The deeper they walked, the quieter the forest became.
Not peaceful quiet.
Not natural quiet.
A heavy, deliberate stillness — like the woods themselves were listening.
Charlie kept pace between Matthew and Lysander, refusing to be shepherded, even though both men instinctively angled their bodies toward her. Protecting. Guarding. Blocking each other.
It would’ve been flattering if it weren’t so unbelievably exhausting.
Eventually, the trees thinned, opening into a clearing where the sunlight dimmed without reason, shadows pooling like ink spilled on old parchment.
At the far end stood a structure.
It looked like a small chapel — aged wood, moss-covered roof, windows made of stained glass cracked with time.
But the foundation was stone.
Worn smooth by countless paws.
Scarred with claw marks.
A history carved into it.
The door was made of bone.
Actual bone — bleached white, fitted together like puzzle pieces, ribs and femurs and vertebrae woven into an arch too precise to be accidental.
Charlie stopped.
Her wolf went still.
“Okay,” she said. “This is… cute. Very rustic serial-killer aesthetic.”
Matthew shot her a warning look. “Charlie.”
“What?” she said. “If we’re entering a murder cottage, I want that on the record.”
Lysander paused at the threshold, turning to her with a measured calm.
“This place is called the Bone-Chapel Accord. It predates every pack in this region. Every treaty. Every feud.”
Charlie folded her arms. “Why bones?”
“To honor our dead.”
“Whose bones are those, specifically?”
“Wolves,” he said simply. “Our ancestors. Their remains form the gatekeepers of our neutrality.”
Charlie stared at the door again.
“That’s either incredibly respectful,” she said, “or the world’s most intense craft project.”
Matthew muttered, “Charlie, please don’t antagonize the ancient death-shrine.”
“Hey,” she said, “I cope with sarcasm. It’s either this or a panic attack, and since I can’t afford therapy—”
The bone door creaked open as if responding to her voice.
A cool breath of air slid out, carrying the scent of old magic, damp stone, faint moon-washed fur, and something else—
Recognition.
Like the Chapel somehow knew who was entering.
Lysander inclined his head. “Enter freely. Both of you. Violence is forbidden here.”
Matthew hesitated. “How forbidden?”
“By death,” Lysander answered.
Matthew tightened his jaw but stepped inside.
Charlie followed.
The interior was dim but not dark — lit by a soft glow emanating from lines etched into the stone walls, runes woven in circular patterns. The floor was smooth slate, cool underfoot. Faded tapestries hung between carved pillars depicting wolves under different moon phases.
It wasn’t ominous like she expected.
It was… reverent.
Charlie’s wolf settled uneasily, but didn’t rebel.
A good sign, she guessed.
Lysander led them toward a stone basin at the center of the room.
“This is where we speak truth,” he said quietly. “Where no lie can pass the lips of those who stand inside the Accord.”
Matthew eyed the basin. “Magic lie detector?”
“In essence.”
Charlie exhaled. “Okay. Let’s get this over with. What’s hunting me?”
Lysander placed both hands on the edge of the basin. “A Hollowed.”
Matthew stiffened. “Impossible.”
Charlie raised an eyebrow. “Gonna need more than a scary capital letter.”
Lysander lifted his gaze to her. “A Hollowed is a wolf that has lost its soul.”
She waited for him to say he was joking.
He didn’t.
“That man in the woods,” Matthew said quietly. “You’re telling me it was one of yours?”
“No,” Lysander said sharply. “Not one of mine. But it was made from a wolf. From a ritual that has been outlawed for centuries.”
Charlie swallowed. “Outlawed because…?”
Lysander’s voice was soft. “Because it rips the spirit from the wolf and replaces it with hunger.”
Charlie took a step back, feeling suddenly cold. “Who would do that?”
Matthew answered before Lysander could.
“The Dire Moon Sect.”
Charlie blinked. “Sounds like a metal band. Or a cult.”
Matthew grimaced. “Cult.”
Lysander corrected, “A renegade pack. Once. Before they fell to insanity.”
“And now?” Charlie asked.
“They believe,” Lysander said, “that the prophecy speaks of you.”
Matthew’s voice dropped. “Because she’s newly turned. Because her form is unstable.”
“And because,” Lysander replied, “her shapeshift isn’t bound by any pack’s magic. She is… unclaimed. Untied. Unwritten.”
Charlie raised her hands. “Fantastic. Love that for me. But why hunt me?”
Lysander stepped closer.
Too close.
Not touching her — but she felt the warmth of his presence like a dangerous gravity.
“They think,” he said quietly, “that if they take your spirit… they can complete their ritual. Create a Hollowed with your power.”
Matthew moved instantly, gripping Charlie’s arm protectively.
“No,” he said. “Absolutely not. They are not touching her.”
Lysander’s gaze cooled. “Release her.”
Matthew didn’t. “I’m not letting her be a pawn in your pack politics.”
“And I’m not letting a hunter dictate wolf prophecy,” Lysander snapped.
Charlie yanked her arm free and glared at both of them.
“Oh my GOD. I am not a chew toy. Stop grabbing me like I’m a murder magnet you can redirect.”
“You ARE a murder magnet,” Matthew said.
Lysander nodded. “It is objectively correct.”
Charlie threw her hands up. “Helpful!”
The runes around them hummed faintly, as if agreeing.
Charlie pressed her palms to the stone basin, grounding herself.
“Okay. So the corrupted wolf wants me either dead or… consumed. The Dire Moon cult wants me as a magical battery. All the packs are… what? Watching me like some cosmic wrestling belt?”
Matthew and Lysander exchanged a look.
Not hostile.
Not competitive.
Troubled.
Lysander spoke first.
“You are at the center of something old, Charlie. Older than any pack. Older than this city. Once, long ago, wolves like you were seen as harbingers.”
“Harbingers of what?”
Lysander held her gaze.
“Change.”
A beat.
“Or ruin.”
The runes pulsed gently under his words.
Matthew’s voice softened. “Charlie… we’re going to keep you alive. I promise you that.”
Lysander’s voice was quieter, but deeper. “And I will keep you whole.”
Charlie stared at both of them — Matthew, earnest and fiercely protective; Lysander, calm and dangerous and impossibly certain.
And for a moment, beneath the fear and confusion and anger…
Her wolf felt something else.
Recognition.
Like she truly was meant to be here — between them.
Before she could process that, the chapel trembled.
The runes flickered.
A voice — not human, not wolf — whispered from the walls:
It is coming.
Matthew reached for his weapon.
Lysander’s eyes blazed gold.
Charlie’s heart dropped.
Whatever hunted her had found their neutral ground.
And it wasn’t alone.