The kitchen was still thick with the smell of ozone and the metallic tang of blood. Elena sat on the floor, cradling Hilary's head in her lap. The pink glow in her eyes had faded, leaving her feeling hollow and cold. Every time Hilary winced, Elena felt a sharp pang in her own heart.
"Hold the bandage tighter, Mason!" Mark shouted. He was leaning over his sisters, his hands shaking. Even the strongest brother in the family looked small in the face of such a wound.
Just as the panic began to swallow them, the front door burst open. This time, it wasn't a monster.
"Elena! We saw the light from the ridge!"
A young man with broad shoulders and golden-brown hair rushed in, followed closely by a girl with a bow slung over her shoulder. This was Carlson, twenty-one years old and Elena's oldest friend. Behind him was Leah, nineteen, her dark eyes wide as she took in the ruined kitchen and the splintered back door.
Carlson dropped to his knees beside Elena. He didn't ask questions about the dead-quiet forest or why there were mice trapped in the corners of the room. He saw the blood and immediately went to work. He was the son of the village healer, and though he hadn't finished his training, his hands were steady.
"Leah, get me the clean water from the stove. Now!" Carlson commanded.
Leah moved with a hunter's grace. She grabbed a fresh cloth and a basin, her eyes darting to the ruined back door. "What happened here, Elena? It looks like a war zone."
Elena couldn't find the words. She just looked at her hands, which were still stained with the gold of the Fae and the red of her sister.
"Orcs," Beatrice whispered from the stairs. "But then... Elena... she did something."
Leah stopped, her hand hovering over the water basin. She looked at Elena, really looked at her. She had known Elena since they were children, playing in the streams and hiding from the village elders. Elena had always been the quiet one, the one who saw things others missed. But this was different. There was a lingering heat coming off Elena's skin, a pressure in the air that made Leah's skin prickle.
"They're gone," Elena muttered, her voice sounding far away. "I made them go away."
Carlson ignored the talk of magic for a moment. He was focused on Hilary. He peeled back the blood-soaked fabric of her dress, his jaw tightening when he saw the depth of the claw marks.
"It's deep," Carlson said, his voice low so the parents wouldn't hear him from the stairs. "The Orcs carry rot on their claws. If I can't clean this out properly, the fever will take her by morning."
Elena's heart skipped a beat. "No. No, Carlson, you have to save her. She saved me."
"I'm trying, El," Carlson said, his brow furrowed in concentration. "But I need more than just water and herbs. I need a miracle."
Leah stepped forward, her hand resting on Elena's shoulder. "Elena, look at me. When the light happened, what did you feel? There is still something... strange about the air in here. It feels like the woods before a storm."
Elena looked at her friend. She looked at Leah's steady gaze and Carlson's desperate work. She looked at the Fae woman, Betty, who was still unconscious against the wall, her golden blood slowly stopping its flow as if the house itself were trying to keep her alive.
"I felt everything," Elena whispered. "I felt the truth of them. They weren't just monsters. They were small, hateful things. So I made them small."
Carlson looked up then, his eyes searching Elena's face. He reached out and touched her forehead. He jumped back, his fingers stinging as if he had touched a hot coal.
"You're burning up," he said. "Elena, whatever you did, it's still inside you."
Leah knelt on the other side. "Use it, Elena. If you can change a monster into a mouse, can you change a wound into whole skin? Can you see the truth of Hilary's body?"
The idea was terrifying. Elena didn't know how to control the pink light. It had come out of her like a scream, a raw reaction to her sister's pain. But as she looked at Hilary's pale face, she knew she had to try.
She reached out her hands, hovering them just above Carlson's busy fingers.
"I don't know how," Elena cried.
"Just want it," Leah encouraged, her voice a firm anchor in the storm. "Want her to stay with us more than you fear the dark."
Elena closed her eyes. She stopped listening to the rain. She stopped listening to Mark's heavy breathing. She reached deep into the center of her chest, searching for that spark of rose-colored fire.
The heat began to grow. It spread from her heart to her shoulders, then down her arms to her fingertips.
Outside, the wind picked up, howling through the trees. Miles away, in the Obsidian Castle, Aiden paused as he stepped into his steaming bath. He felt a surge of pure, healing light ripple through the tether in his soul. It was so bright it almost blinded his inner eye.
"So," Aiden murmured, his voice echoing in the marble bathroom. "She isn't just a seer. She is a healer too."
