornbane,” booms the Council’s speaker an older wolf named Darius who looks like he was forged from oak trees a
My first thought?There’s no way I’m looking at my own face from a century ago.My second?Why is Portrait-Me hotter than Real-Me?Seriously. Mira Thornbane has the same sharp cheekbones, the same storm-gray eyes, the same hair that can’t decide if it’s curly or just perpetually haunted but she looks like someone who reads Latin curses for fun and seduces ancient kings on weekends.Meanwhile, I’m over here breaking into abandoned mansions in sweatpants.“Love what you’ve done with the place,” I mutter to nobody, aiming my flashlight at a cobweb that could register as a small nation.Behind me, a door creaks open on its own.Because of course it does.Because haunted houses don’t believe in basic courtesy.The room beyond is circular, walls lined with books, the floor painted in faded runes that tingle under my shoes like static electricity on steroids. In the center stands a lectern, and on it lies an open book.Always with the creepy books.I approach slowly, because I have seen horr
You’d think finding out you might be the heir to a cursed wolf clan would come with, I don’t know, cake. Or a welcome packet. Maybe a magical amulet that whispers bedtime stories from my ancestors.But no.All I get is a cryptic blonde and emotional trauma for dessert.I spend the night tossing and turning, dreaming of wolves with hollow eyes and girls made of moonlight. When I wake up, there’s a sharp ache pulsing in my chest right where my sternum is, like something inside me is trying to claw its way out.Fantastic.Maybe it’s indigestion.Maybe it’s destiny.Either way, I need answers.“Marked One?” I mutter, walking into the library with the energy of a caffeine-deprived gremlin.The place is practically empty, save for the librarian who gives me the same polite but low-key terrified look I’ve started collecting since I got to Red Hollow. It's starting to feel like I should charge for appearances. “Come see the cursed girl, now with extra fangs!”I head to the Restricted Folklore
Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.
Comments