Part 4: The Shadow Wolves

936 Words
The forest floor trembled beneath Selene’s feet. At first, she thought it was her imagination—the lingering echo of the collapsing temple—but when the ground split with a low rumble, her breath caught. Shapes poured from the fissures, crawling out of the void itself. They weren’t fully solid, more suggestion than flesh—wolves forged of smoke and darkness, eyes burning like coals against the endless black. Selene stumbled back. “What… what are those?” Eryon’s stance shifted instantly—protective, ready, his hand pulling her behind him. “Shadow wolves. Born of the Veil. They hunt whatever doesn’t belong here.” The largest of them prowled forward, its movements unnervingly fluid, as if bones were an afterthought. It growled low, and the sound vibrated through Selene’s ribcage like a warning drum. “Why do they look… wrong?” she whispered. “Because they are wrong.” His voice was taut, strained but controlled. “They’re fragments of what once lived, twisted into predators of the in-between.” The pack spread out, circling. Selene’s pulse hammered. They were fast—too fast. Her human body wouldn’t stand a chance. She felt Eryon’s fingers brush hers, fleeting but deliberate. A silent vow. Then the first wolf leapt. Eryon moved like lightning. His form blurred, shifting mid-motion, his body stretching, bones reshaping, until fur burst through his skin and he landed in full lupine form. His black pelt rippled with power, and his eyes gleamed with silver fire. The clash was immediate. He met the shadow wolf mid-air, jaws snapping against smoke and flame. The two collided, rolling in a frenzy of teeth and claws, until Eryon hurled it across the clearing. It dissolved into ash the moment it struck the ground, but already two more replaced it. Selene’s chest tightened. For every one he struck down, the Veil spawned more. It was endless. She searched desperately for something—anything—when a shadow wolf lunged straight for her. She screamed, stumbling back—then a flash of silver burst from her hands. Light. Pure and blinding, pouring from her palms like liquid fire. The wolf disintegrated before it even touched her, scattering into harmless smoke. Selene froze, staring at her hands. “What… what was that?” The wolves hissed, recoiling from the glow. They didn’t just fear it—they hated it. Eryon, still locked in combat, growled between strikes. “Your blood. It’s awakening.” Selene didn’t understand, but there was no time. More wolves surged, their forms thicker now, hungrier. Instinct took over—she raised her hands again, and light answered. It shot in arcs, burning through the shadows, cutting swaths through the pack. The power felt strange—wild, alive. It wasn’t something she summoned so much as something inside her demanding release. But with every burst, her strength drained. Her vision blurred. The edges of the world swam. “Selene!” Eryon’s voice roared through the chaos. She blinked and saw him, blood staining his fur, still fighting, still unrelenting. But his movements were slowing. The wolves weren’t giving up. If anything, they were adapting. Selene’s knees buckled. Her power flickered. Panic surged—if she collapsed now, both of them would be torn apart. Her chest heaved. She thought of her mother’s illusion, the temple, the whispers. Everything the Veil wanted from her. And then she thought of Eryon—his voice, his touch, the way he’d pulled her back when she nearly lost herself. “No,” she whispered. “You won’t take him from me.” The words ignited something deeper than fear. Her blood burned. Her skin glowed faintly, veins lit with silver light. She raised her hands again—only this time, the light didn’t burst outward. It wrapped around her, forming a shield. The wolves crashed against it, snarling, but their forms melted against the barrier like frost under the sun. Eryon staggered toward her, shifting back into his human form mid-stride, his body battered and bruised. He pressed his hand against the glowing shield, his eyes wide with awe. “Selene…” His voice was raw, reverent. “You’re not just mortal. You’re—” The ground split again, cutting him off. From the fissure, a figure rose—taller than any of the wolves, cloaked in tattered black. Its face was hidden, but its eyes burned brighter than the rest. The wolves fell back instantly, bowing to it. Eryon’s jaw clenched. “The Warden.” Selene’s pulse spiked. “What is that?” “The one who governs this realm.” His voice hardened, grim. “And if he’s here, it means the Veil itself has judged you.” The Warden lifted a hand, and the wolves vanished. The silence was heavier than their howls. Its gaze fell on Selene. She felt it—not just as eyes on her skin, but as a weight pressing into her soul. “Child of two worlds,” it spoke, voice echoing like a thousand whispers at once. “You do not belong.” Selene’s shield flickered. She stumbled back into Eryon, who caught her before she fell. He held her tight, glaring at the Warden. “She is mine. You will not take her.” The Warden tilted its head. “Then she will be your undoing.” The words slithered into the air, heavy with prophecy. And with that, the figure dissolved, leaving only the echo of its warning. Selene gasped, trembling. “Eryon… what did it mean?” His arms tightened around her. His silence was answer enough.
Free reading for new users
Scan code to download app
Facebookexpand_more
  • author-avatar
    Writer
  • chap_listContents
  • likeADD