Silver Pact When silence becomes power, who dares to listen? In a world where magic is shaped by memory and bound by ancient oaths, the Silver Pact once held the world together. But now, the bloomfields — mystical zones where magic and emotion entwine — are breaking down. The once-stable order is crumbling, and with it, the illusion of control. Ari, the reluctant heir to the Pact, inherits more than legacy — she inherits a world on the brink. Haunted by the memory of Mira Hale, the Pact’s enigmatic founder, and challenged by the rise of Seris, a rebel who preaches total magical freedom, Ari is forced to choose between restoring order or letting it all fall apart. Then comes Kaima — a voiceless girl who doesn’t cast spells but awakens them. Her silence holds more power than any spellbook, and her presence marks the beginning of a new kind of magic: one built on witnessing, not ruling. As Ari and Kaima forge an unlikely alliance, a new force rises — the Hollow, where magic responds to intent rather than command. But not everyone wants a world without structure. As rebellion erupts, ideologies collide, and ancient truths are unearthed, the world must decide: Will it be ruled by tradition, broken by chaos, or reshaped by those brave enough to listen? Told across twenty chapters in a lyrical blend of epic fantasy and introspective myth, Silver Pact is a story of legacy, silence, sacrifice, and the power of choosing what to become — when the old world no longer speaks for you.
View MoreThe woods were silent, save for the rustle of leaves underfoot and the whisper of wind through ancient trees. Moonlight spilled through the branches like liquid silver, casting long, shifting shadows across the forest floor. In the distance, an owl called a sharp, solitary sound then silence again, deeper and more unnerving than before.
Ari Hale tightened her grip on the leather-bound notebook clutched in her hand. Her breath came out in soft clouds that hung in the air before fading into nothing. She had walked this trail a hundred times in daylight. It coiled around the edge of the small town of Varro’s Hollow, wound past the old well, and slipped into the forest like a forgotten memory. But tonight, everything felt... different.
She stopped walking and listened.
Behind her, the woods stretched back into darkness. Ahead, the narrow path forked at a bent oak tree, its gnarled limbs twisted like grasping fingers. She’d never gone beyond this point. Locals avoided it. Some said the air got thinner, colder, like something didn’t want you there. Others told stories of the Silver Pact whispered rumours of a forgotten treaty, signed in blood and bound by moonlight.
Ari never believed in local legends. Hearths were full of ghost tales, especially ones passed down to keep teenagers from wandering into dangerous places. But after what she’d seen three nights ago, she had questions. And now she needed answers.
She stepped off the path, past the bent oak, into the deeper woods.
The darkness grew thicker, pressing close, like it was watching. The flashlight in her pocket flickered once before she turned it on. Its weak beam barely pierced the blackness. Tree trunks loomed like silent sentinels. Every step crunched underfoot, and the sound seemed too loud.
“Okay,” she muttered, trying to calm herself. “Just trees. Just a dumb old story.”
But even as she said it, she remembered the eyes glowing silver in the dark, too high off the ground to be any known animal. They’d watched her from the edge of the woods the night she came home late from her shift at the diner. The next morning, her neighbour’s dog had been found torn open near the edge of town. People said it was a coyote. Ari had seen coyotes before. What she saw that night wasn’t a coyote.
It had looked... human.
Half-human.
The trees began to thin.
Ari found herself standing before a wide clearing bathed in silver light. In the centre stood a massive stone arch, weathered and moss-covered, as if it had grown out of the earth itself. Symbols were etched into its surface spirals, claw marks, and crescent moons. Most were worn, barely legible.
Beneath the arch, the ground formed a shallow bowl. Grass had not grown here in years. Only scorched earth remained, and a faint scent of iron lingered in the air.
She knelt and brushed her fingers across the centre of the bowl. The dirt was dry, but dark. Stained.
This is it, she thought. This is where it happened.
A sudden gust of wind blew out her flashlight. She scrambled to relight it, but the switch didn’t respond. Then she heard it the low, guttural growl.
Her breath caught in her throat.
Across the clearing, just past the stone arch, something moved. A shape tall, hunched, powerful. Its eyes caught the moonlight and reflected it back at her, twin lanterns of silver flame.
She stumbled back, heart racing, too afraid to scream.
Then, the creature stepped forward slowly, deliberately. Moonlight illuminated a body covered in fur as dark as midnight. Muscles rippled beneath the surface. Clawed hands hung at its sides, and its legs bent at an unnatural angle, like a wolf standing on two feet.
But it wasn’t fully beast. Its face was almost human sharp features twisted by pain or rage. Its lips peeled back to reveal fangs.
Ari turned to run, but her legs refused to move. The creature opened its mouth and let out a sound halfway between a howl and a word.
A word.
Spoken in a voice that was ragged and ancient: “Hale...”
Her name.
