Chapter 1: The Forest Remembers
The first howl of the night came not from the pack, but from deep within the forest — wild, unfamiliar, laced with a longing that set every hair on Elara’s neck on edge.
She stood at the tree line, barefoot in the dirt, arms folded tightly over her chest. Around her, pack members gathered in loose clusters, exchanging murmurs about the delayed shift. The full moon was already cresting the horizon, fat and heavy, but the usual flood of energy hadn’t yet surged through their veins.
“Elara,” came a voice behind her — low, commanding.
She turned and met Alpha Kael’s eyes. His presence radiated heat, authority, and something else she couldn’t place. Worry, maybe.
“You feel it too,” she said, not bothering with pretense.
Kael nodded. “Something is... off. The moon feels wrong.”
“It’s late,” she said quietly.
“No,” he replied, voice tight. “It’s watching.”
A silence passed between them, heavy with unspoken meaning.
Elara looked away, back toward the woods. That was where she’d been found — twelve years ago, half-feral, bleeding, a crescent-shaped scar still fresh on her shoulder blade. No memory of who she was. No family. Just the whisper of a woman’s voice, saying her name, over and over, like a prayer.
“Elara, you’re trembling,” Kael said.
She hadn’t realized it, but her limbs were shaking. Not from cold. From the same itch that always preceded her transformation — only now, it burned like fire under her skin. The mark on her back throbbed, slow and rhythmic, as if echoing a drumbeat only she could hear.
The air shifted.
One of the younger wolves — Lukas — suddenly collapsed to the ground, panting, clutching his sides as his body buckled. But he didn’t shift. None of them did. One by one, the pack dropped to their knees, writhing in confusion, pain blooming across their expressions.
Except Elara.
She stood tall as the moonlight bathed her in red.
Kael took a step toward her, eyes wide. “You’re not affected.”
“No,” she said slowly, voice barely hers. “I think I’m the reason this is happening.”
The forest howled again — closer this time.
Elara turned toward the sound, heart thudding.
Something — someone — was calling her.
“Stay with the pack,” Kael ordered. “Whatever’s out there—”
But she was already moving, drawn like a tide pulled by the moon.
Behind her, Kael cursed and shifted — bones cracking, fur bursting from skin — but by the time his wolf form hit the forest floor, Elara had vanished into the trees.