The sun dipped below the horizon, painting the sky in hues of amber and violet. Lyla sat on her bed, staring out the window as her pulse raced. Eli’s cryptic promise replayed in her mind: “Meet me tomorrow night at the clearing. I’ll explain everything.”
Her nerves were tangled with anticipation. Eli knew something, something important about the forest, the wolves, and whatever strange events had taken place since her arrival in Silverwood. She had spent the entire day thinking about what he might reveal, but every scenario her imagination conjured felt ridiculous. Ghost stories? A pack of rogue wolves? Some local legend that the town kept alive for fun?
But none of it explained what she had seen. The golden eyes, the massive black wolf, the way Eli had vanished into the forest as if it were part of him.
Her clock read 11:45 p.m. Lyla grabbed her flashlight, pulled on a jacket, and slipped out of the house.
The night air was cold, carrying the earthy scent of the forest. The path to the clearing felt longer in the dark, and every rustle of leaves or snap of a twig made her jump. The moon, nearly full, cast a faint glow over the landscape, but the shadows between the trees seemed to move as if alive.
As she approached the clearing, Lyla felt a strange pull, a sense of being drawn forward by something unseen. Her steps slowed when she heard voices.
“Are you sure about this, Eli?”
The voice was deep, unfamiliar, and filled with scepticism.
“She’s already seen too much,” Eli replied. “If I don’t tell her, she’ll keep digging.”
“She’s not one of us,” the other voice growled.
“She’s connected, Mason,” Eli shot back. “I can feel it.”
Lyla stepped closer, staying hidden behind a tree. Her heart pounded as she peeked around the trunk. Eli stood in the middle of the clearing, his posture tense. Opposite him was a boy she didn’t recognize tall, broad-shouldered, with wild, dark hair and a sharp glare.
“She’s here,” Eli said suddenly, turning his head in Lyla’s direction.
Lyla froze.
“Come out, Lyla,” Eli called, his voice calm but commanding.
Taking a deep breath, she stepped into the clearing. The other boy, Mason, scowled at her, his sharp gaze flicking over her like she was a puzzle he didn’t trust.
“You weren’t supposed to bring company,” Lyla said, crossing her arms to hide her nervousness.
“Mason’s part of this too,” Eli replied. “And this isn’t just about you or me. It’s bigger than that.”
“Okay,” Lyla said. “Then start explaining.”
Eli exchanged a glance with Mason, who sighed and stepped back, folding his arms.
“This town isn’t like other places,” Eli began, his voice steady. “The forest, the people, even the history it’s all tied to something old, something powerful. Silverwood is werewolf territory.”
Lyla blinked. “Excuse me?”
Eli continued, ignoring her disbelief. “There are three packs in Silverwood. We’ve lived here for generations, keeping the peace, staying hidden from humans. But things have been changing. The balance is… breaking.”
Lyla took a step back, her thoughts spinning. “Werewolves? You’re serious?”
Eli nodded. “You’ve already seen one. The black wolf.”
“That was you,” Lyla said softly, the realization hitting her.
“Yes,” Eli admitted. “But that’s not the point. What matters is that you’ve been pulled into this, whether you like it or not.”
Mason stepped forward, his voice rough. “You should’ve stayed out of the forest, Lyla. You don’t belong here.”
“Stop,” Eli said sharply, cutting Mason off. “This isn’t her fault. Something drew her here. You felt it, didn’t you?”
Lyla hesitated. “I… I don’t know. It’s like the forest was calling me. It’s hard to explain.”
“That’s because you’re connected to it,” Eli said. “There’s something about you, something different. You’re not just a random human who stumbled into werewolf territory. The forest recognizes you.”
“Recognizes me? What does that even mean?”
Eli’s expression softened, but before he could answer, a low growl echoed through the clearing.
Mason’s head snapped toward the sound, his body tense. “They’re here.”
“Who’s here?” Lyla asked, her voice trembling.
“Rogues,” Eli said, his voice hardening. “Wolves without a pack. They’ve been getting bolder lately.”
Another growl, closer this time. Lyla’s flashlight flickered, and her breath hitched. Shadows moved in the darkness, circling the clearing.
“Stay close to me,” Eli said, stepping in front of her. Mason shifted to the other side, his posture low and predatory.