Back in the cottage, the kitchen was suddenly bathed in a soft, warm glow. It wasn't the violent explosion of before. This was a gentle, pulsing light, the color of a summer dawn.
Carlson watched in awe as the jagged, red gashes on Hilary's stomach began to pull together. The skin didn't just stitch itself back; it glowed for a moment before becoming smooth and unscarred. The gray tint of the Orc's poison vanished, replaced by the healthy flush of sleep.
Hilary's breath evened out. She sighed, a deep and peaceful sound, and drifted into a natural slumber.
Elena slumped forward, her strength completely gone. Carlson caught her before she hit the floor.
"She did it," Leah whispered, her voice full of wonder and a little bit of fear. "She really did it."
Carlson looked at the girl in his arms. He had loved Elena in his own quiet way for years, but the girl he was holding now was a stranger. She was something ancient. Something that the kings and vampires of the world would kill to possess.
"We have to hide this," Carlson said, his voice grim. "If the Palace finds out what she is... if the Bloodhound Prince hears of a girl who can turn monsters into mice and heal the dying... she will never be free again."
Leah looked at the ruined door, the dark forest waiting outside. "I think it's too late for that, Carlson. Look at the Fae. Look at the sky. The world already knows she's here."
The storm outside finally began to tire, the heavy rain turning into a soft, rhythmic drumming against the thatched roof. Inside the kitchen, the silence was heavy. Now that the immediate danger had passed, the weight of what had happened began to settle over them like a thick blanket of snow.
Mason and Mark had finished bracing the back door with heavy timber and a dresser. It was a temporary fix, but it kept the cold wind out. Their parents, Raymond and Amanda, had finally descended the stairs. Amanda was currently huddled in a corner with Beatrice and Hilary, who was sleeping soundly on a makeshift bed of blankets. Raymond stood by the hearth, his weathered face etched with a fear that had nothing to do with Orcs and everything to do with his youngest daughter.
Elena sat at the scarred wooden table, her head resting on her arms. Carlson sat across from her, his medical kit still open. He was watching her with a mix of devotion and worry, while Leah paced the small room, her hand never straying far from the hilt of her hunting knife.
"The light is still in the air," Leah whispered, glancing at the corners of the ceiling. "It feels like the house is holding its breath."
Suddenly, a soft, musical groan came from the corner of the room.
Everyone turned. Betty, the Fae woman, was finally stirring. The golden blood on her tunic had dried into a crust that looked like delicate embroidery. She pushed herself up against the wall, her movements fluid despite her exhaustion. When she opened her eyes, they weren't white or brown; they were a shimmering, liquid silver.
Her gaze skipped over the brothers, ignored the parents, and locked onto Elena.
"You," Betty whispered. Her voice sounded like the rustle of dry leaves in a sacred grove. "You are the one who felt the snap."
Elena lifted her head. "I don't know what I am. I just wanted my sister to live."
Betty let out a short, jagged laugh. She struggled to her feet, leaning heavily on the stones of the cold fireplace. "You wanted her to live, so you rewrote the laws of the physical world. You turned soldiers of the Shadow Court into vermin. Do you have any idea what that means, little moon?"
"Don't call her that," Carlson said, standing up. He moved to block Betty’s view of Elena, his protective instincts flaring. "She’s a girl from the valley. She’s my friend. Whatever magic happened tonight was an accident."
Betty looked at Carlson as if he were an interesting bug. "An accident? Magic like that is never an accident. It is an awakening. The Moon Goddess has been silent for five hundred years. Her temples are dust. Her songs are forgotten. And yet, here is her blood, sitting in a kitchen that smells of old potatoes."
Elena felt a shiver run down her spine. "The Moon Goddess? I’m just Elena. My father is Raymond, and my mother is Amanda. I was born in that room upstairs during a snowstorm."
Betty’s silver eyes softened, but there was a deep sadness in them. "The body is a vessel, child. Your parents gave you your flesh, but the soul? Your soul was hidden away before the first Vampire King took his throne. You were the missing spark. The prophecy said the Bloodhound would find the heart, but it did not say the heart would be ready to be found."
At the mention of the Bloodhound, the room grew even colder. Everyone in the kingdom knew that name. Prince Aiden was not just a royal; he was a legend of terror. They said he could smell a lie from ten miles away and that his shadow could move on its own to slit the throats of his enemies.
"He felt you," Betty continued, her voice growing urgent. "When you healed that girl, you lit a fire in the darkness. Every supernatural creature within a thousand leagues felt the pulse. The Orcs were just the first to arrive because they were already nearby. But the others... the bigger things... they are coming."
