The locker room emptied quickly after practice, everyone eager to escape Coach Miller's grueling session. My muscles ached from Sage's not-so-accidental collisions throughout training. I winced as I peeled off my sweat-soaked jersey, a large bruise already forming where her shoulder had slammed into mine.
I thought I was alone until I heard the soft click of the locker room door. Looking up, I found Sage leaning against the wall, still in her practice gear, watching me with that predatory smile.
"What do you want?" I asked, trying to keep my voice steady. Something about her presence made the hair on the back of my neck stand up.
"Just a little captain-to-captain chat," she said, pushing off the wall and walking toward me with a grace that seemed almost inhuman. "Or should I say, future captain to current captain?"
I squared my shoulders despite the pain. "I earned my position, Sage. One practice doesn't change that."
She laughed, the sound echoing off the tiled walls. "Earned? Is that what you think?" She moved closer, invading my personal space. "Let me make something perfectly clear, Carter. You're playing a game you don't even understand, with limitations you can't even comprehend."
"What are you talking about?"
"Your pathetic human limitations," she sneered, her eyes flashing with something dangerous. "You should step down now, before you embarrass yourself further. Let someone more... worthy take over."
Human limitations? What was she talking about? The way she said "human" made it sound like she considered herself something else entirely.
"I'm not stepping down," I said firmly, though my heart was racing. "And I don't know what game you're playing, but—"
"Game?" She stepped even closer, and I found myself backing against the lockers. "This is no game, Lila. This is about natural order. About strength. About what you are versus what I am."
For a moment, I thought I saw something flicker in her eyes—a strange amber glow that couldn't be just a trick of the light.
"You're crazy," I whispered, trying to slide away from her.
Sage's hand shot out, slamming against the locker beside my head, the metal denting slightly under the impact. My eyes widened. No one should be that strong.
"Crazy?" she whispered, her face inches from mine. "No. Just superior in every way that matters. Think about it, Carter. For your own good."
With one last contemptuous look, she turned and walked out, leaving me shaking against the lockers, staring at the small dent her hand had left in the metal.
---
I couldn't shake Sage's words as I headed to the field for afternoon training the next day. The joint session with the boys' team was Coach Miller's new initiative—supposedly to "elevate our competitive edge" before the state championship qualifiers.
As I set up the practice cones, I noticed Noah watching me from across the field. He stood apart from his teammates, his intense gaze following my movements. Even from this distance, I could feel the weight of his attention, like a physical touch against my skin.
I pretended not to notice, focusing on my task, but when I glanced up again, he was walking toward me with purposeful strides.
"Need a hand?" he asked, his deep voice sending an involuntary shiver down my spine.
"I've got it," I replied, more curtly than I intended. After yesterday's confrontation with Sage, I was on edge.
Noah studied my face, his eyes narrowing slightly. "You seem tense. Is everything okay?"
"Fine," I said automatically, then sighed. "Just team stuff."
"Sage Blackwood?" he asked, surprising me with his perception.
I looked up at him sharply. "How did you—"
"I've seen how she plays," he said simply. "And how she looks at you."
Something in his tone made me wonder if he knew more than he was letting on. Before I could question him further, Coach Miller blew her whistle, calling us to attention.
"Today we're working on finishing drills," she announced. "Wolfe, since you've got the best shooting technique on the boys' team, you'll demonstrate with Carter."
My stomach flipped as Noah nodded and gestured for me to join him in front of the goal. The rest of both teams formed a semicircle around us, including Sage, whose eyes narrowed as Noah positioned himself beside me.
"The key is in the approach angle," Noah explained to the group, but his eyes were on me. "May I?"
I nodded, not trusting my voice. He moved behind me, his chest almost touching my back as he gently positioned my shoulders.
"You want to open your body to the goal," he said, his breath warm against my ear. His hands moved to my hips, adjusting my stance, and I felt heat rush to my face. "Plant your non-kicking foot here."
His touch was light but firm, professional yet somehow intimate. As he guided me through the motion, his body shadowing mine, I became hyperaware of every point where we almost touched, of his scent—that same wild, earthy smell I'd noticed in our first encounter.
"Now," he murmured, "when you strike, follow through completely." His hand covered mine as we pantomimed the perfect shot together.
When he finally stepped away, I felt strangely bereft. I glanced up to find Sage staring at us, her expression murderous.
"Let's see it for real," Coach Miller called.
Noah set the ball up for me, our fingers brushing as he passed it. "You've got this," he said quietly, with a confidence that seemed to flow into me.
I took a deep breath, approached the ball using Noah's technique, and struck it cleanly. The ball rocketed into the top corner of the net with more power than I'd ever generated before.
