Mag-log inCHAPTER 3
The Locket Monday, 7:03 a.m. The spiral behind my ear woke me up throbbing like a second heartbeat. I rolled out of bed, hoodie still on from the game, and found the locket on my nightstand exactly where I’d dropped it after Mom handed it over last night. “Grandma Elowene’s,” she’d said, voice too casual. “She wanted you to have it when we finally settled somewhere permanent.” Permanent. Right. The locket was heavier than it looked: blackened silver, Gothic Romanian filigree curling like frozen smoke around a single oval of deep-red garnet. In the center, etched so small I needed a loupe to read it, Japanese kanji: 森羅 Morau – “to receive.” Grandma Elowene had lived in Kyoto for thirty years. Married a Japanese photographer, never came home. Died last spring. I’d never met her. But the locket fit against my sternum like it had been waiting for my ribcage to grow into it. I clipped it on under the hoodie and skated to school through mist so thick the lake looked like it was boiling upside-down. 1st period – Arkansas History Brittany slid into the seat beside me, pom-poms shedding glitter. “Cute necklace,” she whispered. “Antique?” “Family heirloom.” She squealed quietly. “So mysterious! You should totally let me borrow it for Homecoming court pics.” I tugged the hood higher. “Not happening.” 5th period – Photo Lab Mr. Bathory was already at the enlargers, sleeves rolled to the elbow, forearms pale as film base. He didn’t look up when I walked in. “Miss Moreau. The print you exposed Friday night. The one with young Mr. Tsatoke.” My stomach dropped. “I want it for the yearbook spread. Full page. Caption: ‘Freshman phenom or phantom?’” He finally met my eyes. “Bring the negative. Now.” I hadn’t even developed that roll yet. Seras was waiting in the darkroom, red safelight bleeding across her cheekbones like war paint. She held my film canister between two fingers like it was diseased. “Looking for this, Valentina-chan?” I lunged. She stepped back, canister disappearing into her blazer pocket. “Give it.” “Make me.” The spiral behind my ear flared white-hot. The locket followed—garnet burning a circle against my skin. Seras’s eyes flicked to it and narrowed. “So the old witch finally passed it down.” “Grandma Elowene wasn’t—” “Don’t.” Seras’s voice cracked like a whip. “Don’t you dare say her name like you knew her.” She stepped closer. The safelight made her red streak look wet. “My family served the Nakamura covenant for four hundred years. Shadow binders. Blood seals. We kept the mist contained. And every single time the Morau clan breezed in with their pretty lockets and their ‘receiving’ gifts, the council chose you. Kyoto, 1923. Prague, 1889. New Orleans, 1865. Every generation, the Morau get the power and the Nakamura's the scraps.” I backed into a tray table. Developer sloshed. “I don’t even know what you’re talking about.” “Bullshit.” She pulled out a negative strip—old, brittle, edges curled. Held it to the safelight. A little girl on a Kyoto rooftop, platinum hair in twin braids, holding a tiny skateboard. Fresh spiral tattoo behind her ear glowing silver. Same face as mine. Same locket, newer chain. Behind her, a woman in a black kimono—Grandma Elowene—pressing the locket into the girl’s hands while a ring of Nakamura elders knelt in the background, heads bowed. The little girl was smiling at the camera like she’d just won something. Seras’s voice dropped to a hiss. “That was the day the council voted to bind the next Receiver to the Hot Springs vein. Your grandmother stole the covenant from my great-grandmother. And now you’re here to finish the job.” She flicked the negative at me. It fluttered to the floor like a dead moth. “The locket isn’t jewelry, Celeste. It’s a key. And the valley’s been waiting seventy-three years for someone dumb enough to turn it.” The darkroom door opened. Mr. Bathory stepped in, shadow stretching wrong across the floor. “Miss Nakamura. Out.” Seras didn’t move. He repeated, softer. “Out.” The mist vents hissed. Fog curled around Seras’s ankles like it was dragging her. She spat one last word in Japanese—something that made the safelight flicker—and left. Mr. Bathory picked up the Kyoto negative, held it to the light. “Your grandmother was… persuasive,” he said quietly. “Elowene Morau could convince the mist to kneel. A rare gift.” He handed me my own film canister—Seras must’ve dropped it. “Develop your print, Celeste. But know this: every photograph you take with that locket on steals a memory from the valley. And the valley always collects its debt.” He brushed a thumb across the garnet. The locket snapped open for the first time. Inside: a tiny mirror. My reflection stared back—eyes molten silver, mouth smiling like the little girl in Kyoto. But the reflection blinked one second after I did. I slammed it shut. After school I developed the Friday night roll alone. The touchdown shot came up perfect: Remy mid-throw, braid flying, scar glowing. Behind him, the coyote mist pack—eight strong—galloping across the turf. Every single coyote had my face. Platinum hair. Silver eyes. And every single one was wearing the locket. I cropped the print tight on Remy’s face, hands shaking so bad the enlarger danced. When I pulled it from the fixer, the photo was warm—like body temperature. A wet fingerprint appeared on the border. Not mine. Written in fresh red developer: The Receiver has arrived. The Nakamura girl will try to break the chain. Let her. Some locks only open when you bleed on them. —J.B. I wore the locket to bed that night. At 3:33 a.m. it burned cold. The mirror inside cracked down the middle. Through the fissure, a woman’s voice—Kyoto accent, Romanian lilt—whispered in perfect English: “Receive carefully, Celeste. The valley gave you its heart. Now it wants yours back—with interest.” I looked out the window. The mist had formed a perfect spiral on the glass—exact match to the tattoo, the scar, the locket. It spun once. Slowly. Like a key turning. The locket is warm now. It has a pulse. And it just whispered your name in two languages.