Raymond stepped forward, his voice gruff. "Then we leave. We head south to the coast. We can disappear in the ports."
"You cannot run from a Vampire who can track the scent of your soul, human," Betty said, her gaze returning to Elena. "And you certainly cannot run from the one who is tethered to you by fate."
Elena looked at her family. She saw the fear in her mother’s eyes and the exhaustion in her brothers' faces. She looked at Carlson, who was gripping the back of her chair so hard his knuckles were white.
"I won't let them hurt you," Elena said, her voice steadying. "If I can turn them into mice, I will turn a whole army into mice if I have to."
Betty shook her head. "The next ones won't be so easy. You used a raw burst of power, but you are empty now. I can see it. Your spirit is a dry well. If they come again tonight, we all die."
"Then what do we do?" Leah asked, her eyes sharp.
"We move," Betty said. "But not to the coast. We go deeper into the forest. There is a place where the Fae used to dance, a place where the veil is thin. I can mask your scent there for a few days. Just enough time for Elena to learn how to breathe without setting the sky on fire."
Meanwhile, in the Obsidian Castle, the mood had shifted from "dramatic" to "mildly annoyed."
Aiden was now fully dressed. He wore a high-collared black coat with silver buttons and boots that cost more than Elena’s entire village. He looked every bit the dark, brooding Prince of the Night.
He was standing by his window, staring toward the dark silhouette of the northern forest. The pull in his chest was constant now, a low hum that told him exactly which direction to go.
"The carriage is ready, My Lord," Silas announced, appearing in the doorway. "Though I must say, traveling at this hour is quite uncivilized. The bats will think we are being desperate."
Aiden didn't turn around. "She healed someone, Silas. Not just a scratch. She repaired a mortal wound with pure lunar light. If the High Council finds her before I do, they will put her in a cage and use her like a battery."
"Or," Silas added helpfully, "they will kill her to keep the balance of power. People are quite boring that way."
Aiden’s jaw tightened. "I am not going for the power, Silas."
Silas raised an eyebrow. "Oh? Then why are we bringing the velvet-lined traveling cloak? And why did you spend ten minutes making sure your hair looked 'perfectly disheveled'?"
Aiden turned, giving his butler a look that would have turned a lesser man to stone. "I am going because the prophecy says her heart belongs to the Bloodhound. And I am the Bloodhound."
"And you've been lonely for five centuries," Silas muttered under his breath. "It’s alright to admit you want a girlfriend, Sire. No need to blame the stars for everything."
Aiden ignored him and swept past, his cloak billowing behind him. As he walked through the grand hall, he passed a tall, slender woman leaning against a pillar. She had golden hair and a smile that didn't reach her eyes.
"Going somewhere, Aiden?" she asked, her voice like silk over a trap.
Aiden didn't stop. "None of your business, Ramela."
Ramela, the shapeshifting maid who held more power than she let on, watched him leave with a thoughtful expression. She flicked her tongue over her teeth, her eyes momentarily turning into yellow slits.
"A moon daughter," Ramela whispered to the empty hall. "How very inconvenient for my plans."
She shifted her form, her body shrinking and fur sprouting from her skin. Within seconds, a sleek, gray fox trotted out of a side door, vanishing into the night just as Aiden’s carriage began to roll.
The departure from the cottage was frantic.
Mark and Mason worked with a grim speed, loading a small wooden cart with sacks of grain, dried meat, and every blanket they owned. Raymond and Amanda stood by the hearth one last time, looking at the home where they had raised eight children. It was a house filled with memories of scraped knees and birthday stews, but now it felt like a target painted against the dark backdrop of the trees.
"We cannot take the main road," Betty warned. She was draped in a heavy wool cloak that Beatrice had found in the attic. The Fae looked stronger now, though her silver eyes remained clouded with a deep, ancient fatigue. "The shapeshifters have scouts. If we walk the open path, we are inviting a slaughter."
"Then we take the Deer Trail," Carlson suggested, his hand resting on the handle of the cart. He looked at Elena, who was helping a shaky Hilary into the back of the wagon. "It is narrow and overgrown, but it leads deep into the heart of the forest. Most villagers are too afraid to go that far."
"Good," Betty whispered. "Fear is a wonderful shield."
They set off just as the first hint of gray light began to bleed into the horizon. The forest was not quiet. The trees seemed to groan under the weight of the night, and the wind carried a strange, high-pitched whistling that made Elena’s skin crawl.
