THE WOLFLESS

490 Words
The moon was full again. And once more, it refused to answer him. Jared sat on the orphanage roof, legs swinging over the edge, his breath clouding in the cold air. Below, the other boys howled — some real, some pretending, all mocking. Their laughter tore through the night like claws against glass. “Still no fur, Jared?” “Maybe your wolf ran away before you were born!” He said nothing. He’d learned that silence was stronger than any roar. Moonridge Orphanage wasn’t a home; it was a cage for those unwanted by their packs. Broken bloodlines, failed heirs, wolfless orphans. And Jared — the strangest of them all. Sixteen. No claws. No shift. No howl. The Matron said late bloomer. The doctor said defective. The others whispered curse-born. He called himself different. He liked the sound of that word. It tasted like rebellion. Sometimes, when the moonlight brushed his skin, he swore he could feel something stir beneath — not a beast, not a curse, but a whisper. Like the night itself wanted to speak to him. He touched his chest. There’s something here. Waiting. Then, he felt it — that weight in the air. The quiet before a storm. Even the wolves in the forest had gone silent. The Matron stepped out of the main hall, lantern shaking in her trembling hand. Her scent was sharp with fear. And from the shadows beyond the gate, the forest parted. A figure approached — tall, cloaked in black and silver. Her stride was steady, her presence electric, like thunder walking in human form. Her eyes gleamed gold beneath the hood. Every wolf in the orphanage dropped to one knee. “An S-tier…” someone whispered. “A true Alpha.” The Matron stammered, “L-Lady Kael… what brings someone like you here?” The woman’s voice cut through the night — low, smooth, commanding. “Him.” She pointed to the roof. Jared froze. The Matron blinked in disbelief. “Him? But he’s—he’s wolfless!” The woman’s lips curved, faintly. “That’s what makes him interesting.” And in that moment, Jared’s life — his silence, his loneliness, his fragile normal — cracked open. Lady Kael looked up at him, eyes glowing like fire trapped in amber. “Come down, boy. The moon is done waiting for you.” The air thickened. Something ancient moved in his blood — like a voice whispering from beneath his skin. And for the first time, Jared didn’t feel human. He felt seen. But as he climbed down, the wind shifted — carrying a scent of blood. Somewhere beyond the forest, a howl rose — not one of reverence, but warning. Lady Kael’s eyes flicked toward the sound. Her expression darkened. “They’ve found him already,” she murmured. Jared frowned. “Found who?” She looked back at him — and the moonlight caught her fangs. “You.”
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