The ashes of the seer’s sanctuary drifted down like snow.
Mira crouched by the blackened rocks, fingers brushing the smear of blood carved into the stone: You were born to burn. She hated how true it felt. Behind her, Grey and Liam surveyed the wreckage. There was nothing left to save, no scrolls, no relics, no trace of the war seer’s guidance. Only smoke and silence. “He was our last lead,” Liam said grimly. “Now what?” Mira stood slowly, jaw clenched. “Now we find someone who knows Valda.” Grey arched a brow. “Alive or dead?” “Both, if we have to.” She paced a few steps, trying to stay calm. But her hands wouldn’t stop shaking, not from fear. From the burn in her blood. Since her shift, the world looked sharper. Louder. She could hear the birds a mile away. Smell the lies before someone even spoke. She hated it. She craved more. “We’ll need shelter,” Grey said. “Somewhere remote. Secure. Where you can train without being seen.” “I don’t want to train,” she snapped. “You don’t have a choice.” “I didn’t have a choice the moment I was born!” Grey didn’t flinch. Liam stepped between them. “Stop. We’re all on the same side.” Mira looked away, biting back words that tasted like smoke. Grey’s voice softened. “I know you’re angry.” “You think?” “I know what it feels like to wake up and not recognize your own power.” She met his gaze. “Did you ever want to tear it out of yourself?” “Every day. Until I learned how to make it mine.” That landed. Mira took a breath. “There’s a place.” Grey nodded for her to go on. “When I ran away after the pack fell, I stayed in the foothills for a while. There's an old cabin, human-made, abandoned. No tech. No tracking. It’s buried in the woods and protected by natural barriers.” “You think it’s still there?” Liam asked. “It’s either there… or she’s already found it.” They moved quickly. By midday, they reached the base of the hills, overgrown and wild. Mira felt the place before she saw it. Like a ghost brushing past her thoughts. Then she stopped short. The cabin stood in the clearing. Still whole. Still waiting. Mira exhaled, tension sliding from her shoulders in layers. They entered cautiously. Dust coated the counters. A broken lantern hung from the ceiling. But the walls were strong, and the scent inside was familiar. Safe. Liam dropped their packs near the hearth and checked the windows. “We’ll have to reinforce the south wall. There’s rot.” “I’ll do it,” Grey said, already unrolling tools from his pack. Mira walked slowly through the room, touching surfaces she hadn’t seen in years. Her old hiding place. Her last sanctuary before she buried her wolf for good. Now she was back, fully shifted, fully exposed. And more hunted than ever. That night, they didn’t speak much. Mira sat alone by the fire, staring into the flames like they held answers. Grey came and sat beside her. Quiet. Solid. She didn’t push him away. “They burned everything,” she said eventually. “They’re trying to break your mind before your body.” She turned to him. “You think I’m going to break?” “I think you’re going to become something they can’t control. And that terrifies them.” A beat passed. Mira leaned her head back. “When this is over… if I lose myself…” Grey’s voice was low. “I’ll bring you back.” “What if you can’t?” “Then I’ll burn with you.” She turned toward him sharply. But he didn’t smile. He meant it. The bond between them pulsed, hot, alive. Not just instinct. Something deeper. Chosen. She almost leaned into it. Almost. Until…. A rustle outside. Then, A knock. Three slow taps. Mira rose instantly, motioning Liam to cover the back door. Grey stepped beside her. They opened it fast. But there was no one there. Only a note nailed to the wood with a dagger. Mira pulled it down. Four words burned across the page: YOU ARE NOT READY. End of Chapter Twelve …………………. Someone is watching them. Someone close enough to knock and disappear. As Mira wrestles with her power and her past, enemies are already two steps ahead. But how much longer can she afford to hesitate?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