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Invitation Marked with Blood

Author: Tyson Roy
last update Last Updated: 2025-07-13 15:29:38

The courier had been on the road for hours. The path from Dawn Veil’s medical outpost was narrow, winding through trees and open fields, shrouded in the mist that seemed to hang around everything in the morning. The sun had just started to rise, the light soft and pale, barely pushing through the thick foliage.

She arrived exhausted, her horse tired, the bags strapped to the saddle heavy with sealed messages. The small outpost had always been a place of peace, but today it hummed with curiosity. A few children peeked out from behind fences, and the older wolves watched her closely, their eyes full of questions.

Without hesitation, she asked for Aria Hartfield, the healer who had earned a reputation among them. She was quickly shown to the garden, where Aria worked, hands deep in the earth, tending to chamomile.

Aria straightened when she heard the approach. Her dress was simple, linen, and worn, and the shawl draped across her shoulders loosely hid the swelling of her belly. It had be
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  • Moonlit Secrets   Flame on Her Feet

    The training grounds of Moonrise had never sounded like this before. Once, the air had been filled only with the grunts of boys, the bark of commanders, the heavy thud of fists against dirt. Now, the space was alive with something brighter—laughter, wild and fierce, spilling over the old stone markers like sunlight breaking through storm clouds. Barefooted girls ran the hard-packed earth, their voices high and unashamed, chasing one another with staffs and sticks, their joy louder than doubt.Aria stood at the edge, arms folded loosely, a smile pulling at her lips. She remembered what it had been to stand here, small and hungry, told to heal but never to fight, to serve but never to rise. That world had tried to shrink her, but it had failed. And now, it was gone—replaced by this chorus of flame-hearted girls, daring to take what had been denied for generations.“Flame-Mother! Show us again!”The cry came from Lark, all wiry limbs and golden hair that refused to lie flat. The others c

  • Moonlit Secrets   The Mirror of Then and Now

    The door to Aria’s childhood home groaned on its hinges, releasing a breath of dust and the faint, lingering scent of old lavender. The little stone cottage had been abandoned for years, surrendered to moss and ivy, to wildflowers that claimed the paths where once her small feet had run. Yet the bones of it endured—walls stubborn against the seasons, windows cracked but still holding—like a memory that refused to fade, no matter how much time tried to bury it.Aria paused on the threshold, her palm pressed flat against the splintered wood. The ache came back, not sharp as it once had been, but soft—like the echo of a song. She closed her eyes and breathed in the musty air. For a moment, she was a child again, wearing patched dresses, shrinking into silence, praying for something—anything—to love her back.Her daughter’s hand slipped into hers, warm and steady, a tether to the present. “Mama,” she whispered, wide-eyed. “Was this really your house?”Aria nodded, a smile tugging at her m

  • Moonlit Secrets   The Forgiveness Rite

    The sun sifted through the canopy in golden shafts, warm and gentle, painting the sacred glen in shifting light. Moss gleamed like emerald velvet underfoot, the stream whispered against its stones, and the trees seemed older than memory—sentinels that had borne witness to births, bondings, and blessings long before war silenced the grove. For generations, it had been left untouched, abandoned when ceremony gave way to conflict. But today, for the first time in living memory, it stirred with voices again.Word of Aria’s call had spread quickly, moving like breath through the pack. Old and young, healer and warrior, rogue-born and elder—all had come, some drawn by hope, others by curiosity, a few by wounds too long unspoken. The glen filled with wolves of every kind, their eyes carrying the ache of years, their hearts restless with longing for something they could not yet name.At the circle’s center stood Aria. She wore no crown, no cloak of office—only a simple dress, her hands empty,

  • Moonlit Secrets   No Crown for the Kind

    The first pale light of dawn brushed the mountains, streaking the sky in gold and rose. From the high balcony above Moonrise, the valley seemed to sleep still—stone roofs curled in smoke, winding lanes hushed in dream. Only the embers in the square below betrayed what had happened the night before: the burning of a letter, the fire that had consumed the last venom of the old order.Aria stood at the railing, cloak drawn against the chill, the wind teasing strands of her hair loose. She rested her palms on the cold stone, breathing deep, as if the thin air might strip her of the last traces of fear and leave only steadiness behind. For a fleeting moment, she imagined the old Lunas—gentle shadows in history, silent beside their Alphas—gazing down at a world that had never let them be more than ornaments. She wondered what they would think, seeing her here now, unbound, unbowed.Soft footsteps broke the thought. Councilor Hale emerged, a velvet bundle cradled in his arms. Myra walked wit

  • Moonlit Secrets   The Burning Letter

    Twilight lay a lavender hush over Moonrise’s courtyard, painting the stone paths in long blue shadows. The great fire pit smoldered at the square’s center, its embers waiting for nightfall, its glow reflected in the eyes of wolves gathering one by one. They were not drawn by hunger or celebration, but by whispers—whispers of dissent, of an old voice refusing to let the new world settle without a fight.Aria sensed the tension before she saw its cause. She had been working along the garden border, dirt still beneath her nails, her daughter and Linnet laughing as they braided flowers into each other’s hair. Then came the murmur, sharp and carrying.“Did you hear? Elder Caelen wrote a letter.” “A warning—against the Luna herself.” “He says she’s leading us to ruin.”Aria rose, steady but alert, her pulse quickening though her face betrayed nothing. This was not the first time her authority had been challenged. But there was a weight in the way the words spread, like smoke seeping into

  • Moonlit Secrets   The Council Reversed

    The sky was bruised violet by the time the pack gathered in the judgment circle, the hollow of earth ringed with standing stones etched by centuries of scars. This place had never been kind. It was where disputes had been shouted into law, where exile had been decided by raised voices and averted gazes. Aria had once stood here, a trembling girl branded by silence and scorn. Every word had cut like a whip. Every silence had left a scar.Now she returned—not as the judge, but as Luna. As witness. As a shield.Word had spread quickly. A rogue girl, hardly older than Aria’s own daughter, had been caught with stolen bread clutched to her chest. The bakers had shouted for punishment, the council had summoned the pack, and the old hunger for swift judgment coiled in the air like smoke. For all their vows of unity, suspicion still lingered in their bones.The child was led forward. She was small, filthy, her black hair hacked short, her eyes huge and wild with fear. She hugged the loaf as if

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