Before Lyla could process what was happening, two wolves emerged from the shadows, their eyes glinting with malice. They were smaller than the black wolf she had seen before, but no less terrifying. Their snarls sent chills down her spine.
“Leave,” Eli commanded, his voice taking on a strange, resonant tone. “This is our territory.”
The rogues didn’t back down. One lunged forward, and in a blur of motion, Eli shifted. Lyla gasped as his body twisted and transformed, fur erupting from his skin, his limbs elongating. In seconds, the boy she had been speaking to was gone, replaced by the massive black wolf she had seen that night.
Mason shifted too; his wolf forms leaner but no less fierce. Together, they charged the rogues.
The clearing erupted into chaos. Snarls and growls filled the air as the wolves clashed, teeth flashing and claws slashing. Lyla stumbled backwards, her flashlight forgotten on the ground. She couldn’t look away, her fear and fascination warring within her.
Eli tackled one of the rogues, pinning it to the ground with a ferocious growl. Mason drove the other wolf back toward the trees, snapping at its heels.
The fight was over as quickly as it began. The rogues fled into the forest, their howls fading into the night.
Eli shifted back first, his breathing heavy and his skin streaked with dirt and scratches. Mason followed, his expression grim.
“They’ll be back,” Mason said.
“Not tonight,” Eli replied, his eyes on Lyla.
Lyla stared at them, her mind struggling to catch up. “You… you’re werewolves.”
“Yes,” Eli said simply.
“And those rogues?”
“Wolves without a pack,” Eli explained. “They don’t follow the rules. They’re dangerous.”
Lyla took a shaky breath. “Why did they attack? Was it because of me?”
“Partly,” Eli admitted. “But mostly because they’re opportunists. They’ve been testing our defences for weeks.”
Mason scowled. “This is why she shouldn’t be here, Eli. She’s a liability.”
“She’s not going anywhere,” Eli said firmly.
Lyla found her voice. “I’m standing right here, you know. If this is my problem now, I deserve to know what’s going on.”
Eli nodded. “You’re right. And I’ll tell you everything. But not here. Let’s get back to town.”
By the time they reached the edge of the forest, the adrenaline had worn off, leaving Lyla exhausted but buzzing with questions. Eli walked beside her, his expression unreadable.
“You handled that well,” he said quietly.
“Handled what? Watching wolves tear each other apart?” she replied, her voice sharper than she intended.
Eli smirked. “Most people would’ve run screaming.”
“I wanted to,” Lyla admitted. “But I also wanted to understand.”
Eli stopped walking and turned to face her. “You will. But it’s a lot to take in, and it’s not safe to talk about everything out here. Tomorrow, meet me at the diner after school. We’ll talk.”
Lyla nodded, too drained to argue.
When Lyla finally returned home, the house was dark and quiet. Her dad had fallen asleep on the couch, a stack of paperwork spread across the coffee table.
Lyla tiptoed upstairs, her mind still racing. She collapsed onto her bed, staring at the ceiling. Werewolves were real. Eli and Mason were living proof. And somehow, she was tied to all of it.
As she drifted off to sleep, she couldn’t shake the feeling that her life had just been irreversibly changed.
