The forest swallowed sound.
No wind. No birds. Just silence and the claw marks burned into the bark outside the cabin. Luna must ascend. Or die. Mira stared at the message, her pulse thunderous in her ears. The blood used to write it still smoked, like it had been carved with molten fury. Her father was gone. Again. “Tracks,” Liam said, crouching low. “Fresh. But not full wolf. Controlled.” Grey paced behind him, eyes scanning the perimeter. “Someone masked their scent. Just like the Howlers. Could be them.” “Could be him,” Mira said softly. They all looked up. “You think your father…?” Liam asked, hesitant. “I think Valda didn’t just tether him,” she said. “She changed something in him. Left a trigger we didn’t see.” Behind her, Ash chuckled from the doorway. “Now you’re getting it.” Liam stepped toward him, blade flashing, but Grey held him back. “No,” Mira said. “He’s right. This isn’t just about control anymore. It’s about activation.” Ash leaned casually against the doorway, silver threads still tight around his wrists. “The Midwife doesn’t waste resources. If she let your father live, it was for one reason; he’s part of your ascension.” “What does that mean?” Grey growled. Ash met Mira’s eyes. “It means this isn’t about choosing if you become Luna anymore. It’s about surviving it.” The words sank deep. Mira turned back to the forest. “If they want a Luna to ascend or die… then I’ll show them what happens when a Luna fights back.” She didn’t wait for a vote. She started moving. “Where are we going?” Liam asked, hurrying to catch up. “To the high ridge,” she said. “There’s a beacon point there. If Dad’s being manipulated, he’ll circle back to high ground.” Grey followed. “You think he left the message himself?” “No,” Mira said, voice tight. “I think he was made to leave it. And I want to know who was watching.” They moved fast, the cold night air pressing against their lungs. Mira’s body ached from the earlier shift, but her wolf paced inside her with purpose now. Alert. Ready. When they reached the ridge, they stopped. Smoke curled from a torch wedged in a tree trunk. At its base – a bag. Ash’s voice behind them. “That’s a Drop.” “What’s inside?” Mira asked. Liam knelt to open it. Inside: a folded parchment, a clawed pendant, and a vial filled with shimmering red liquid. Mira picked up the vial. “Blood?” “Yours,” Ash said. “Or close enough.” Liam handed her the note. Mira Lane, Luna-13: We gave you power. You refuse the path. Choose again. Ascend under the Blood Moon… or your family will fall. —The Circle Grey stepped beside her. “They're escalating. Faster than we planned.” “Because something’s changing,” she murmured. “Something they can’t control.” She turned back to Ash. “Why tell me now?” He shrugged. “Because I was number fourteen. And the others… are waking up.” Her breath hitched. “Others?” He nodded once. “Scattered. Bound by silence. But now that you’ve shifted? They’re feeling it. A resonance. You’re the spark.” Liam looked horrified. “So this isn’t just about you anymore.” “No,” Mira whispered. “It’s about all of us.” A crack of lightning split the sky. No storm. No clouds. Just a burst of raw power that made her wolf flinch. She looked toward the eastern sky. The Blood Moon was rising. Early. Way too early. Ash’s face paled. “That’s not supposed to happen.” Mira stared as red light spilled across the trees. The prophecy was speeding up. She was out of time. But before anyone could speak, another howl echoed across the ridge. It wasn’t her father this time. It was a child’s voice. High-pitched. Distant. Crying. Mira froze. “What the hell was that?” Ash’s expression darkened. “That… wasn’t part of any plan.” Grey reached for his weapon. “Mira…” But she was already running toward the sound. Through the trees. Over roots. Down the slope. Until she reached the clearing at the edge of the old burial site. And saw her. A girl. Barefoot. Shivering. Eyes glowing silver. She looked up at Mira and whispered one word. “Mother?” End of Chapter Sixteen …………………. The Blood Moon is rising ahead of schedule. Mira is out of time and now a child with her eyes and her scent stands in the dark, calling her mother. But how can that be… unless her future has already begun unraveling into the present?The door sealed shut behind them with a hiss.Vault Three wasn’t just underground—it was beneath something ancient. Mira could feel it in her bones. Every step echoed like they were walking through the veins of a sleeping giant.Cold lights flickered to life overhead, buzzing with energy that hadn’t pulsed in years.Grey moved ahead, blade drawn.Liam scanned the walls, thick with frost and symbols etched in a language even Mira’s wolf didn’t recognize.Ash stayed close to Echo, whose expression had gone blank.“She’s remembering,” Ash said. “This place was imprinted into her core.”Echo raised a hand, fingers brushing the wall like she was touching a memory.“There was a woman,” she whispered. “White coat. White eyes. She never blinked.”Mira felt the chill deepen.They passed rows of empty glass tanks, cracked, drained, abandoned. Some still had claw marks inside.One had blood that hadn’t dried.Liam swore softly. “They raised them like weapons.”“No,” Ash said. “They manufactured
