The Awakening
The small town of Hollow Pines was known for its gloomy charm, where mist clung to ancient trees like a shroud and lanterns flickered down crooked streets. Halloween brought a special chill this year, with the full moon hanging low, casting an eerie glow across the fields and forests surrounding the town.
Talia crouched beside the crumbling cemetery gate, her breath forming tiny clouds in the crisp night air. At seventeen, she was as much a mystery to the townsfolk as the town was to her. Though she’d grown up here, she’d always felt like she didn’t quite belong. Strange dreams had haunted her since childhood, dreams of shadowed halls and voices whispering in languages she couldn’t understand. But tonight wasn’t about dreams or the strange feelings; tonight was about a laugh with her friends.
“You sure you want to go through with this?” chuckled Maeve, her best friend, peering at Talia from under her witch’s hat. Next to her, Finn and Rowan shuffled awkwardly, trying to keep warm. Finn was bundled up in a vampire cape, his cheeks reddened from the cold, and Rowan wore the classic skeleton costume, which now looked a bit too tight on him.
“Oh, come on!” Talia whispered, smirking. “Where’s your Halloween spirit?”
She held up a dusty, leather-bound book she’d found in her grandmother’s attic a few days before. Its cover was blank, save for a strange sigil stamped in faded gold. Despite the cobwebs and dust, something about it had compelled her to sneak it out of the house.
“Let’s do it, then,” Talia said, with a wink. She opened the book, flipping through the brittle pages, and found a spell — or at least what she thought was one. The words on the page were twisted and ancient, the letters unfamiliar. Still, something within her seemed to understand, urging her to speak them aloud.
Clearing her throat, she raised her arms and chanted, her voice rising over the wind that had begun to stir around them. “Saelara’shyn mor’tor’eah,” she intoned, her voice slipping into a tone she barely recognized as her own.
The wind picked up suddenly, howling through the gravestones, and Talia felt a strange, tingling warmth at her fingertips. The pages of the book fluttered wildly as if they were alive. She laughed nervously, casting a look at her friends, expecting them to laugh with her. But they stared, wide-eyed and pale.
“Talia, look!” Finn gasped, pointing at her hands.
A soft, pale glow radiated from her fingers, like moonlight made solid. She pulled her hands back, watching in horror as the light pulsed and flickered, forming faint tendrils that danced in the air around her. The light spiraled outward, touching the ground, then creeping toward the nearest gravestone. When it made contact, the earth trembled.
“Oh…no,” Talia breathed, her heart pounding.
The ground around the gravestone cracked, dirt splitting as something began to push its way upward. Her friends took a collective step back, clutching each other. A skeletal hand, thin and covered in layers of dirt and moss, clawed its way from the ground, followed by the brittle remains of what looked to be a very old corpse. Empty sockets where eyes had once been stared out at them.
“Talia, what did you do?” Rowan whispered, his voice shaking.
“I…I don’t know!” she stammered, dropping the book, her hands still glowing with that strange, silvery light.
The skeleton rose fully from its grave, standing in eerie silence, its empty sockets somehow locked onto Talia. In the stillness, she felt a hum of recognition, as though she and the creature were connected by an invisible thread. Words from the book echoed in her mind, words she hadn’t consciously read, telling her of an ancient power, an inheritance bound by blood and boundless darkness.
“It’s responding to me,” she murmured, both horrified and fascinated.
The skeleton took a step forward, its bones creaking like ancient wood in the wind. Talia’s friends backed away, panic on their faces, but Talia stood frozen, rooted to the spot as if in a trance. The wind, which had picked up to a near howl, quieted, leaving only the soft whispers of the trees and the crackle of dry leaves swirling around their feet.
“It’s like…you summoned it,” Maeve whispered, clutching her arm.
“No, this wasn’t supposed to be real!” Talia cried, feeling the warmth in her hands fade. The glow dissipated, leaving only the cool night air and the faint rustle of the trees. The skeleton, sensing the energy fading, slowly settled back into its grave, its form sinking into the earth as though it had never stirred.
Silence settled over the cemetery. The only sound was the soft scrape of dirt, filling the grave once more. Talia blinked, clutching her now-empty hands, her heartbeat deafening in her ears. She looked down at the book, lying open and undisturbed on the ground. A single word at the top of the page stood out, glowing faintly in the moonlight.
"Mor’tor’eah," she whispered.
Finn broke the silence. “What…what just happened?”
Talia took a shaky breath. “I don’t know. But I think…” She paused, looking at each of them, her voice trembling. “I think I just woke something up. And I don’t think it’s going to go back to sleep.”