Before the ache of invisibility, before bruises and endless chores, there had been light. There had been warmth. A time when I belonged.
I was six the first time I saw my father laugh—not politely, but fully, filling our small home with sunlight. Broad-shouldered, calloused hands gentle when they touched mine, eyes carrying both calm and fire. He would lift me onto his shoulders as we walked through the village, and I felt the world stretch wide beneath me, limitless.
Mother was soft, steady, and graceful, with hair that smelled of lavender and sunlight. She braided my hair each morning, humming tunes I would later long to hear, whispering of the stars, the forest, and the Red Moon. “You have a strength inside you, Aria,” she said once, her fingers brushing my forehead. “Stronger than you know. The Red Moon has watched you since birth. One day, it will call you, and you must be ready.”
My father nodded. “We see it, Aria. Fire in you even now. Fire the world cannot break. Remember who you are.” His hand rested over my chest, above the spot where the Red Moon would one day mark me. Even then, I felt warmth settle in my bones, a quiet certainty.
Our home smelled of bread, warm earth, and drying herbs. Laughter filled the hallways. The garden behind the house was my sanctuary, untamed flowers and grasses where I could run barefoot and lose myself in wind and sun. I remember the soil between my fingers, rich and warm, the joy of sprouts pushing through the earth, fragile yet unyielding.
I had friends then. Children ran along dirt paths with me, laughing, daring each other to climb low trees or jump across the shallow stream. We chased each other until our lungs burned, collapsing in grass, panting and giggling. Life was simple, unburdened.
School was a small building with wooden desks and chalkboards. I loved it—not for the lessons, though I devoured every word, but for the chance to be more than “Aria, the invisible girl.” Teachers smiled when I answered correctly, occasionally letting me stay after class to clean, patting my shoulder as if I mattered. For the first time, I felt seen.
Evenings were my favorite. My father would carry me to the hill overlooking the village, where the river glittered under the setting sun. He taught me to skip stones, to listen to wind in the reeds, the croak of frogs, and distant calls of waking owls. He told stories of forests beyond the village, of creatures that walked between worlds, of moons that shone red when great change approached.
“You will see it one day,” he said, gripping my hands. “The Red Moon will find you. It will mark you because you are not ordinary. You are chosen. Remember who you are, even if the world forgets.”
I did not understand fully then, but the certainty of his words pressed into me, a promise that one day I would awaken to my destiny.
I remember the last spring before everything changed. The garden was lush, the air smelled of blossoms and warm earth, the sun touching every corner of the village. My father took me to the river, teaching me to skip stones. We laughed, spilling sound into the sky. My mother wove wildflowers into a crown for my hair, smiling softly. That evening, the Red Moon appeared, pale and distant, a sliver of crimson against twilight.
“It watches you, Aria,” my father whispered. “The moon sees the strength inside you. Remember this.” I did.
Then life crumbled. My father went away one morning and did not return. I was eight, too small to understand permanence, too powerless to stop grief swallowing our home. My mother tried to shield me, but her eyes betrayed her. I saw her tears, quick and sharp, before I could ask, and felt the hollow absence of my father in every corner.
A year later, my mother grew sick. The fever burned cruelly, and nothing could stop it. I held her hand as she lay in bed, voice faint:
“Aria… remember… the Red Moon… it watches… it chooses… you will be strong… stronger than the world allows.” Her fingers twitched once in mine, then stilled forever.
I was left alone in a home that felt vast, cold, and unwelcoming. The warmth of laughter, the smell of bread and herbs, the touch of hands that loved me—gone. My step-parents arrived soon after, taking control with harsh hands and eyes that did not care. My life became chores, punishments, and bruises. I became invisible—not by choice, but circumstance.
Yet the memory of my parents lingered like embers. I remembered my father’s hand, warm and steady, my mother’s scent, the softness of her voice, and the Red Moon watching us. These memories became my refuge, the quiet strength pulsing beneath my skin, waiting for awakening.
---
The village now buzzed in early morning light. Smoke rose from crooked chimneys, animals stirred in pens, and the paths smelled of damp earth and wildflowers. I moved through chores with practiced efficiency, hands raw from scrubbing, muscles aching, the cold biting under the thin blanket over my shoulders. Every creak of the floorboard, every distant crow of a rooster reminded me I was seen only when needed.
“Aria! Get up this instant! Don’t think you can laze around while there’s work to do!” my stepmother’s voice cut through the morning, sharp as a blade.
I groaned and pulled myself upright, ignoring the ache and chill. The rope burns on my wrists from yesterday throbbed faintly, a reminder of the punishment I had earned for spilling water on the laundry. Pain was proof I existed.
---
Far beyond the village, the forest breathed. Kael Draven, Alpha of the Blackfang Pack, moved silently among the shadows, senses sharp, drawn to the pulse of destiny that had begun stirring in me. He had resisted the Red Moon’s call for years, but now the threads tugged at him, relentless. He could feel it—the girl in the village, invisible to all, yet impossible to ignore.
At the river, I knelt, cold water biting at my hands. My brown eyes flashed silver for a heartbeat. My hair shimmered faintly. The warmth in my chest surged, and the whispers returned, soft, insistent:
“Aria… you are not weak. You are mine.”
I drew back, pulse hammering, yet no fear followed—only a deep knowing. Something dormant had awoken, and the girl beaten and invisible for so long was no longer hidden.
Kael stepped from the trees, broad-shouldered, predatory. “You shouldn’t be here,” he said, voice low and commanding.
“I… I feel it,” I whispered, trembling. “But I don’t understand.”
“You are mine,” he said, repeating the words like thunder, warning and truth intertwined.
The Red Moon hung pale above, watching. Threads of destiny pulled me forward, weaving a path I could no longer turn from. Pain, chores, invisibility—all had been prelude. I pressed my hand to the crescent-shaped birthmark, pulsing faintly beneath my skin, and knew: my life had shifted. The invisible girl was gone. Aria had been marked and bounded
And she would rise.