The replacements moved like shadows made of steel.Not quite wolves. Not quite machines. Not human.Their armor clinked with each calculated step, coated in matte black, no insignias. Their faces were hidden beneath seamless masks with no eye slits, just a single glowing ring at the center, white-hot and unblinking.Echo clung to Mira’s side, trembling. “They’re the ones that watched us. When we were sleeping.”Mira stepped in front of her. “Stay behind me.”Ash’s voice was low and urgent. “They're Echo Operatives. Late-series models. Pure command-level.”“How many?” Grey asked, blades drawn.“Does it matter?” Liam growled. “They bleed, they fall.”“No,” Ash said, backing slowly. “They don’t bleed.”The five replacements stopped in perfect formation, then split. Two flanked wide, one stepped directly forward, and the other two disappeared into the trees without a sound.“They’re circling us,” Mira muttered. “Trying to box us in.”She looked at Ash. “What are their directives?”“To ret
The girl—Echo, or Thirteen-One, or whatever she truly was slept curled in Mira’s blanket, her breath soft, but her presence anything but.The cabin was too quiet. Even the fire refused to crackle.“She’s not just a child,” Ash said from the corner, arms crossed, voice low. “She’s a trigger.”“For what?” Grey asked, sharpening a blade he hadn’t set down since the attack.Ash didn’t answer. Mira stared into the fire, her eyes burning.“She said there were more,” she murmured. “Caged. Like her. Some with blood like mine. Some with Liam’s face.”Liam leaned against the wall near the door. “Why us?”“Because they mapped us,” Ash said. “Before you were even born. Genetic resonance. Traits, instincts, rare alpha markers… they cataloged them. The ones who survived, they stored. The ones they couldn't control…” He shrugged.“Erased,” Mira finished coldly.The child stirred slightly, murmuring Mira’s name in her sleep. The sound cut deeper than a blade.“What would they use her for?” Grey asked
Mira didn’t move.She couldn’t.The girl in the clearing looked no older than seven. Dressed in a simple white shift, barefoot in the frost-bitten grass, her silver eyes shimmered with eerie familiarity. Her voice, when she said “Mother?”—had cracked something deep and primal inside Mira’s chest.Grey and Liam burst through the trees behind her.“Mira!” Grey called, tense. “What did you….”He stopped when he saw the child.Liam went still, too. “Is that…?”“I don’t know,” Mira said. Her voice sounded far away, even to herself.The child stepped forward, her lips trembling. “I dreamed of you. You smell like fire and moonlight. You’re… mine.”“No,” Mira said softly, her heart hammering. “That’s not possible. I don’t have a child.”Ash appeared at the edge of the clearing, his usual calm cracked. “She’s not supposed to be here.”“What do you mean?” Mira snapped. “Who is she?”He stared at the girl. “She’s from the vault. One of the contingency prototypes. They called her Echo.”The child
The forest swallowed sound. No wind. No birds. Just silence and the claw marks burned into the bark outside the cabin. Luna must ascend. Or die. Mira stared at the message, her pulse thunderous in her ears. The blood used to write it still smoked, like it had been carved with molten fury. Her father was gone. Again. “Tracks,” Liam said, crouching low. “Fresh. But not full wolf. Controlled.” Grey paced behind him, eyes scanning the perimeter. “Someone masked their scent. Just like the Howlers. Could be them.” “Could be him,” Mira said softly. They all looked up. “You think your father…?” Liam asked, hesitant. “I think Valda didn’t just tether him,” she said. “She changed something in him. Left a trigger we didn’t see.” Behind her, Ash chuckled from the doorway. “Now you’re getting it.” Liam stepped toward him, blade flashing, but Grey held him back. “No,” Mira said. “He’s right. This isn’t just about control anymore. It’s about activation.” Ash leaned casually against the
The assassin didn’t fight.He lay beneath Mira, still breathing hard, blood streaked across his temple where his mask had torn but his eyes were wide open. Gold and grey, mirroring hers.“Get off me,” he rasped.Mira didn’t move.“Who are you?” she demanded, her claws still pressed to his throat.He smirked. “Guess.”Liam stepped closer, still pale. “This isn’t possible. I would’ve known if I had a twin.”“Not if you were never supposed to,” the assassin said bitterly. “Not if one of us was hidden… built… for something else.”Grey growled. “Enough riddles.”Mira slowly eased off him, but didn’t let her claws drop. “You were one of them. A Ghost Howler.”He pushed up on his elbows. “Was.”“Why?” Liam asked. “Why betray your blood?”The assassin looked at him, not with hatred, but with something colder. Indifference.“I wasn’t raised to be your brother,” he said. “I was raised to destroy her.”Mira’s stomach flipped. “You were made for me.”He nodded. “Not as a mate. As a mirror. A bala