**Chapter 100 – Better Days****August 2031 – Thursday morning, Pearcy, Arkansas**Alarm hits at 6:15 a.m.—earlier than usual. I slap it silent before it can wake the house, roll out of bed already half-awake from last night’s messages still glowing in my head.Gray dawn light leaks through the blinds. I pull on black jeans, a faded Yellowcard tee under the red-kanji Nakamura hoodie, lace up my beat-up Vans. Dragon-feather necklace settles against my chest—warm, like it approves of early starts.Downstairs is quiet. Mom’s still asleep, Dad’s probably already out on the lake for his morning run. I grab a banana, scribble a note—*Out early, skating. See you after school.*—and slip out the front door with my board under my arm.Warm August air hits my face, crisp with pine and water. Street’s empty except for a couple of early joggers and the distant hum of a boat motor on the lake.I drop the board at the end of the driveway, foot on the tail, headphones in. Cue up Yellowcar
**Chapter 99 – Sparks and Earth****August 2031 – Lake Hamilton High School, Pearcy, Arkansas**Second day.I wake up to the alarm blaring Deftones—*Digital Bath* this time—and the faint smell of Mom’s miso soup drifting up the stairs. The dragon-feather necklace is warm against my chest, like it caught some leftover heat from yesterday’s flames.I throw on a gray hoodie (Nakamura kanji still in red on the back), jeans, sneakers. Grab the skateboard and backpack. Bus ride is quiet. Headphones in, staring out at the lake glittering under early sun. Thinking about yesterday. The pack didn’t eat me. Jake’s handshake felt real. And Mia… she kept glancing over during fire class. Quiet, but curious.I step off the bus, board under arm.The parking lot smells the same—pine, lake, wolf musk—but today it doesn’t feel quite so heavy.Jake spots me from across the lot, lifts his chin in greeting. A couple of the pack nod too. Progress.I head inside, locker slam, schedule check.
**Chapter 98 – Freshman Fire **August 2031 – Lake Hamilton High School, Pearcy, Arkansas**280 Wolf Street First day of high school, and I already feel like I’m Skateboarding into a lion’s den.Or rather a Wolves Den.Lake Hamilton High.Home of the Wolves—literal werewolves.The rival school to Lakeside, where my big sister Seras was cheer vice captain, sunrise goddess, and basically untouchable legend.Everyone in Hot Springs knows the name Nakamura now.Thanks, sis.I sling my backpack higher—plain black, no fancy runes yet—and step off the bus.with my Skateboard in hand held by the trucks. Black hoodie with the Nakamura Kanji in red on the back and a dragon Feather on a necklace from my Brother-in-law Lucian.The parking lot is packed—kids laughing, horns honking, scent of pine and lake water thick in the morning air.But under it—wolf musk.Strong.Territorial.The pack is here.I’m just a freshman fire wizard—fourteen, scrawny compared to some of these sophomores already shi
**Chapter 97 – Dawn Alliance** **March 26, 2031 – Storm Academy Secure Conference Chamber**The morning after victory feels too quiet.I wake early—Remy still asleep, arm heavy across my waist, coyote-gold aura dim with exhaustion.The academy is stirring slow—students returning, staff rebuilding wards, distant laughter echoing in halls that haven’t heard it in months.But peace has weight.I slip out careful, crown humming faint on the bedside table.Dress in simple leathers—no armor today.The secure chamber is deep underground—old war room from the academy’s founding, walls layered with Deep Script, blood wards, and now new USSF encryption nodes.Rowan set the link last night—triple-encrypted quantum channel, Shambhala resonance key, my blood signature lock.The holo-table activates at my touch.Screens flicker.First—USSF Liberty Prime command deck.Colonel Reyes center—uniform crisp, eyes sharp.Dr. Harlan beside—coffee in hand, hair wilder than yesterday.General Voss—new face
**Chapter 96 – War ends New Love Begins **Rowan & Kayo Focus – March 23–25, 2031 – Storm Academy Dormitories**The portal back to the academy opens like a sigh of relief after holding your breath for months.One moment, the biting Antarctic wind cuts through scarred armor, ice cracking underfoot like breaking bones, the smell of void ash and purified fire still clinging to clothes and skin.The next—warm spring air rushes in, carrying cherry blossoms and the faint scent of rain on old stone, the familiar hum of academy wards wrapping around us like a mother’s embrace.Storm Academy.Home.The Court steps through together—armor scarred deep, faces etched with exhaustion and quiet victory, but alive, whole, unbreakable.Seras and Lucian first—hands linked tight, sunrise dimming to a gentle glow around her, dragon wings folded gentle against his back, copper scales catching petal light.Celeste and Remy next—crown quiet for once, coyote grin wide and relieved, his arm loose around her w
**Chapter 95 – Heart of the Void **March 22, 2031 – Final Nest, Antarctic Convergence**The last nest is buried under miles of Antarctic ice—a frozen fortress hiding the swarm’s true heart.A black cathedral of carapace and void, pulsing beneath the polar cap, feeding on the planet’s core ley lines like a parasite sucking marrow from bone.One massive spire rises through cracked ice—taller than Everest, wide as a city, tendrils spreading global, corrupting oceans and skies with black veins visible even from orbit.The Grand Matriarch waits inside—queen of queens, mother of the invasion, source of every tendril that has choked the world.We come as one.The full alliance—united in fire and blood and light.Court at center—bonds blazing hot, rings pulsing synchronized.USSF fleets orbital—lances charged to maximum, targeting arrays locked.Shambhala monks chanting wards that hum like ancient songs, floating serene amid chaos.Kōjin’s forgefire echo lingers—hammer sigils burning molte