A cheer went up from my teammates, and Noah gave me a smile that made my heart skip. "Perfect," he said, and somehow I knew he wasn't just talking about the shot.
---
During the scrimmage that followed, something strange happened. As Sage charged toward me with the ball, I felt a surge of energy unlike anything I'd experienced before. My vision seemed to sharpen, my reflexes quicken. I easily intercepted her pass, leaving her momentarily stunned.
It happened again when I sprinted down the wing—I was faster than I'd ever been, outrunning defenders who usually caught me easily. When I collided with a midfielder from the boys' team, he was the one who stumbled back, not me.
"What's gotten into you today, Carter?" Coach Miller called, clearly impressed. "Whatever it is, bottle it!"
I caught Noah watching me with an unreadable expression—something between pride and concern. Sage, on the other hand, looked increasingly agitated with each display of my newfound strength and speed.
When practice ended, I lingered on the field, testing this strange new energy by taking shots from distance. Each one flew with power and accuracy I'd never possessed before.
"Enjoying your little adrenaline rush?"
I turned to find Sage standing behind me, her face twisted in a sneer.
"What are you talking about?" I asked, suddenly wary.
"You think you're special because you had one good practice?" She laughed coldly. "You have no idea what real power is."
Before I could respond, she stepped closer, her eyes suddenly changing color—shifting from hazel to a brilliant amber that glowed in the fading daylight.
"This is power," she whispered, and to my horror, I watched as her fingernails lengthened into sharp, curved claws.
I stumbled backward, my heart pounding. "What—what are you?"
"What you'll never be," she said, her voice deeper, rougher. "I'm a werewolf, Lila. Born to strength and speed you pathetic humans can only dream of." She flexed her claws. "And let me make one thing clear—a weak human like you could never satisfy an Alpha's needs. Noah deserves better than some fragile human girl playing at being strong."
I stared at her transformed hand, unable to process what I was seeing. Werewolves weren't real. They couldn't be. Yet the evidence was right in front of me, impossible to deny.
"You're insane," I whispered, but even I could hear the uncertainty in my voice.
Sage smiled, her teeth suddenly looking sharper than they should. "Am I? Or are you just afraid to admit that you're out of your depth?" She retracted her claws slowly, her eyes returning to normal. "Stay away from Noah, Lila. He belongs in our world, not yours."
As she walked away, leaving me frozen on the field, I couldn't shake the feeling that the world as I knew it had just shattered—and that the strange energy I'd felt during practice might mean I was caught in the middle of something far more dangerous than a simple rivalry.
I couldn't sleep. Every time I closed my eyes, I saw Sage's face transforming, her eyes glowing that impossible amber color, her fingernails extending into deadly claws. Werewolves. The word itself seemed ridiculous, something from horror movies and Halloween stories—not something that existed in my ordinary high school life.
But I couldn't deny what I'd seen. The way her fingers had elongated, the inhuman glow in her eyes, the dent she'd left in the metal locker with just a casual slam of her hand.
"You're losing it, Carter," I whispered to my darkened ceiling, the digital clock beside my bed showing 3:17 AM. "Stress-induced hallucinations. That's all."
When I finally did drift off, my dreams were chaotic and terrifying. I was running through endless woods, something monstrous pursuing me. I could hear its breathing, feel its presence closing in. Just as massive jaws were about to close around my neck, I jerked awake, drenched in sweat and gasping for air.
Mom knocked on my door as I was getting ready for school, her concerned face appearing in the doorway. "Honey? You okay? I heard you crying out in your sleep."
"Just a nightmare," I said, avoiding her eyes as I pulled my hair into a ponytail. "Big game coming up, that's all."
She studied me for a moment too long. "You know you can talk to me about anything, right?"
Something in her tone made me look up. There was an unusual intensity in her expression, almost like... fear? But what would she have to be afraid of?
"I know, Mom," I said, forcing a smile. "I'm fine, really."
She nodded, but didn't look convinced. "Good luck at practice today."
---
School was a blur. I moved through my classes like a ghost, jumping at shadows, examining every student with new suspicion. Were there others like Sage? How many of my classmates might actually be... something else? The thought made me dizzy.
In the hallway between classes, I felt a strange warmth spread through my chest, a sudden calm that made no sense given my mental state. I turned and found Noah leaning against a locker nearby, watching me with those intense eyes. He didn't approach or speak, just gave me a small nod that somehow felt like a lifeline in my sea of confusion.
Throughout the day, he seemed to appear whenever my anxiety peaked—in the cafeteria when Sage walked by with her new clique, outside my classroom when I nearly had a panic attack thinking about what I'd seen. Each time, he didn't intrude, just existed in my space like a silent guardian, and each time, that inexplicable calm would wash over me.
