Chapter One: The Moonlit Prophecy

555 Words
The Blood Moon was rising. Aeloria could feel it in her bones before she even stepped outside. The air over Brinvale was thick, as if the night itself were holding its breath. A crimson glow bled through the clouds, painting the cobbled streets and thatched rooftops in shades of wine and shadow. She pulled her shawl tighter and pressed on toward the healer’s hut, the leather satchel of herbs knocking lightly against her hip. Every full moon brought restless dreams and strange ailments to the villagers, but tonight’s was worse. The Blood Moon was rare—once in a generation—and the elders claimed it stirred old magic best left sleeping. Aeloria never believed in old wives’ tales… until now. Halfway down the lane, she stopped. There—on the edge of the forest—lay a man. He was sprawled face-down in the frost-tipped grass, his cloak torn and blackened as if burned. Even from a distance, she could see the dark stain spreading beneath him. Her heart lurched. Dropping to her knees beside him, she turned him over with shaking hands. His face was pale, handsome in a severe way—cheekbones sharp as moonlight, jaw unshaven, hair damp with sweat. His breathing was ragged, each inhale catching like it might be his last. The wound in his side was deep. Too deep. Her healer’s mind went into motion: apply pressure, slow the bleeding, fetch help— But the nearest guard post was too far, and the way his blood kept spilling… “Stay with me,” she whispered, pressing her palms against the gash. “Just—hold on—” A strange heat flared beneath her skin. It started in her chest and rushed through her arms, pooling in her hands until her fingertips burned. Her breath caught as pale silver light seeped from her palms into his wound, threads of it weaving into torn flesh like liquid moonlight. The air around them seemed to hum, low and thrumming, as if the night itself leaned closer. The man gasped sharply. His back arched, eyes flying open. For a heartbeat, they gleamed—not with the dull brown or blue of an ordinary mortal—but with molten silver. Then the light faded. The wound was gone. Not closed with a scar, but truly gone, as though it had never been there at all. Aeloria’s hands trembled. She stared at her palms, at the faint afterglow fading into her skin, and at the crescent-shaped birthmark on her right wrist that now seemed brighter than she remembered. “What… are you?” the man rasped, voice hoarse yet steady. She swallowed. “I should be asking you that.” Footsteps crunched over the frost. A thin, hunched figure emerged from the shadows: the village seer, Maelen, his eyes like clouded glass. He carried no lantern—he never needed one. Somehow, he always knew where to go. He stopped a few paces away, gaze fixed not on the stranger, but on her. “The Moon has chosen you, child,” Maelen said, voice low and grave. “And it will cost you your heart.” Aeloria’s breath caught. The Blood Moon swelled above them, bathing the world in crimson light, and for the first time in her life, she felt truly afraid.
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