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What Survived The Burn
What Survived The Burn
Penulis: Larissa Watson

Chapter One

Penulis: Larissa Watson
last update Terakhir Diperbarui: 2025-06-26 21:31:31

Liora’s POV

Sunlight cuts through the blinds, casting golden bars of light across the bedroom floor. Dust particles swirl in the beams like tiny stars, weightless and slow. It’s the first thing I see when I wake up, and for a moment, I’m still—not groggy, just aware. Too aware. I can make out each particle suspended in air, each thread in the weave of my blanket. It’s like the world is turned up a notch, sharp and gleaming.

Downstairs, I hear Mom humming in the kitchen. The soft thud of a mixing spoon against a bowl follows—she’s making pancakes. She always makes pancakes on my birthday. It’s a ritual, a tradition wrapped in cinnamon and vanilla.

Today is my seventeenth birthday.

But for me, it’s just another day. Routines keep me steady, and I don’t like to break them. There’s comfort in the predictable. So I rise, stretch, and head to my closet, reaching for the same green top I always wear when I want to feel like myself. It brings out the color in my eyes. I pair it with ripped skinny jeans and bare feet. The floor is cold under my toes.

I have my own bathroom, so I don’t bother grabbing anything. Steam clouds the mirror as I step into the shower. The hot water hits my back and shoulders like a blanket, easing the ache I didn’t realize I carried. I close my eyes.

Today feels different.

The thought isn’t mine. It doesn’t sound like my voice in my head. It’s like something nudged it in, gently but insistently.

Something big is going to happen.

Something Momentous

My body stills. I stand perfectly still in the spray, heartbeat loud in my ears. I didn’t think that. Not really.

I shake it off. Sleep. Nerves. The weird vulnerability that birthdays always bring. It’s not the aging—I don’t care about getting older. It’s the attention, the pressure to perform joy, the weight of people watching to see how you’ll carry another year.

When I step back into my room, the scent of cinnamon has deepened. Mom’s humming has turned into quiet, almost ethereal singing. It’s not a song I recognize, but it feels familiar in that strange, dreamlike way, like I’ve heard it in a memory I forgot I had.

I towel off and pull a brush through my damp hair. My fingers pause at the hair tie. That thought still lingers. That sense of… something. Something inevitable.

I glance in the mirror. My reflection stares back, but it doesn’t feel like me. For a second—just a second—my eyes seem brighter, more golden than hazel. More alert. I blink and it’s gone. Freckles. Long lashes. Same stubborn jaw.

Same girl.

Maybe.

The kitchen is awash in light, the table already set. Pancakes, stacked high. Blueberries arranged into a crooked smiley face. Syrup drips over the edges like a slow spill of amber. Mom turns as I enter, her hair in a loose bun, flour smudged on her cheek. Her smile is real and warm.

"There’s my birthday girl," she says, and pulls me into a hug.

I lean in, holding on a second longer than usual. Her arms are steady, her scent familiar—vanilla, soap, something else I can never name. A knot in my chest eases, just slightly.

"You okay?" she asks, leaning back to study me.

I nod too fast. "Yeah. Just weird dreams."

She raises an eyebrow. "You’ve been having a lot of those lately."

"I guess."

She gestures to the plate. "Eat before they get cold."

We sit across from each other. The only sounds are forks on ceramic and the occasional creak of the house settling. It’s peaceful, but my brain keeps buzzing like there’s something I’m missing.

"Mom."

"Yes, sweetheart?"

I hesitate. "Do you ever get a feeling? Like… something’s going to happen?"

She pauses, tilting her head. "What kind of something?"

"I don’t know. Just… something big. Like there’s a shift in the air."

She hums thoughtfully. "I think we all get those feelings. The world changing under your feet before you know why."

I nod slowly. My phone chimes, interrupting the quiet. It’s Andy.

"He’s outside," I say, standing.

"He’s driving you to school today?"

"Yeah."

She walks over, hands me my lunchbox, and kisses my cheek. "Happy birthday. Sweetheart, Invite him to dinner tonight?"

"Maybe," I say. I probably won’t.

I step outside into the bright morning, the sun making the pavement shimmer. Andy’s car is waiting—a black sedan with purple chrome wheels that catch the light like oil slicks.