I wanted to ask him what he knew, why Sage had mentioned his name, why she seemed to think he "belonged" in some world I didn't understand. But the words stuck in my throat every time our eyes met.
---
"Carter! What the hell was that pass?" Coach Miller's voice cut through my fog as another ball sailed well over Maya's head and out of bounds.
I muttered an apology, trying to focus on the regional qualifier match that was quickly slipping away from us. The scoreboard showed a tie game with fifteen minutes left, but it felt like we were down by ten goals given how poorly I was playing.
Every time I got the ball, I'd see Sage watching me from her position on the wing, that knowing smirk on her face. My hands would shake, my vision would blur, and another opportunity would be wasted.
"Get it together," Maya hissed as she jogged past me. "What's going on with you?"
I couldn't tell her that I was questioning my sanity, that I was seeing monsters where there should be teammates. I couldn't explain that every time I closed my eyes, I saw glowing amber irises and razor-sharp claws.
When Coach finally pulled me from the game with five minutes left, I couldn't even protest. I sat on the bench, head in my hands, listening to the crowd's murmurs of disappointment. The team captain, benched in a crucial qualifier.
Somehow, we scraped out a win—no thanks to me. Maya scored in the final minute, sending us to the next round of the state championship tournament. The team celebrated, but their glances in my direction were confused and concerned.
As we filed off the field, I overheard two local sports reporters talking.
"Carter's leadership is questionable at this point," one said. "Worst game I've seen her play."
"Maybe it's time for a change in captaincy," the other replied. "That new girl, Blackwood, seems like she's got what it takes."
I quickened my pace, fighting back tears, knowing that Sage had heard every word—and was probably savoring my humiliation.
---
Long after everyone had gone home, I returned to the darkened field. The stadium lights were off, but the full moon provided enough light to see the goal posts and penalty area. I dropped my bag by the sideline and walked to the center of the field, then sank to my knees in the cool grass.
The tears came then, hot and fast, all the confusion and fear of the past few days pouring out of me. I'd worked so hard to be captain, to be respected, to lead my team. And now it was all falling apart because I couldn't handle... what? A hallucination? A cruel prank? Or the terrifying possibility that the world wasn't what I'd always believed it to be?
"Lila?"
I startled at the voice, hastily wiping my tears as I looked up to see Noah standing a few yards away. His face was half in shadow, but I could feel his concern like a physical touch.
"How did you know I was here?" I asked, my voice hoarse from crying.
He hesitated before answering. "I just... had a feeling."
For some reason, I didn't question it. He moved closer, then sat beside me on the grass, our shoulders not quite touching. We stayed like that for a long moment, silent under the moonlight.
"Bad game?" he finally asked, his voice gentle.
I laughed bitterly. "The worst. Everyone's questioning whether I should be captain."
"One bad game doesn't define you," he said simply.
"It's not just the game," I whispered before I could stop myself. "I think I'm losing my mind."
Noah turned to face me, his expression suddenly alert. "What do you mean?"
I shook my head, unable to form the words. How could I tell him what I'd seen? What Sage had said about him?
"You can tell me," he said softly, and something in his tone made me believe him. "Whatever it is, Lila, I'm here."
As I looked into his eyes, illuminated by the moonlight, I felt that strange calm again—like being wrapped in a protective blanket. And for reasons I couldn't explain, I found myself trusting him enough to voice my greatest fear.
"Noah," I whispered, "do you believe in monsters?"
"Do you believe in monsters?"
The words hung between us in the moonlight, more revealing than I'd intended. Noah's expression shifted, not with the surprise or confusion I expected, but with something deeper—recognition, perhaps even relief.
"What if," he said carefully, his voice low and steady, "what you think are monsters are just... different beings? Different from humans, but not monsters?"
A chill ran down my spine. He hadn't dismissed my question or laughed it off. Instead, he was answering in a way that confirmed my worst fears.
"Sage," I whispered. "I saw her... change. Her eyes, her hands..."
Noah nodded slowly, his gaze never leaving mine. "And how did that make you feel?"
"Terrified," I admitted. "Confused. Like everything I thought I knew was a lie."
He moved closer, and I could feel the warmth radiating from his body in the cool night air. "Lila, there's something I need to tell you. Something I've wanted to tell you since the moment we met."
My heart pounded against my ribs as Noah stood and offered me his hand. I took it, allowing him to pull me to my feet. We stood face to face under the stadium lights that had automatically flickered on, casting long shadows across the empty field.
"What you saw with Sage was real," he said, his voice dropping to almost a whisper. "She is a werewolf. And so am I."
I wanted to laugh, to tell him this wasn't funny, but the absolute seriousness in his expression stopped me. And then, before I could respond, his eyes began to change—the deep brown irises shifting, glowing with a golden light that seemed to illuminate his entire face.