She froze.
It knows me?
The creature took a step forward. Then another. But this time, it didn’t look like it was hunting her. It looked like it was... reaching out.
Before she could react, the ground trembled.
A flash of silver light burst from the archway behind the creature. A second figure erupted from the trees smaller, faster. This one was fully animal, all sinew and teeth. It slammed into the standing figure with a feral snarl. They rolled together, biting and clawing.
Ari didn’t wait to see who won.
She ran.
By the time she reached the edge of the forest, her lungs burned and her legs ached. She didn’t stop until she reached the old Hale house on the outskirts of Varro’s Hollow. The porch light buzzed weakly, casting a pale-yellow glow. She burst through the door and slammed it shut behind her.
“Grandfather!” she called, her voice hoarse.
No answer.
She rushed up the stairs, ignoring the groan of old wood beneath her feet. Her grandfather's room was dark. The bed was neatly made, untouched.
“Where the hell?”
Then she saw a note on his desk, scrawled in his tight, slanted handwriting.
Ari, If you're reading this, then you’ve already gone too far. You saw it. I tried to keep it from you, but blood calls to blood. Do not go back to the clearing. Not yet. Not until you know the truth.
The Hale line is not what you think. Gideon HaleShe stood in stunned silence, her hands trembling.
“What the hell does that mean?” she whispered.
The next day, she skipped school and drove Gideon’s truck into town. Varro’s Hollow had a population of just under 1,200 and hadn’t changed much since the 1950s. Most people knew each other. But secrets ran deep here buried in old foundations and forgotten by time.
She pulled up outside the town library a red-brick building older than anyone still living.
Inside, Mrs. Wetherby, the librarian, peered over her glasses. “Well, if it isn’t young Ari Hale. Looking for another sci-fi romance?”
“Not today.” Ari forced a smile. “I was hoping you had local history books. Old ones. Maybe about legends?”
Mrs. Wetherby frowned. “The Folklore Shelf. Back left corner. But don’t go believing any of that nonsense.”
Ari found the shelf covered in dust. Most of the books hadn’t been opened. She pulled out a heavy tome titled The Hidden Histories of Varro’s Hollow.
An hour later, her fingers stopped on a passage:
In the year 1793, the founding families entered into what was later called the Silver Pact. A covenant between man and beast. The Hales, the Red moors, and the Thorne lineages formed the Triumvirate. Each bore the mark. Each carried the blood. It was not a curse it was an agreement.
Below it was a faded image three figures standing beneath a crescent moon, surrounded by wolves.
Ari turned the page.
The pact demanded sacrifice and secrecy. Betrayal of the pact was punishable by death. One family broke the bond. The Thorne line was hunted and extinguished. The others scattered, hiding their bloodlines among the unknowing.
She read the words again.
The Hale line... my family...
She slammed the book and stood. Her head was spinning. Her grandfather knew. He’d kept this from her entire life.
Why?
That night, she returned to the forest.
Not out of bravery.
The world had shifted, and nothing made sense anymore.
The clearing was just as she left it, moonlit. This time, she brought her grandfather’s old hunting rifle.
She sat near the edge and waited.
An hour passed.
Then two.
Just as she was about to leave, a voice behind her said, “You shouldn't have come back.”
She turned sharply.
It was him the creature from the night before. But this time, he was human.
At least, he looked it.
He had wild dark hair, silver-flecked eyes, and a scar across his collarbone that looked like a claw had raked across it.
what are you? she asked.
He gave a bitter smile. “My name is Kael. I’m what’s left of the Red moors.”
She lowered the rifle, slowly. “You knew my name.”
“I know your blood,” he said. “I smelled it before you ever stepped into the clearing. You’re one of us.”
Ari’s heart pounded. “I’m not like you.”
He stepped closer. “Not yet. The Silver Pact lives in your veins.”
She shook her head in disagreement,
Kael looked past her, toward the arch. “Doesn’t matter. The pact was signed generations ago. You’re bound by it whether you want to be or not.”
Ari looked at the arch again, then back at him. “So, what happens now?
“The Thorne bloodline didn’t die out completely. One survived. She’s building something. Gathering others. The pact is breaking and when it does, the forest won’t hold its boundaries anymore.”
She frowned. “What does that mean?”
