The Hunt
The forest had gone silent.
It wasn't the peaceful kind of silence that came with nightfall. This was the kind of silence that meant every living creature had fled, sensing the predators that were closing in. The only sounds left were the whisper of wind through ancient pines and the thundering of Elara's heartbeat in her ears.
She ran faster, her cloak billowing behind her as branches tore at the fabric and scratched her face. Her arms were already slick with blood from a dozen wounds, but she didn't slow down. She couldn't. The twin infants bundled against her chest hadn't made a sound since the attack began, and the silence was both a blessing and a curse. Her spell had worked, sealing their voices and their power, hiding them from magical detection.
But it also meant she couldn't hear them breathe.
Elara pressed her hand against the bundle as she ran, desperate for confirmation. A heartbeat pulsed against her palm, strong and steady. Then another, offset by just a fraction of a second. Two hearts. Two lives. Still fighting.
She pushed her body harder, her legs burning and her lungs screaming for air. Behind her, the hunting party was closing the distance. The sound of massive paws striking earth echoed through the trees, accompanied by the low growls of trained killers. They weren't just wolves. They were Council assassins, and they had been tracking her for days.
"There!" A male voice cut through the night, cold and commanding. "The Oracle w***e runs to the river!"
Elara's blood turned to ice. They knew where she was going. Somehow, they had anticipated her path, cut off her escape routes, herded her exactly where they wanted her.
The trees began to thin ahead, and moonlight glinted off water in the distance. The River Styx marked the boundary of Silver Moon Pack territory. If she could cross it, they would be in neutral lands. If she could cross it, her children might have a chance at survival.
An arrow hissed past her ear, so close she felt the displacement of air against her skin.
She stumbled, catching herself against a tree. The bark bit into her palm, but she barely felt it. The infants shifted against her chest, and through the thin blanket, she could feel them. Her daughter on the left, her son on the right. Mirror images. Perfect halves of a whole.
The prophecy had called them the Twin Moons. Together, they would restore balance to a world corrupted by greed and violence. Together, they would bring down the Council's regime and free the oppressed packs from tyranny.
Which was exactly why the Council wanted them dead.
"Surrender the abominations!" The voice was closer now, maybe twenty yards behind her. "The Council offers mercy, Oracle. Give us the twins, and you may live."
A broken, b****y laugh escaped Elara's throat. Mercy. As if she hadn't seen with her own eyes what they did to the last Oracle who defied them. As if she didn't know exactly what their version of mercy looked like.
She burst through the final line of trees and nearly fell down the steep embankment. The River Styx churned below, swollen with spring melt, violent and dark under the full moon's light. The water moved fast, dangerously fast, and she could hear the roar of rapids somewhere downstream.
There was no bridge. No boat. No way across except through the deadly current.
Footsteps thundered behind her. Elara spun around, drawing the last dregs of her power into her fingertips. Silver light sparked weakly and died almost immediately. She had used everything on the sealing spell, pouring every ounce of magic she possessed into protecting her children from detection.
Seven massive wolves emerged from the shadows, their eyes glowing in the moonlight as they formed a semicircle around her. Behind them, a man in Council robes stepped forward, his boots crunching on dead leaves. His smile was sharp as a blade, and Elara recognized him immediately.
"End of the line, Elara." Commander Thrace. She had known him once, years ago, before the corruption took hold of the Council. Before power and fear had twisted him into something unrecognizable. "Give them to me. Make this easy on yourself."
"Easy?" Elara's voice came out steady despite the terror clawing at her throat. She backed toward the river's edge, holding her children tighter against her chest. "You want to murder infants because you're afraid of a prophecy. There's nothing easy about that."
"We're not afraid." Thrace's hand rested casually on his sword hilt, as if they were discussing something mundane instead of her children's execution. "We're being practical. Your twins would upset the balance of power. The strong would fall. The weak would rise. Chaos would consume everything we've built. We cannot allow it."
"You mean you cannot allow anyone to challenge your tyranny." Elara's eyes flashed with anger. "You've corrupted everything the Council was meant to be. You've turned protectors into oppressors."
Thrace's smile vanished, replaced by cold fury. "Take her."
The wolves lunged forward as one, a coordinated attack meant to overwhelm and capture.