I gasped, instinctively stepping back, but he gently held onto my hand, keeping me from retreating further.
"Don't be afraid," he said, his voice deeper, more resonant. "I would never hurt you, Lila. Never."
"This can't be real," I whispered, my voice trembling. "Werewolves don't exist."
"We do," he said simply. "We've existed alongside humans for centuries, keeping our nature hidden. There are packs all over the world, including two right here—the Silvermoon Pack, which I lead as Alpha, and the Bloodmoon Pack, which Sage's father leads."
My mind raced, trying to process what he was saying. Alpha. Pack. The words Sage had used suddenly took on new meaning.
"Why are you telling me this?" I asked, my voice barely audible.
Noah's expression softened, his eyes returning to their normal color. "Because from the moment I saw you, I felt something I never expected to find—a mate bond."
"A what?"
"A mate bond. It's rare, even among our kind. A connection that binds two souls together." He stepped closer, his gaze intense. "When I'm near you, I can feel your emotions. When you're upset or in danger, I know, even from across the school. That's why I've been there, watching over you."
I shook my head, overwhelmed. "This is impossible. I'm just a normal girl. I'm human."
"Are you?" he asked softly. "Haven't you felt different lately? Stronger? Faster? More aware?"
I thought about the practice where I'd outrun defenders who usually caught me easily, the strange surge of energy I'd felt. But that couldn't mean...
"No," I said firmly. "This is crazy. You're crazy."
Noah didn't argue. Instead, he walked over to one of the heavy goal posts—the metal kind that took four people to move during field maintenance. Without any apparent effort, he lifted it from its moorings, holding it above his head with one hand.
My jaw dropped. There was no way anyone human could do that.
He set it down gently, then turned back to me. "Not crazy, Lila. Just different. And I think you might be too."
"That's not possible," I whispered, but doubt was creeping in. "My mom is human. My dad..."
"What about your dad?" Noah asked, his tone gentle.
"I don't know," I admitted. "My mom never talks about him. He left before I was born."
Noah nodded as if this confirmed something. "Lila, I think there's a reason Sage hates you so much. It's not just jealousy over soccer or... over me. I think she senses what I do—that you're not entirely human. That you have werewolf blood, dormant perhaps, but there."
The world seemed to tilt under my feet. Could it be true? Could I be part werewolf without knowing it? It would explain so much—my restlessness, the strange energy I'd felt lately, the way I sometimes felt like I didn't quite belong anywhere.
"I don't know what to believe," I said honestly.
Noah moved closer again, his eyes searching mine. "Believe what you feel," he said softly. "Right now, in this moment. What does your heart tell you?"
In the moonlight, with his face so close to mine, I couldn't deny the pull I felt toward him—a connection that had been there from our very first meeting. It wasn't just attraction; it was deeper, more primal, like a recognition on a level I couldn't explain.
"I feel..." I began, struggling to find the words. "I feel like I've known you forever. Like there's something drawing me to you that I can't fight, even when I try."
A smile spread across his face, transforming his features. "That's the bond, Lila. That's what I've been feeling too."
Before I could respond, he leaned in, his hand gently cupping my cheek. When his lips met mine, it was like an electric current surged between us. The kiss was tender at first, then deepened with an intensity that took my breath away. I felt something awaken inside me, a warmth that spread from my chest throughout my entire body.
When we finally broke apart, I was trembling, but not from fear. Something had changed—I had changed. In that moment, under the moon's silver light, with Noah's arms around me, I felt more alive than I ever had before.
"What happens now?" I whispered against his lips.
"Now," he said, his forehead resting against mine, "we figure this out together."
---
I woke the next morning feeling like a different person. The sunlight streaming through my window seemed brighter, more vivid. I could hear birds singing outside with crystal clarity, distinguishing between different species by their calls. The scent of coffee brewing downstairs was so rich and complex that I could pick out subtle notes I'd never noticed before.
Sitting up in bed, I flexed my hands, marveling at the strength I felt coursing through my muscles. Noah's words echoed in my mind: "Haven't you felt different lately? Stronger? Faster? More aware?"
Yes. Yes to all of it.
I moved to my mirror, studying my reflection. I looked the same—same brown hair, same green eyes, same freckles dusting my nose. But something had changed, something fundamental that I couldn't quite define.
The memory of Noah's kiss sent a shiver through me. That moment had awakened something dormant inside me—something that had perhaps been there all along, waiting for the right trigger.
I touched my lips, still feeling the ghost of his touch, the electricity that had passed between us.
Whatever was happening to me, whatever I was becoming, one thing was certain: nothing would ever be the same again.