Chapter One: Whispers in the Frost

936 Words
The frost came early this year. Even before the sun had fully risen, a pale sheet of silver clung to the earth—glimmering on tree branches, coating the wooden eaves of cottages, curling around the stone steps of the village like a whisper of something ancient. The air was quiet. Still. Too still. Eira Shadowglow stood at the edge of the forest, a woven basket tucked beneath her arm, breath coiling into mist as she stared into the trees. Something was off. The snow hadn't fallen yet, but the scent of it was heavy in the wind. The woods, normally filled with birdsong and the rustle of small animals, had fallen into an eerie silence. No sparrows trilled in the bare branches. No deer wandered the frostbitten paths. Only the hush. And that strange feeling crawling beneath her skin—the feeling of being watched. She pulled her fur-lined cloak tighter around her shoulders and turned her gaze skyward. The sky was a washed-out gray, the early morning sun struggling to break through. Shadows stretched across the forest floor like long, bony fingers. Still, she pressed forward. The herbs wouldn’t gather themselves. Her boots crunched softly against the frost-hardened ground as she stepped into the woods. Here, among the twisted roots and fallen leaves, she was in her element. The forest had always been a strange comfort—wild, unpredictable, but alive. It whispered to her in a language no one else seemed to hear. Eira knelt beside a low patch of frostflowers growing near the base of an ancient pine. As she plucked the delicate petals, her fingers brushed the cold earth, and a ripple of energy shivered up her spine. It wasn’t the cold. It was… something else. She stilled, listening. A breeze stirred the trees, but it carried no scent of danger. And yet, there it was again—that faint sound on the edge of perception. Not wind. Not branches creaking. A howl. Low. Distant. Echoing from somewhere deep within the woods. Her head snapped toward the sound, her heart quickening. It wasn’t the call of any wolf she’d ever heard. It was older. Sadder. Almost mournful, like a song sung by the bones of the earth itself. Eira rose slowly, her breath catching in her throat. Her fingers moved instinctively to the charm that hung at her neck—a simple talisman of bone and silver carved into a crescent moon, the last gift from her grandmother before she passed. It pulsed faintly beneath her touch, warm despite the cold. She didn’t understand why it comforted her so much… only that it always had. Shaking off the unease, Eira turned back toward the village. She’d gathered enough for the morning. Still, she glanced over her shoulder one last time, toward the place where the trees grew darker, denser—where the sound had come from. The wind had changed. And for the briefest moment, she thought she saw movement among the trees—a shape, tall and broad, just beyond the veil of mist. But when she blinked, it was gone. By midday, Eira was back in her cottage, the warmth of the fire doing little to thaw the cold lingering in her bones. She moved through her space with practiced ease, hanging herbs to dry above the hearth, grinding roots and petals into powder, steeping them in steaming water. Outside, children played in the fading light, their laughter muffled by closed windows and drifting smoke. Inside, the shadows stretched longer. She stared into her teacup for a long time, her thoughts drifting like leaves on a stream. That howl. It wasn’t in her head. She knew it. And her body’s reaction… the racing pulse, the way her hearing had sharpened, how her eyes had caught flickers of light between the trees—it wasn’t normal. It wasn’t human. She pressed her fingers to her temple. No. Don’t think like that. Not again. But later that night, as she curled beneath her blankets and tried to find sleep, the charm at her neck began to glow faintly once more. And when the dreams came, they were worse than ever. She was running. Not with human legs—with paws, heavy against damp earth, moving faster than the wind itself. Trees blurred past, silver light breaking through the canopy. She wasn’t afraid—she was wild, fierce, alive. She could hear the echo of another presence—something massive moving beside her, unseen but near. A wolf. Not just any wolf. A shadow-eyed beast with ember-gold eyes. She stopped, breath heaving. The world smelled of frost and smoke. And just beyond the trees, a fire burned—not ordinary fire, but a swirling flame of silver, licking the sky, lighting the forest with an ethereal glow. Then—eyes. Golden, bright, burning into hers. And a voice, deep and rough, whispering through the dream. “You are not what you think you are, little wolf.” Eira jolted upright in bed, gasping. The room was dark. Her skin was slick with sweat, heart pounding like a war drum in her chest. The fire in the hearth had gone out. Only the charm at her neck still glowed—soft, pulsing light beneath her trembling fingers. Outside, the wind howled through the trees. And far away, at the edge of Larkmoor, a stranger on a black horse rode through the mist, eyes golden and watchful, his scent carried on the wind like a warning. The Alpha had arrived. And nothing would ever be the same again.
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