Moonfall was nothing like she expected.
Celeste had imagined something small. A quiet gathering of wolves who didn’t belong anywhere, standing around scattered fires and pretending not to notice each other.
Something easy to disappear into. She was wrong.
The valley was enormous.
Torches lined every path, burning gold and amber against the dark, stretching further than she could see from the entrance. Music came from somewhere deep inside the crowd. Low drums and a melody she didn't recognize but felt.
There were hundreds of wolves here. Maybe more dancing around the light, every one of them masked. All dangerous in ways no one bothered to hide.
She stood at the entrance.
For a moment she considered turning around. Going home. Pretending tonight never happened.
But then she remembered the humiliation when Thorne announced his new Luna.
She walked in.
Her mask was silver, thin across the bridge of her nose and cheekbones, with small details carved into the edges that she had never looked at closely enough to name. It felt strange against her skin. Like being someone else. She kept her hood up and moved through the crowd slowly, taking everything in.
Wolves danced around the central fire. Others leaned together in quiet conversation. Some disappeared into the darker paths beyond the torches.
Nobody looked at her twice. That alone was worth the two hour walk.
At home, she was Maera's daughter. The healer's girl. The one Thorne had just very publicly decided wasn't good enough. Here she was just a woman in a silver mask and nobody had an opinion about that at all.
Celeste moved away from the crowd slowly, letting the music fade behind her, letting the laughter and voices blur. The deeper she went along the valley’s edge, the quieter it became, until all that remained was the soft rhythm of drums echoing through the trees and the occasional crackle of a torch.
She sat on a flat stone near a torch and watched the gathering from a distance and let herself just exist for a little while.
She didn't notice him until he spoke.
"You're holding your cup like it offended you."
Celeste looked down.
She was gripping the small cup of spiced wine gotten from a passing tray so tightly her knuckles had turned pale. She loosened her fingers immediately.
"I'm fine," she said, without looking up.
"I didn't ask if you were fine." Something in the way he said it made her look up.
He stood a few feet away, half-shadowed by the torchlight.
Tall.
That was the first thing she noticed.
Tall and broad-shouldered, dressed in dark clothes that made him blend easily into the night. A black mask covered the upper half of his face, but what it didn’t hide was striking sharp jaw, a mouth set in something that wasn't quite a smile, and eyes the color of molten amber.
Those eyes were fixed on her.
Watching her like she was something worth figuring out.
Celeste felt that look settle over her skin.
"This path is usually empty," he said. "People come to Moonfall for the crowd."
"I came to get away from people," The answer slipped out before she could think about it.
Something shifted in his expression. Recognition. Understanding.
"So did I," he said.
He sat down on the stone beside hers without asking. Not close enough to crowd her, not far enough to be dismissive.
Celeste should have moved away. She didn’t.
They sat in silence for a moment, listening to the drums echo across the valley. The moon hung bright and full above them. Indifferent to all of them.
"Bad day?" he asked eventually.
Celeste let out a quiet breath.
“That’s one way to describe it.”
"Do you want to talk about it?"
"No." She blinked.
"Good." He leaned back slightly, stretching his legs out in front of him like he had nowhere else to be.
This time she did laugh. It came out small and surprised, like it had slipped past her before she could stop it. She pressed her lips together but it was already out there.
He looked at her when she laughed. She felt it even without turning her head. Something about his attention changed, sharpened slightly.
She kept her eyes forward.
"You're not from around here," he said. It wasn't a question.
"Neither are you," she replied.
"How do you know?"
Celeste glanced at him sideways.
"Because you sat down on the empty path at a party instead of going with the crowd."
His mouth curved. Just slightly. "Maybe I'm not important."
She looked at him properly then. The dark mask. The way he carried himself, and the quiet confidence in his posture.
"You're important," she said simply. "You just don't want to be tonight."
The curve of his mouth deepened. It changed his whole face, or at least the parts of it she could see.
"Same as you," he said quietly.
She didn't answer that. Because he was right and they both knew it and saying so out loud felt like giving something away.
The drums in the distance shifted tempo, rolling into something slower and more deliberate. Around the main fire she could see couples moving into the open space, drawn together by the change in music.
"Dance with me," he said.
Not a question. Not quite a command either. Something in between, offered without pressure, like a door being held open.
She should have said no. She was a girl from Silvermere in a stolen mask at a neutral gathering and she did not know this man's name and everything about him said *careful.*
"Okay," she said.
She had danced before, at pack gatherings and seasonal celebrations, the kind of dances with steps everyone knew and partners who kept a polite distance. This was nothing like that.
He placed one hand at her waist and took her hand in the other and the moment he did, Celeste felt something she hadn’t felt in a long time. Chosen.
She missed a step.
"Sorry," she said quickly.
"Don't be." His hand steadied her at the waist and she was acutely, completely aware of it. "You're holding your breath."
"I'm breathing."
"You weren't."
She looked up at him. From this close the amber of his eyes was startling, warm and sharp at the same time, and they were so focused on her.
His gaze made her want to look away and not look away simultaneously.
"You're very sure of yourself," she said.
"Usually," he agreed.
"Does that ever stop working for you?"
"Not yet."
She burst out laughing again. His expression when she laughed was something she couldn't quite name, like a man catching unexpected scene and not entirely sure what to do with it.
They danced. The music moved through them, the torchlight flickered and the crowd was far enough away that it felt like they were in their own separate world. She forgot about Thorne. She forgot about the common ground and the formal tone of the pack bell and all those faces turning. She forgot that she had spent all day being not enough.
Here, in the dark, with this stranger's hand warm at her waist, she felt whole, someone worth choosing.
The music slowed. Then stilled.
She stepped back and his hand fell away. The night air where his warmth had been felt unreasonably cold.
"I have to go," she said.
He looked at her steadily. "You don't know my name."
"No," she agreed.
"Aren't you going to ask?"
Celeste reached up and straightened her mask, buying herself one small moment. Then looked at him, this tall, amber-eyed stranger who had sat with her on an empty path and danced with her like she was worth the attention. Her heart beat harder than it should. Some part of her wanted to know. Wanted to stay.
She ignored it.
"Tonight I'm no one," she said softly. "It's better if you're no one too."
She turned and walked away before he could answer. Before she could change her mind.
But halfway up the valley path, her hand pressed flat against her sternum, she felt it again. That sensation shifting behind her ribs. Opening. Like a door that had been shut for a very long time.