The sun rose bloody over the hills.
Mira crouched near a shallow creek, rinsing the blood from her hands. Her reflection in the water shimmered, unfamiliar. Her face was the same, but her eyes, no longer hollow. Now, they burned. Behind her, Grey kept watch as Liam helped their father settle against a tree trunk. The man looked barely conscious, but alive. Mira couldn’t stop glancing at him, torn between relief and dread. “You did it,” Liam murmured. “You broke the chains.” “No,” Mira said softly. “The pendant did. Our mother’s magic.” Grey stepped closer, his eyes flicking to the healing wound on her side. “You need stitches.” “I’ll heal.” “Still. Sit.” She did. Grey knelt in front of her, pulling gauze and antiseptic from his kit. As he cleaned the wound, she hissed but didn’t flinch. “How are you not panicking right now?” she asked him. “You mean after watching you transform into the most powerful wolf I’ve ever seen?” She smirked faintly. He wrapped her side carefully. “I’m panicking on the inside.” A pause. Then: “You were magnificent,” he said quietly. Mira’s breath hitched. She looked away. “It wasn’t supposed to happen like that.” “It was supposed to happen exactly like that.” Liam approached, looking pale but steady. “He’s awake again.” Mira rose and crossed to her father. He opened his eyes slowly. The black was gone. Only gray remained. “Mira.” She swallowed. “Hi, Dad.” He reached for her hand, callused fingers trembling. “You’ve grown fierce.” “You would’ve too, if you’d survived what I did.” “I tried,” he whispered. “But Valda took everything. She made me watch. She needed me as a tether… to find you. To track you.” Mira knelt beside him. “Is she working alone?” “No. She serves something bigger. Something older. She believes you were meant to rule the wolves… through fear.” Mira’s jaw tensed. “That’s not happening.” His eyes hollow with guilt, met hers. “Then run. Hide. Never let them catch you again.” Grey stepped in. “We’re not running.” Her father looked at him, studying. “Alpha Maddox. You’ve bonded with her.” Grey nodded once. “Yes.” “Then protect her from herself. The blood you carry is sacred. But hers… is cursed.” Mira stood. “No more riddles. No more fear. I’m going to find out exactly what I am.” “And when you do?” her father asked. “What if you don’t like it?” “Then I’ll carve a new future with my own claws.” A silence stretched. Then Liam spoke. “Where do we go now?” Mira turned to Grey. “The seer.” Grey frowned. “We already…” “No. We only scratched the surface. He gave me the pendant, but he didn’t tell us what the prophecy really says. I need to hear it. All of it.” Grey nodded slowly. “He won’t like being pushed.” “Good,” Mira said. “Neither do I.” They packed what little they had and began the trek back toward the wastelands. But as they crossed a ridge, Mira paused. A strange scent hit the air. Sharp. Clean. Metallic. Liam smelled it too. “That’s…” “Smoke,” Mira finished. They climbed the last hill and saw it. The seer’s sanctuary was in ruins. Ash floated on the wind. His cave had collapsed. The runes burned. The fire was unnatural, no sign of spreading, no scent of fuel. “Valda,” Grey muttered. “She silenced him,” Mira said. “Destroyed the only one who could tell us the truth.” A low growl rumbled in her chest. Then she saw it. Carved into the cliff face, in blood: “YOU WERE BORN TO BURN.” End of Chapter Eleven …………………… The seer is dead. Valda is silencing every voice that might help Mira resist. But the prophecy is still alive and Mira’s blood is burning hotter than ever.The sun rose bloody over the hills.Mira crouched near a shallow creek, rinsing the blood from her hands. Her reflection in the water shimmered, unfamiliar. Her face was the same, but her eyes, no longer hollow.Now, they burned.Behind her, Grey kept watch as Liam helped their father settle against a tree trunk. The man looked barely conscious, but alive. Mira couldn’t stop glancing at him, torn between relief and dread.“You did it,” Liam murmured. “You broke the chains.”“No,” Mira said softly. “The pendant did. Our mother’s magic.”Grey stepped closer, his eyes flicking to the healing wound on her side. “You need stitches.”“I’ll heal.”“Still. Sit.”She did.Grey knelt in front of her, pulling gauze and antiseptic from his kit. As he cleaned the wound, she hissed but didn’t flinch.“How are you not panicking right now?” she asked him.“You mean after watching you transform into the most powerful wolf I’ve ever seen?”She smirked faintly.He wrapped her side carefully. “I’m panick