Elena walked at the back of the group with Leah. Every few minutes, Elena would glance at her palms. She half-expected to see them glowing pink again, but they were just pale and trembling from the cold.
"You did well, El," Leah said quietly, her bow gripped tight in her hand. "But you need to rest your mind. You look like you haven't slept in a decade."
"I can't," Elena replied, her voice barely a whisper. "Every time I close my eyes, I see those mice. I see the way their bones snapped. It wasn't just magic, Leah. It felt like... like I was peeling back a layer of the world and changing the rules."
"That is exactly what you were doing," Betty called out from the front, her ears sharp enough to catch a falling leaf. "The Daughter of the Moon does not ask for permission. She commands. But a command with no discipline is a death sentence for the commander."
They had been walking for three hours when the forest began to change. The trees grew taller, their trunks thick with glowing blue moss that hummed with a low frequency. The Deer Trail vanished, swallowed by a carpet of white ferns that crunched like glass under their feet.
Suddenly, the horses pulling the cart stopped. They tossed their heads, their eyes rolling in terror.
"What is it?" Mason asked, reaching for his axe.
A thick, purple mist began to roll across the forest floor. It didn't behave like normal fog. It swirled in purposeful patterns, rising up to form a wall in front of them. From within the mist, a dozen tall, thin figures emerged.
They were not Orcs. They were Wood-Wights—skeletal creatures made of rotted bark and vine, with hollow sockets where eyes should be. They were the guardians of the deep forest, and they did not like trespassers.
The Wights raised spears made of sharpened flint. A low, rattling sound filled the air, like a thousand dry sticks breaking at once.
"Stay back!" Mark roared, stepping in front of the cart.
"They won't listen to steel," Betty hissed, her silver eyes flashing. "Elena! You must speak to them. Tell them who you are!"
"I don't know who I am!" Elena cried, her heart racing.
One of the Wights lunged forward, its wooden spear whistling through the air toward Mark.
"No!" Elena screamed.
She didn't wait for the pink light this time. she threw her hands out, picturing a wall of solid ice. Instead of ice, a wave of shimmering lunar silver erupted from her chest. It hit the Wight, but it didn't turn it into a mouse. Instead, the creature froze. Green leaves began to sprout from its rotted limbs. Tiny white flowers bloomed in its eye sockets.
The Wight dropped its spear and fell to its knees, no longer a monster, but a living, breathing tree.
The other Wights stopped. They lowered their spears, their hollow heads tilting in unison. They didn't see an enemy anymore. They saw a gardener.
Meanwhile, the "Bloodhound’s" journey was facing a much more frustrating obstacle.
Aiden’s magnificent black carriage, pulled by six coal-black stallions, was currently stuck in a mud pit the size of a small pond.
"Silas," Aiden said, his voice dangerously calm. He was leaning out of the window, his expensive silk sleeve dangling dangerously close to a splash of brown sludge. "Tell me why we are stationary."
Silas was standing on a dry patch of grass, holding a purple silk umbrella over his head to shield himself from a light drizzle. "Well, Sire, it appears that the laws of physics do not care for your royal lineage. The wheels are quite buried. Also, the horses have decided they would rather eat this particularly lush clover than pull two tons of obsidian and ego through a swamp."
Aiden stepped out of the carriage, his boots sinking into the mud with a squelch that made him wince. "I could fly, Silas. I could turn into a cloud of bats and be there in twenty minutes."
"And arrive covered in soot and smelling like a cave?" Silas asked, tut-ting loudly. "Think of the first impression, My Lord. The prophecy says 'The Bloodhound shall find his heart,' not 'The damp rodent shall startle a kitchen maid.' Appearance is everything."
Aiden looked down at his ruined boots and let out a long, dramatic sigh that moved the trees around them. "I hate the countryside. Everything is so... moist."
Suddenly, a gray fox trotted out of the bushes. It sat near the edge of the mud pit, its yellow eyes watching Aiden with an expression that looked suspiciously like a smirk.
Aiden narrowed his eyes. "Is that a fox? Or is it Ramela come to mock me?"
The fox let out a sharp, yapping sound that sounded remarkably like a laugh, then turned and vanished into the brush, heading north toward the very forest where Elena was currently turning monsters into shrubbery.
Aiden wiped a smudge of mud from his cheek. "Get the shovel, Silas. If that fox beats me to her, I’m turning you into a footstool."
"Of course, Sire," Silas replied, not moving an inch. "I believe the shovel is under the crate of fine wine. This may take some time."