“It means,” Kael said, his voice low, “that you’re either with us... or you’re in the way
No agreements were signed.No laws declared.No new Circle crowned.And yet, something had changed.The morning after the assembly of the Third Voice fractured, the world did not feel broken.It felt unfinished.Not with absence.With possibility.In the groves once governed by Pact Scribes, children now ran among resonance lines not to bind them, but to play within them.Some blooms opened when someone laughed.Some closed when someone lied.There were no rules anymore.Only relationships.And those took time.In a quiet cave on the edge of the known world, Ari sat with an unwritten book in her lap.She had been asked gently, but persistently to record what had happened.The full truth of Mira Hale, Saris, Kaima, and the forming of the Hollow World.She had said yes.And every day since, she had opened the book.And left the page blank.Not because she didn’t know what to write.But because she had finally understood what Kaima meant:Some stories are not meant to be taught.They are
There were no announcements.No declarations.No war drums or pulse-beats from the bloom.In the weeks following the collapse of the Veil wrights’ artificial network and the Hollow's full emergence, the world slipped into a strange stillness.Not peace.Cautious pause.As if even the wind was listening for what would come next.In the Hollow Circle, now scattered across vast roots and drifting Bloomfields, Ari sat beside a narrow stream made of condensed resonance.Children played nearby. Some sketched runes in the air; others asked questions she couldn’t always answer.She was not their guide anymore.But she still watched.And remembered.Lyra returned from the East with news Ari had expected, though still dreaded:“The Rhendari enclave is pulling out of shared resonance.”Ari nodded slowly.“They fear the Hollow,” Lyra continued. “They say it has no rules. That it feels too much. That emotion should never shape power.”“They’re not wrong,” Ari said. “But they’re also not ready to l
Fifty-eight days had passed since the original bloom opened the world.In that time, the Pact had spread to twenty-three regions each with its own bloom, its own resonance, and its own interpretation of Ari’s vision. The forest of Ash root still pulsed, but it no longer pulsed alone.There were no kings. No formal orders. The old monarchies and mage-banners had crumbled in the face of a force that did not ask for allegiance only presence.From the Salt Barrens, where Elen now guided the Spiral Flame Pact, to the drifting glaciers of Thalorhym, where a sea-bloom hummed beneath the ice, magic no longer obeyed singular voices.It breathed with multiplicity.But the world, as always, did not remain quiet for long.In the southern arc of the shattered Vale of Mirrors, Ari watched as children painted runes with their bare hands each one slightly different, each one accepted by the bloom.These were the children of war, children of Pact-bound refugees and rebel kin, born not into the legacy
Jeremiah nodded as he said “The Pact was meant for this land. These people. Not far nations and deep seas.”Lyra frowned. “But it’s not us anymore, is it? The bloom listens to all.”Elen stood apart, arms crossed, silent.Then Kael stepped forward and placed a binding sigil at the Circle’s edge. Old magic. Pre-bloom.“We can pause the connection,” he said. “Just for a while. Let the world calm down.”Ari looked at him.“You want to cut it off.”“Just protect what we built.”Ari turned slowly to Elen. “And you?”Elen said nothing.But she didn’t stop Kael.And that was enoughThat night, Kael and three Circle members approached the bloom’s edge.They carried four old blades each dipped in silver sap and soaked in oil root.They whispered an old binding: the kind Mira would have used, before she understood resonance.And they struck.Not at the bloom’s core but at one of its youngest roots.The bloom didn’t scream.It shuddered.Light dimmed. The sky silenced. The stars realigned.And f
It had been twenty-three days since the bloom first flowered.Ari could feel it the hum in her bones, the low pulse of the leyline beneath her feet. The bloom was no longer just a symbol. It was a presence, one that now reached beyond the forest, beyond Ash root Crag.The new Pact was alive.And it had begun to listen beyond its borders.When she placed her palm to its trunk that morning, she felt something different.A ripple. Not of danger, but of return.Mira’s vision had been order. Seris’s, liberation. Ari’s had always been something simpler:To heal what they broke.But now, for the first time, she wondered had they broken too much to mend?They arrived just after noon: three riders cloaked in smoke-coloured furs, bearing no weapons but carrying emblems that hadn’t been seen in the forest for a generation.The emblem of the Outer Houses.Kael, who met them at the river crossing, recognized the sigil instantly.“Outlands,” he said. “I thought they turned inward after the Pact fra
The seed lay where Saris had vanished smooth, silver-veined, no larger than Ari’s palm. It pulsed faintly with warmth, like something still breathing.Around her, the ancient Circle had quieted. The stones that had once housed Mira and Seris’s first vows now stood in reverent stillness. Even the spirits so volatile before hovered silently in the shadows of the forest, their energy subdued. Watching.Ari didn’t speak as she knelt and cupped the seed.No one dared to interrupt.Kael, Lyra, Erin, Jeremiah they stood behind her like sentinels, unsure of what came next.“She gave this to us,” Ari whispered. “Not as surrender. As… continuation.”“You can’t be sure of that,” Erin said, but her voice lacked force.“I can,” Ari replied, eyes locked on the seed. “She gave it to me. She chose it over herself.”Kael shifted. “So, what now?”Ari stood, and the seed’s glow brightened in her hand.“We plant it.”They returned to Ash root Crag, where the rebellion’s heart still beat faintly amidst ma
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