STRANGER MOON

838 Words
The first scream shattered the silence just after midnight. Rhea Blackwood jolted upright, her pulse slamming against her ribs like a hammer on steel. Her chest heaved with breath she didn’t remember holding. Sweat clung to her skin, and her fingers clenched the bed sheet like a lifeline. She hadn’t screamed—but someone had. And it didn’t come from a dream. No, this was real. Too sharp. Too raw. It echoed across the night like a cry torn straight from the wild. She sat there, motionless, listening. The motel room was dim, lit only by the flickering glow of a dying fluorescent bulb. The air was still and heavy, like it had been holding its breath since sundown. Her phone buzzed again on the nightstand—probably the fifth time tonight—but she ignored it. Instead, she moved to the window. Outside, the world was drowning in mist. Thick fog rolled over the crumbling parking lot, swallowing the world in slow motion. Streetlights glowed like dying stars, barely piercing through the haze. And above it all, hanging heavy and low over the treetops like a secret too loud to ignore, was the moon. Full. White. Watching. She hated this town already. Halewind was the kind of place that wasn’t on maps. The kind of town where time moved slower, but everything felt more urgent. Rhea had only planned to stop here for the night on her way to nowhere in particular. She didn’t even remember why she took the detour off the highway—just that something had tugged at her, a strange pull in her chest, and next thing she knew, she was here. Now she couldn’t shake the feeling she wasn’t alone. That scream hadn’t been human. Not really. It had sounded too deep, too feral. Like something ancient had woken up hungry. And the dreams… God, the dreams. She’d been having them every night since her last birthday. Always the same: a forest drenched in moonlight. Blood in the snow. A wolf standing in the distance, staring at her with eyes the color of burning gold. And that voice—low, commanding, not quite a whisper: "Come home, little heir." She hadn’t told anyone. Not that there was anyone to tell. Foster homes. Temporary schools. Couch surfing. Rhea’s life was a series of half-built bridges and places that never felt like hers. Her parents were ghosts in memory. Her mother disappeared when Rhea was a toddler. No one ever talked about her father. That was why the letter felt so unreal. Subject: Blackwood Estate – Inheritance Confirmation Sender: Abraham Crane, Crane & Thorn Law Offices “Miss Rhea Blackwood, You are the last confirmed heir of the Blackwood bloodline. Per the late Vivienne Blackwood’s will, you have inherited the family estate in Halewind, along with all that comes with it…” She hadn’t even finished reading it. The words felt wrong. Foreign. Like they were meant for someone else with the same name. A mistake. A trick. She didn’t have a family. But the name Vivienne had stirred something in her. A half-buried memory. A scent—lavender and smoke. A voice calling her little moon. Her hands trembled now as she reached for the old duffel bag by the nightstand. She pulled out the manila envelope, flipped it open, and looked at the key inside. Antique. Silver. Engraved with a crescent moon. It was real. All of it. Another scream pierced the air—closer this time. This one was followed by growling. Deep. Guttural. Rhea froze. Then the power went out. The light flickered once… then died, plunging the room into thick silence and ink-black shadow. Her breath caught in her throat. A low hum filled the air—not electrical. Something deeper. A vibration in her bones. Her ears rang with the silence. Then— A soft knock on the door. Three slow, deliberate taps. She didn’t move. Again. Three taps. This time louder. Her heart pounded. She looked at the window—fog had pressed up against the glass like something alive. Shapes moved within it. Long limbs. Four legs. Glinting eyes. Another knock. She stepped back, hand reaching for the bat she kept under the bed. She wasn’t sure what she'd hit if she had to—man, animal, or something in between—but she wasn’t going down quietly. Then she heard it. Breathing. Right outside the door. But lower. Too low. Not someone standing. Something crouched. The door handle turned—just a twitch, testing. She gripped the bat tighter. Then— A whisper, right outside the door: “Found you.” Rhea slammed the bat against the door with a shout. Silence. She stood there for a heartbeat. Then two. Then the hallway light flickered on. Just for a second. Enough to see the shadow standing at the far end. Tall. Broad shoulders. Barefoot. And eyes that glowed yellow in the darkness. Not human. Not afraid. Just waiting. And then he was gone.
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