Elara dropped to her knees in one fluid motion, pressing her lips to each infant's forehead. The spell she needed required blood, and hers was already flowing freely from a dozen wounds. She whispered the words her own mother had taught her, the f*******n magic of the Moon Goddess's first daughters. The magic that would cost her everything but might save her children.
"By blood and moon, by soul and tide, I split what's whole, let fate decide. Hide them well in separate streams, until the moon calls, wake their dreams."
The infants' eyes opened. Silver-grey, identical, ancient beyond their newborn days. They locked onto their mother's face, and in those depths, Elara saw understanding. She saw forgiveness for what she was about to do to them, for the burden she was placing on their tiny shoulders.
I'm sorry, she thought desperately, her heart breaking. I'm so, so sorry.
A wolf's jaws snapped inches from her face, close enough that she felt hot breath on her skin. Elara threw herself backward, and the ground disappeared beneath her.
She fell.
The river swallowed her whole, ice-cold water shocking the air from her lungs. She kicked desperately upward, breaking the surface while still clutching her children with iron determination. The current grabbed her immediately, dragging her downstream with terrifying force that threatened to rip the babies from her arms.
Above her on the embankment, she heard Thrace roaring orders to his men. "Get in the water! Don't let her escape!"
Elara's fingers found the woven basket she had prepared weeks ago, hidden in a hollow tree root at the water's edge. She had spent nights weaving it with her own hands, had poured protective magic into every fiber. She had known it might come to this. An Oracle always knew when death was approaching.
She kissed each baby one final time, tasting her own tears mixed with river water and blood. Her lips lingered on their foreheads, memorizing the feel of their soft skin, the warmth of their tiny bodies.
"Find each other," she whispered against their silent mouths, her voice breaking with emotion. "When the moon calls, you will rise together. You will be whole again. You will—"
An arrow slammed into her shoulder with brutal force.
She screamed, nearly dropping her daughter as white-hot pain exploded through her body. The basket was just ahead, caught on a rock. Ten feet. Five. She had to reach it.
Another arrow punched through her side, tearing through flesh and muscle.
Blood clouded the water around her, turning it dark. Her vision blurred, darkness creeping in at the edges. But her hands still worked, and her will was forged from iron and desperation. She placed both infants in the basket with shaking fingers, wrapped together in the silver cloth she had woven with protection runes.
"I love you," she breathed, her voice barely a whisper now as her strength faded. "Both of you. Always."
She pushed the basket into the current with the last of her strength and watched it catch the flow, spinning away into the darkness. As it moved, the spell she had cast activated. Silver light exploded around the basket, and with a sound like breaking glass, it split down the middle.
Two halves. Two baskets. Two paths.
The current pulled them in opposite directions. Her daughter's basket veered toward the eastern bank, caught in an eddy that would carry her toward the poorest districts. Her son's basket shot toward the western shore, heading toward the territories of the wealthy and powerful.
Separated. Hidden. Safe.
Behind her, she heard wolves hit the water with massive splashes, their snarls echoing across the river.
Elara turned to face them, her hands coming up empty of power but full of a mother's rage. If she was going to die, she would buy her children every second she could. Every moment might mean the difference between their survival and their death.
Commander Thrace stood on the embankment above, his bow raised and an arrow nocked. The moonlight gleamed off the silver tip, deadly and final.
Their eyes met across the distance. Elara saw no mercy there. No regret. Only cold determination.
He drew the string back and fired.
The arrow flew true, cutting through the air with a whistle. Elara felt it pierce her chest, punching through bone and into her heart. The pain was distant, almost insignificant compared to the grief of leaving her children alone in this cruel world.
As the river pulled her under for the final time, her last thought was a prayer to the Moon Goddess.
Keep them safe. Let them find each other. Let them be strong enough to finish what I started.
The water closed over her head, and Elara's world went dark. Her body drifted downstream, carried by the current toward the rapids. Behind her, the wolves reached the spot where she had disappeared, but there was nothing left to find.
On the embankment, Commander Thrace lowered his bow and watched the water with cold satisfaction.
"Find the baskets," he ordered his men. "Search both banks. The prophecy dies tonight."
But the river had other plans. The two baskets, protected by ancient magic and a mother's final blessing, had already passed beyond their reach. They tumbled through different currents, spinning wildly but holding together, each carrying a silent infant toward an unknown destiny.
One basket veered east, toward poverty and shadows.
The other shot west, toward wealth and power.
The Twin Moons would survive.
Separated, they would grow.
And one day, they would find each other again.