As I slide into the passenger seat, he gives me a once-over.

"Girl, you look like death," he says, smirking. "Seatbelt, bitch."

I smile for the first time today. It spreads easily. Andy’s been my best friend since preschool. He’s the one who made my prom dress, my homecoming dresses—hell, even a Halloween costume that still makes my mom tear up. I was the first person that he told he was interested in boys, not girls.

He’s brilliant. He’s mine. In a best-friend soul-twin way.

I buckle up. He pulls out of the driveway.

"You sure you’re okay?"

I deflect. "Eyes on the road."

"Seriously, though. You look... haunted."

"Today just feels weird. Like I woke up in the right house but the wrong version of my life."

"You wanna skip?" he asks.

I turn to him, mock-horrified. "Andrew Marks, Mr. Perfect Attendance, offering to skip school? Be still my heart."

"Desperate times," he says, eyes twinkling. "What do you want to do?"

"Shopping. Something brainless."

"Mall it is."

The mall is nearly empty, just retirees walking loops and sleepy employees unlocking stores. It smells like cinnamon pretzels, faux leather, and teenage freedom.

We dive into our favorite boutique. Andy holds up a pair of neon green platform boots.

"Statement piece?"

"For a space lizard maybe."

"You wound me."

We try on outfits we’d never buy. Take selfies in ridiculous hats. Andy picks out a denim jacket with silver stars embroidered on the sleeves.

"You’re getting this."

"No, I’m not."

"Yes, you are. It’s a birthday bribe so I get to pick your cake."

"There might not even be cake."

"Oh there will be. You owe me for skipping Econ."

"Fine. Chocolate raspberry."

He claps. "Exquisite taste."

At lunch, we sit near the fountain, sharing a milkshake, dipping fries in ketchup. The tension in my chest has eased, but it hasn’t vanished.

"Thanks for this," I say.

He glances at me. "You’re not telling me everything."

I freeze. "What do you mean?"

"I know you. You’re here, but your eyes are someplace else. And they’ve been there for a while."

I stare at the table. "I just… I feel like I’m standing at the edge of something. Like something’s coming, but I don’t know if it’s good or bad."

He nods slowly. Doesn’t mock. Doesn’t press.

"Whatever it is, I’m with you. You know that, right?"

I lean against him. "I do."

We linger until our phones buzz. It’s late. I text Mom—errands ran long. She just tells me to be home by six. "Your favorite dinner. Don’t be late."

I promise I won’t be.

But part of me—some small, restless piece buried deep—wonders if I can keep that promise. If this moment, this ordinary day, is the last one before everything changes.

I don’t know.

But for now, I just loop my arm with Andy’s and walk out into the sunshine. The world is still calm. Still bright. Still mine.

For now.

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  • What Survived The Burn   Chapter Sixty-Three

    Simon and I walked side by side through the ballroom, weaving between tables as Alphas and Lunas alike greeted us with bows, firm handshakes, and measured smiles. The room was alive with the hum of conversation and the clink of silverware against porcelain. Platters of food lined the buffet, steam rising in elegant curls. The savory scents mingled in the air—roast beef, seasoned vegetables, warm rolls, and sweet citrus-glazed chicken.The sight of so many packs gathered in one place should have made me nervous, but instead, I felt grounded. Simon's fingers brushed against the small of my back every so often, a quiet reminder that he was here, that I wasn’t facing any of this alone.I gave warm greetings, asked about long travels, listened to snippets of politics and territorial gossip. Every conversation was brief but charged with intent. Everyone here was watching us. Judging. Measuring.Solene caught my eye again from across the room. She had already made a second trip to the buffet

  • What Survived The Burn   Chapter Sixty-Two

    Simon’s POVThe next morning arrived far too quickly.Sunlight barely filtered through the curtains before I was sitting on the edge of the bed, already dressed from the waist down and holding my shirt in my hands, staring blankly at the floor. My entire body hummed with something I still didn’t fully understand. The raw, pulsing edge of magic.But at least I wasn’t glowing anymore.Loria stood near the mirror, applying a finishing touch to her makeup. Her illusion was flawless. She looked exactly the way she used to—mousy brown curls, flame-colored eyes, soft skin untouched by the divine shift that had happened less than twenty-four hours ago. I knew it was a mask. I also knew she hated wearing it. But it was necessary.We had to get through today without setting off seventy-six Alphas and their Lunas.I dragged my shirt over my head and stood, adjusting the cuffs. The dress code was somewhere between business casual and regal power move, and I tried my best to land somewhere in the

