I knew I would feel it when she arrived. Mom kept saying Raven was the one we’d been waiting for, the Warren heir, the girl I was born to protect. I tried not to believe it. We’ve had other girls placed with us before. Other maybes. Other almosts. Every time, I let myself hope, and every time, I was wrong. But the moment Raven crossed the town line, something inside me snapped into place. Guardian magic isn’t loud. It doesn’t spark or glow. It’s subtle, like a compass needle jerking north. A pull under the skin. A thread tightening.
And when Raven stepped out of that car and looked at me… the thread didn’t just tighten. It locked. My ribs felt like they were trying to hold in a storm. She wasn’t just the Warren heir. She was my Beloved. The word hit me so hard I almost staggered. I wasn’t ready for it. I wasn’t supposed to feel it this early, not before she turned eighteen, not before her magic settled, not before I ended things with Lily.
But none of that mattered. The bond didn’t care about timing.
And the worst part? Even without the magic humming under my skin, even without the ancient pull between us, I know I still would’ve noticed her. The way she looked around the house like she was afraid to hope. The way she held her pendant like it was the only thing keeping her steady. The way her eyes met mine and didn’t look away.
Something in me recognized her long before the magic did.
“Earth to Noah,” Emily mutters, elbowing me as Raven steps inside. “Stop staring. You look like you’re about to pass out.”
I drag my eyes away from Raven and force myself to breathe. “I’m fine.”
“You’re weird,” Emily says, but she’s smiling. She already likes Raven. I can feel it in the way her aura softens around her. Familiars always know before the rest of us.
Raven stands just inside the doorway, her hand hovering near the pendant at her throat. The lights flicker, barely, but enough to make my Guardian senses flare She did that. Without meaning to. Without knowing how. Her magic is waking up.
Mom comes out of the kitchen, wiping her hands on a towel. “Raven, sweetheart, welcome. We’re so happy you’re here.”
Raven gives a small, polite smile, but I see the tension in her shoulders. She’s bracing for disappointment. For rejection. For the moment she realizes she doesn’t fit here either. But she does. She fits too well. Emily bounces forward. “Come on, I’ll show you your room!”
Raven hesitates, glancing at me. Just a flicker of her eyes. It hits me like a current. She feels something too. Not the full bond, not yet, but the connection. The pull.
I swallow hard and look away. I can’t let her see it. Not until she’s eighteen. Not until it’s safe. Not until I break up with Lily. God. Lily. I was already planning to end things. We’ve been drifting for months. She wants more than I can give, and I’ve been lying to myself about why. But now… now I don’t have a choice.
Raven needs me. Completely. Fully. Without distractions or ties to anyone else. The Guardian oath demands it. The Beloved bond requires it. And the town, this fragile, cursed place, depends on it. Because if the bond fails, the protections around Hallow’s Edge will shatter. And the darkness waiting beyond the wards, the Hollowing, will slip through.
People tell stories about it. Shadows with too many eyes. Voices in the fog. The Bell Night Legend, when the church bell rang through the mist and no one walked out alive. But those are just the stories people are willing to say out loud.
The truth is worse. If the wards fall, the Hollowing will devour this town from the inside out. And Raven is the only one who can stop it. She disappears upstairs with Emily, and I finally let out the breath I’ve been holding since she stepped out of that car.
Mom steps beside me. “You felt it, didn’t you?”
I don’t answer. She doesn’t need me to.
Her voice softens. “She’s the one, Noah.”
I close my eyes. “I know.”
Because the moment Raven looked at me, the world shifted. And nothing will ever be the same. Mom moves toward the kitchen, but pauses. “You should tell the family link before your father walks in and reads it off your face.”
She’s right. I’m terrible at hiding things from them. I close my eyes and reach inward. The link is always there, a warm strand connecting me to my parents and Emily. Not telepathy, exactly. More like a shared emotional space. I push a thought into it.
She’s here.
Mom’s relief pulses back. Emily’s excitement flares upstairs. Dad’s steady approval anchors the link. Then I add the part I’ve been avoiding.
She’s not just the heir. She’s my Beloved.
The link goes silent. Then, Mom’s gasp. Emily’s squeal of excitement. Dad’s presence sharpening like a blade.
A moment later, the front door opens. Dad steps inside, shaking off the cold. His eyes find me instantly. “You felt the bond,” he says quietly. I nod. He nods back, slow and thoughtful. “Then everything changes.”
Before I can respond, Ms. Carter steps forward with her clipboard smile. Dad shifts into polite host mode, shaking her hand and thanking her for bringing Raven safely. Mom ushers her to the kitchen for coffee.
But Mom gives me a look over her shoulder. The look that says: Deal with Lily. Now.
“You have to end things with her,” she says once Ms. Carter is out of earshot. “Tonight.”
“I know.”
“You can’t be bound to someone else when your Beloved is under this roof.”
“I said I know.”
She crosses her arms. “Then why haven’t you done it?”
Because Lily cries when she doesn’t get her way. Because she turns everything into a performance. Because she’ll make a scene at school, and I hate scenes. But also because… she’s lonely. Under all the noise and glitter, she’s just a girl who wants to be seen. And I don’t want to hurt her. But I don’t have a choice anymore.
Dad steps back into the hallway, his expression unreadable. “Noah.”
I straighten instinctively.
“You can’t hesitate. The Warren heir is under our roof. Your Beloved is awakening. And the Sentinel Coven will sense her soon, if they haven’t already.”
My stomach drops. The Sentinels. The rival coven that’s been waiting for the wards to fail. The ones who want the Hollowing to break through. The ones who would kill Raven before letting her restore the protections.
Dad’s voice lowers. “They’ve been quiet for months. Too quiet. I think they’ve been waiting for her.” A cold rush slides through me. “They’ll come for her,” Dad says. “And when they do, you need to be ready.”
I swallow hard. Because I already know: They’re coming. And I’m the only thing standing between them and Raven.
Dad steps aside. “Go upstairs. Check on the girls. Emily’s excited, but Raven… she might be overwhelmed.”
I nod and start up the stairs, every step heavier than the last. Everything in my life just changed. And the girl at the top of these stairs is the reason I was born.