The moon bled deeper.The crimson halo thickened, swallowing the moon’s pale surface inch by inch. The sky darkened. The stars dimmed.The Bloodmoon was coming.And with itThe breaking of the bond.The forest thinned as they moved.The trees, twisted and weary, leaned away from the path. The ground beneath them shuddered with each step.The bond was fraying faster now.Lyla could feel it.Like a rope pulled too tight. Strands snapping one by one.The talisman in her hand vibrated with each tremor.It guided her forward.To the heart of the forest.To the place where she would bleed.The Bloodmarked followed in silence.Eli stayed close, his jaw set, his eyes shadowed with worry.Dani flanked her left. Jonas her right.Mason brought up the rear, his hackles raised.They didn’t speak.They didn’t need to.The forest's dread was their dread.The bond’s pain was their pain.The Bloodmoon loomed overhead.Watching.Waiting.The talisman grew heavier with each step.The earth shifted benea
The moon was wrong.Too pale.Too still.Lyla stared at it through the thinning canopy. The full moon hung in the sky like a frozen eye, watching, waiting. Its light touched the forest but gave no warmth.The bond stirred beneath her feet. Weak. Anxious.The forest knew.The Bloodmoon was coming.And when it arrived...Everything would break.The Bloodmarked moved through the trees in wary silence.Every step felt heavier than the last.The fight with Kane had left them battered, their connection to the forest frayed. The wolves' steps faltered more than usual. Their senses dulled.The bond was still there, but thinner. Fainter.Lyla could feel its weakness like an ache beneath her skin.Mason walked beside her, his usual confident stride replaced by a limp. His gray fur was streaked with dried blood."This doesn’t feel right," he said, voice low.Lyla nodded. "It isn’t."Ahead, Jonas led the way. His shoulders were rigid, his eyes sweeping the shadows. Dani followed just behind him,
The shadows tightened.Cold. Unforgiving.They coiled around Lyla’s throat like a noose.The Hollow King's presence pressed against her mind, vast and ancient. Its voice seeped through the cracks in her resolve, whispering promises wrapped in darkness."Kneel."Her knees shook.The talisman, gripped in Kane’s bloodstained hand, pulsed with crimson light. The crescent symbol glowed like an open wound. The forest’s magic, the lifeblood of the packs, bled through the air with every flicker of red.Behind Kane, the Hollow King loomed.Its limbs stretched like shadowed roots. Its eyeless face tilted toward the moon. Its power swelled with each heartbeat.The forest was breaking.Lyla could feel it.The threads of connection the invisible bond that had once united the wolves, the trees, the earth were unraveling.And with it, their strength.Mason collapsed first.Then Jorah.Then Eli.His voice reached her, ragged and strained.“Lyla...don’t...let it win.”The shadows dragged Eli to the gr
The earth split beneath their feet.Again.But this time, it didn’t feel like a wound or a mouth.It felt like a heartbeat.Lyla staggered, the talisman scorching her palms as the ground heaved. The circle Kane had carved glowed with crimson light, its veins spreading like cracks through the earth. The air vibrated with a deep, rhythmic thrum slow, steady, inevitable.The Hollow King's pulse.Across the clearing, Kane grinned, his chest rising and falling with labored breaths. Blood dripped from the ritual knife in his hand, soaking into the carved runes."You can’t stop it now, Blackwood," he rasped. "The forest remembers its true master."The shadows coiling around the pit swirled faster. The Hollow King’s form stretched from the abyss, taller and more solid than before. Its limbs elongated with each pulse of the crimson light. Its eyeless face turned toward Lyla, and though it had no mouth, she felt the weight of its attention.It knows me.The talisman in her grip pulsed with whit
The wind turned cold.Not a passing chill.A breath from something beyond.Lyla’s heart slammed against her ribs. The pit roared beneath her feet, no longer just a crack in the earth but a wound splitting the fabric of reality. The shadows were no longer shadows. They pulsed, thick and heavy, like veins filled with molten night.And from that night, it stirred.The thing that whispered her name.Eli reached for her arm. "Lyla"She couldn’t answer. Couldn’t move.The forest screamed again, louder than before. Roots shriveled. Branches cracked. The air, once thick with the forest’s ancient magic, grew thin. Brittle.The gate had been unsealed.And something wanted through.The Elder stood at the edge of the pit, his silhouette sharp against the crimson glow. His eyes, pale and cold, locked on hers."You felt it, didn’t you?" His voice was silk over steel. "The hunger. The power."Lyla bared her fangs. "I felt the forest fighting you."The Elder chuckled. "Ah. But the forest isn’t fighti
The ground split open.Not like a wound.Like a mouth.Lyla moved first, claws igniting with silver fire as she lunged for the Elder.But the Elder did not flinch.Did not defend.Did not even care.Because they had already won.The wind howled.The shadows beneath them unraveled not just darkness, but something alive.Something old.Something returning.Eli’s voice was sharp. “Lyla”Jorah’s golden eyes burned. “It’s not just them.”Dani’s smirk vanished. “We’ve been fighting the wrong war.”Caelum’s silver gaze was steady, his voice quiet. “No. We’ve been fighting the wrong enemy.”Lyla landed hard, skidding back just as the thing began to rise.Not a creature.Not a god.Something in between.Something born from the ashes of a fallen empire.The Elder smiled, stepping backward, into the shifting black."You thought you were the ending."The whispers in the wind became voices."But you were only ever the beginning."Lyla bared her fangs."Then let’s see how this story really ends."T