The sound that ripped from Mira’s throat wasn’t human.It wasn’t even hers, not entirely.Her wolf had been silent for years, buried under layers of control and self-denial. But now, under the blood-stained trees and her father’s agonized scream, it surged up like a storm breaking through her bones.A second howl; low, ancient, furious, echoed from her chest, vibrating through the stone circle.Valda’s smile faltered.“Oh,” she whispered. “There you are.”Mira didn’t remember moving.One second, she stood frozen in horror.The next, her body was shifting.Not fully. Not yet. But her fingers cracked, claws pushing through. Her irises blazed silver, and her canines extended. Her voice, when it came, was layered: hers and her wolf’s fused.“You don’t own me.”Valda’s eyes sparkled. “No. But I made you possible.”Grey moved in beside her, still partially shifted, blood still streaking his arm from the rooftop fight.“We can’t take all of them,” he growled low. “Not here. Not now.”Liam st
“No,” Liam breathed. “That’s not,…..he’s dead. He died with the pack.”The scream echoed again, fractured by the wind but unmistakably familiar. Mira’s spine stiffened as the sound twisted through her bones like it had been waiting in her blood all along.“I heard it too,” she said quietly.The seer stood slowly, gripping his staff. “The blood remembers. But what you hear now... is not the man you knew.”Grey’s claws unsheathed with a slow scrape. “We need to move. That sound didn’t just come out of nowhere.”Liam looked shaken, rooted to the ground. “What if it’s him? What if they took him too?”“If they did,” Grey said darkly, “then what’s left might not be your father anymore.”Mira grabbed her brother’s wrist. “We’re not leaving until we find out.”The seer turned toward the shadows. “You’ll find what you’re looking for beyond the dead grove. But be warned… the answers will not heal you.”“They never do,” Mira muttered.They left the hidden lair and stepped into the half-light of
The wastelands didn’t welcome wolves.They warned them.Even in daylight, the skies above the ruined valley stretched gray and still, like the sun itself had given up. Wind dragged through the jagged trees like breath through broken lungs, and every shadow whispered secrets Mira didn’t want to hear.Grey led them up the ravine, his limp worse now, though he never slowed.Mira kept her gaze sharp, her senses wider than they’d been in years. She hadn’t shifted in so long her body ached with the tension of resisting it but here, every hair on her skin stood on end. Her wolf stirred beneath the surface, restless and alert.“Are we close?” she asked.“Almost,” Grey said. “He doesn’t live in a house. He lives beneath one.”“Lovely.”Liam snorted. “I’m guessing we knock on a crypt and hope he’s home?”Grey stopped.“No,” he said. “He’ll find us.”Before Mira could respond, a deep, craggy voice echoed from the ridge above.“He already has.”They turned.An old man stood in the rocks, tall and
The night air was thick with the echo of that broken howl.Mira was already moving, boots slapping wet asphalt as she sprinted through the alley and out onto the silent street. Her blood pounded louder than the wind. It couldn’t be him. It wasn’t possible. But her wolf wasn’t questioning it, she was clawing, howling, aching toward the sound.“Mira, wait!” Grey was just behind her, injured but fast.She didn’t wait.She turned sharply down a narrow side street, past a rusted chain-link fence, and into the abandoned courtyard of an old church. The air changed here. Heavy. Charged. Like something sacred had been burned away long ago.And then she saw him.A figure, barely standing in the moonlight. Leaner than she remembered. Older. But unmistakable.He turned.Her breath caught.“Liam,” she said.He didn’t speak. His eyes, one golden, one bloodshot, searched hers like he was trying to make sure she was real.“I thought you were dead,” she whispered.He gave a shaky smile. “Same.”Grey m
Mira snatched the radio from the hunter’s belt.Her hands trembled, but her voice came out steady. Cold. Calculated.“He’s down,” she said into the speaker. “The Luna is not secured.”Silence.Then the voice returned, sharp and venomous:“Then you’re dead.”A high-pitched screech exploded through the speaker.Mira dropped the radio, just before it sparked and erupted into flames.“Shit!” Grey cursed, stomping it out before it could catch the carpet.“What kind of tech is that?” Mira gasped, staring at the melted plastic.“Black-market,” Grey muttered. “Hunter grade. Self-destruct failsafe. He was never meant to survive this job.”She turned back to the unconscious body. “Then he’s not just a grunt.”“No,” Grey said. “He’s a warning.”Mira crouched beside the hunter, grabbed his jaw, and forced his head to the side to check the scar again. It wasn’t just burned, it was ritualistic. Carved deep. Symbolic.The crescent. The daggers.Ghost Howlers.“They were wiped out a decade ago,” she