chapter 2

1456 Words
The hollow was little more than a scar in the earth—a wide, bowl-shaped depression where the Blackwood Range folded in on itself, hiding a spring-fed pool that never froze, even in the cruelest winters. Tall pines stood sentinel around the rim, their needles so thick that sunlight arrived only in thin golden spears. Moss coated every rock and root. The air smelled of wet stone, pine resin, and the faint metallic tang of old blood. No pack claimed it. No coven consecrated it. No court marked it on their maps of the night. That was why the three children had found it. Outcasts recognize outcast places. For the first three nights after the Triune Eclipse, they did not speak much. Luka hunted. He was good at it even in boy-form—silent feet, sharp nose, the instinct to stalk rather than charge. He brought back rabbits, a pheasant once, and on the fourth night a young deer that had wandered too close to the spring. He tore into the haunch with his teeth, then pushed the rest toward the others with a low grunt. Mira accepted it wordlessly, her small hands shaking as she tried to spark fire without burning everything around her. The flames came obediently this time, small and steady, warming the meat without charring it black. Cassian watched them eat. He sat a little apart, knees drawn to his chest, eyes reflecting the firelight like twin rubies. When Mira offered him a strip of venison, he shook his head. "I don't… eat that," he rasped. His voice was still hoarse from days of silence and hunger. "Then what do you eat?" Mira asked. It was the first full sentence any of them had spoken to each other. Cassian looked away. "Things that are already dead. Or… things that won't scream." Luka lifted his head, lips still b****y. "Like roadkill?" "Sometimes." Cassian's shoulders hunched. "I try not to take from the living." Mira studied him for a long moment. Then she reached into the small pouch she had carried since her exile—a leather bag no bigger than her palm, filled with dried herbs and a single shard of obsidian. She crushed a handful of feverfew and yarrow between her fingers, whispered a soft word in the old tongue, and pressed the paste to the worst of the cuts on Cassian's arms. The skin closed almost immediately. Cassian flinched at first, then stared at the healed flesh. "You're… a witch?" "Was," Mira said flatly. "Now I'm just me." Luka snorted. "We're all just us now." That was how it began—not with grand declarations, but with small, practical mercies. They learned each other the way animals learn a new territory: cautiously, one sense at a time. Luka taught them scent. How to tell a deer's fear-sweat from a hunter's boot-leather. How to know when a storm was coming by the way the pines sighed. Mira taught them fire—how to call it small, how to make it dance without consuming. She showed Cassian how to bend light around himself so the sun wouldn't burn him to ash if he had to cross open ground in daylight. Cassian taught them stillness. How to wait in the dark until prey came close enough to touch. How to listen past the wind, past the owls, to the heartbeat of something alive and warm fifty paces away. They spoke more as the weeks turned to months. Luka told them about the pack. How his mother had sung him lullabies in the den even after the elders forbade it. How she had fought the betas when they tried to take him away. How her last words, screamed as silver chains dragged her into the trees, were his name. Mira spoke of the grove. Of her mother's hands—always smelling of lavender and earth. Of the night the fire came, how she had screamed for it to stop and it only grew louder. Of Morwen's cold voice saying, "Some gifts are curses in disguise." Cassian spoke least. But once, under a moonless sky when the dark pressed close, he whispered: "My sire laughed when I cried for my mother. He said humans were food, not family. I told him I would rather starve than become like him. He left me in an alley with my throat torn open. I didn't die. I just… changed." They did not comfort each other with words. Instead they moved closer. Shoulders touching. Backs to the same tree trunk. Three small bodies forming a triangle against the night. Winter deepened. Snow fell in heavy, silent curtains. Game grew scarce. Hunger became a constant companion. One night in late January, when the cold was so sharp it hurt to breathe, Luka woke to the sound of Mira crying. She was curled into a ball, hands pressed to her stomach. The hunger was eating her from the inside. Cassian was already awake, watching her with those hollow eyes. "She needs food," he said. "Real food. Not just scraps." Luka nodded. "There's a human farm two ridges over. Chickens. Goats. Maybe pigs." Mira lifted her head. "We can't. They'll shoot us." "They shoot wolves," Luka corrected. "Not children." Cassian's voice was soft. "They shoot anything that moves in the dark." They argued in whispers for an hour. In the end, hunger won. They moved under cover of the next storm—snow so thick it hid their tracks almost as soon as they were made. Luka led, nose low. Mira followed, weaving small charms of confusion around their footsteps so any dogs would lose the scent. Cassian brought up the rear, eyes scanning for lantern light or the glint of a shotgun barrel. The farm was small, poor, half-fallen. A single light burned in the kitchen window. A dog barked once, then went silent—whether from Mira's spell or Cassian's sudden, silent leap onto its back, they never asked. They took only what they needed: two hens, a sack of potatoes, a wheel of hard cheese left on the porch to cure. Luka snapped the hens' necks cleanly. Mira carried the sack. Cassian kept watch. They were almost back to the tree-line when the shotgun roared. The blast caught Mira in the shoulder. She dropped like a stone, blood blooming dark against the snow. Luka spun, snarling, half-shifted before he could stop himself. Cassian moved faster than thought—between one heartbeat and the next he was on the farmer, wrenching the g*n away, pinning the man to the ground without breaking skin. "Don't," Cassian hissed. "He's just protecting his own." The farmer—a man in his fifties, beard gray, eyes wide with terror—stared up at the child who moved like death itself. "You're… you're not human." "No," Cassian said quietly. "We're not." Luka scooped Mira up. She was shaking, teeth chattering, but alive. The wound was ugly but not mortal. Mira's own magic flickered weakly, trying to knit the torn flesh. Cassian released the farmer. "Go inside. Lock your doors. Forget you saw us." The man scrambled backward, never taking his eyes off them, then ran for the house. They retreated into the storm. Back in the hollow, Mira lay by the fire while Luka cleaned the wound with snow and boiled pine needles. Cassian paced, furious at himself. "I should have smelled him sooner." "You couldn't," Mira whispered. "The wind was wrong." Luka looked at both of them. "We can't stay here forever. They'll come looking. Farmers talk. Hunters listen." Cassian stopped pacing. "Then we move deeper. There's an old quarry north of here. Caves. Water. Hard to track." Mira tried to sit up, winced. "We need more than caves. We need… each other." They were silent for a long time. Then Luka spoke, voice rough with something like hope. "We're not alone anymore." Cassian looked down at the mark on his wrist—the crescent, the thorn, the black drop. It had not burned since the eclipse, but it had never faded either. "No," he said softly. "We're not." Outside, the snow kept falling, covering their tracks, hiding their small fire, burying the blood they had spilled. But in the shadows beyond the hollow, eyes watched. Not human eyes. Not yet. Elder Thorne stood motionless on the ridge above, silver fur dusted with snow, amber gaze fixed on the three children below. He had tracked them since the eclipse. He had seen the mark ignite. He had heard the prophecy whisper in his dreams. He turned and melted back into the trees. The Council would need to know. The Covenant had always feared the Triad. Now the Triad was no longer myth. It was breathing.
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