  • What Survived The Burn   Chapter Sixty-One

    Loria’s POVMy feet didn’t seem to touch the ground anymore.Yet, beneath me, I could feel it all—the hum of the soil, the song of roots, the pulse of something ancient and patient and impossibly alive. It was as if the earth itself breathed with me, sighed with me. The magic wasn’t just around me now. It was me.Zerina, usually the one clawing at the edges of my thoughts, had gone quiet.At first I thought she might be in shock.“I’m not in shock,” she finally muttered, her tone dry. “I’m just trying to figure out how in the hell we’re supposed to hide this from an entire room full of Alphas tomorrow.”I blinked, still disoriented from the residual glow beneath my skin. I could feel it like a second heartbeat, slow and steady but ready to surge.“Easy,” I whispered inwardly. “I can shield it.”“Maybe you can,” she snapped. “But what about him?”My eyes turned instinctively to Simon.He stood just a few feet away, chest still heaving from our walk, his golden skin glowing with threads

  • What Survived The Burn   Chapter Sixty

    Simon’s POV“Simon, GO,” Zyan roared in my head, but my feet were already moving towards the door. As soon as I stepped onto the porch Zyan shifted, shredding my clothes to bits. His paws hit the ground and didn’t slow down. “What was that,” I asked him.We both felt the warmth, the radiating light that came from my skin, the feeling of unknown power residing in my veins. “I don’t know,” Zyan whispered.Loria stepped through the trees and my whole world stopped. It is her I am sure of it, but she didn’t look like that when she left the house. Her hair once mousy brown and full of curls, is now solid black and hangs to her knees in big waves. Her eyes that used to look like flames are now a piercing green with silver flaking the edges. She walks straight towards Zyan’s massive form. Zyan sniffs her and tries to nuzzle his nose into her stomach. She giggles slightly but her voice doesn’t even sound like her. It sounds like something out of this world. High pitched and heavenly. “

  • What Survived The Burn   Chapter Fifty-Nine

    Loria’s POVThe kitchen was quiet. Unnaturally so. No buzzing from the breast pump, no beeping from the oxygen monitors, no soft cries from one of the four tiny lives upstairs. Just me, a bowl of leftover pasta, and the ticking of the antique clock over the stove.Zerina stirred inside me, quiet but alert."You should eat more," she said gently. "You barely touched breakfast."I twirled a bite of pasta onto my fork. "I know. I'm just..." I sighed. "Tomorrow's coming too fast."The speech I had finished earlier this morning sat like a weight in my bag. It wasn’t perfect. It didn’t sound powerful. It didn’t feel like the kind of thing an immortal Luna should say to a room full of Alphas, but it was the truth. And if we were going to ask them to stand beside us, they deserved nothing less.Zerina didn’t argue. She understood. She’d been with me through every revision, every moment of erasing and rewriting and doubting. But she was quiet now. Just like the house.Simon was upstairs, going

  • What Survived The Burn   Chapter Fifty-Eight

    Simon’s POVShe clutched a hand to her chest, cheeks flushed, and I could feel both her startle and her pull toward me through the bond.My eyes traveled over her—slow, reverent. I couldn't help it. That gown. That woman. My mate.Every inch of her was a reminder that power didn’t always roar. Sometimes it stood in silence and owned the room. She looked like a queen from one of the old legends, carved from moonlight and war."You're going to break necks in that dress," I said, stepping inside and letting the door click softly behind me.Zyan stirred almost immediately. "Ours. That is ours. Look at her. Stars above, we mated with a goddess."I couldn't argue.Loria shifted, adjusting the silver wrap over her shoulders, still looking in the mirror. The sheer sleeves sparkled under the soft light, and the way the gown clung to her body—hell. I was speechless."You think it’s too much?" she asked, turning to face me. Her brow was furrowed slightly, uncertainty blooming behind her confiden

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