CHAPTER 3- THE FIRST FOOTSTEPS
Morning came colder than before.
Jackline woke beneath her blanket, coals faintly glowing in the firepit like the last pulse of a dying heart. For a moment, she lay still, listening - not to silence, but to breathing beside her.
Steady. Heavy. Real.
The wolf slept near her; his massive body curled like a dark mountain on the stone floor. His presence filled the room with something she had never felt in all her years of emptiness.
Security.
Not because he owed her anything.
Not because she controlled him.
But because he stayed.
Jackline eased herself up carefully so she wouldn't wake him. The light seeping through the broken wall was pale grey, edged with frost. Dew clung to stones like tears caught at dawn.
She moved quietly, gathering her spear and satchel.
Today, she planned to explore deeper into the forest - not just for food, but for answers.
The diary she found waited under her pillow like a secret heartbeat. She hadn't read past the first page last night - exhaustion had stolen the chance. But now, sitting beside the fire, she opened it again.
The ink was careful. Elegant. Human.
We lived here once. Laughed here. Feasted under banners.
Then came the red moon.
And everything changed.
Jackline's blood chilled.
Red moon.
Like the one that had turned the sky to bruised fire days ago - the night the wolf became something more than wolf.
Her eyes darted to him.
Still sleeping. Still beast.
But no longer just a beast.
Her fingers traced the faded script.
They feared prophecy. They feared the child who was born under the crescent.
So they took her.
And they cursed him to guard what remained.
Jackline's heart thudded once - then twice, like the world skipped a beat.
Her breath left her in a whisper.
"The child... was me."
Something moved behind her.
Not a wolf.
Not the wind.
Footsteps.
Jackline spun, spear raised - heart punching her ribs - and the wolf was awake before she had even turned. Fur bristled. Lips peeled back. A growl rolled from deep in his chest, low and thunderous.
Someone stood in the courtyard.
A man.
Not large, but carrying a bow across his back and a knife at his hip. His cloak was soaked at the hem from morning dew. Mud caked his boots - travel-worn. His eyes were sharp, sweeping the ruins as if searching for ghosts.
He froze when he saw her.
Then his gaze slid slowly to the wolf - and widened with fear.
"A forest wolf," he breathed. "A big one. I thought they were just stories."
His hand moved toward his knife.
The wolf stepped forward - silent, ready to strike.
Jackline lifted her spear, voice steady despite the tremor in her blood.
"Stop."
The man blinked - confused that she spoke at all.
Jackline stepped between them.
The wolf growled, but didn't attack - not with her there. She could feel the tension coiled through him like a drawn bowstring, but he waited.
Trusted her choice.
The man swallowed hard, eyes flicking between girl and beast.
"I...didn't come to kill you," he said cautiously. "Or the creature. I- I've heard stories. A girl in a ruined castle. A wolf with moonlight eyes. I thought it was madness, but-"
Jackline's voice cut through like a blade.
"How did you find this place?"
The man hesitated.
"The forest led me."
Jackline's stomach turned.
The forest whispered her name last night.
Now it was guiding strangers to her door.
The wolf took one step forward, positioning himself protectively beside her - not behind, not ahead.
Equal.
The man lifted his hands, palms open.
"My name is Leron," he said. "I'm a traveler from the nearest village. For two days, hunters have spoken of strange sounds in the woods. Some say a beast stalks the old ruins - a wolf bigger than any seen before."
His eyes flickered to the wolf again.
"They don't know you're here," he added quietly. "Not yet."
Not yet.
Jackline felt the weight of those words like a shadow falling over her.
She tightened her grip on her spear. "And what do you want?"
Leron's voice lowered, shaping the word carefully.
"Truth."
He glanced toward the diary in her hand.
"Stories say a princess was born here. Taken at birth. Hidden from those who feared her bloodline."
Jackline's heart slammed to a standstill.
He knew.
Or believed he did.
She swallowed, throat tight.
"You think that's me."
Leron's gaze softened - not with pity, but recognition.
"You look like her."
Her.
The woman in the portrait.
Her mother.
Jackline's knees nearly weakened - but she did not fall.
The wolf stepped closer, shoulder brushing her leg, grounding her like a stone in a river. Silver eyes never left Leron, ready to strike if he so much as twitched wrong.
Jackline steadied herself with a breath.
"If I am who you think I am," she said quietly, "why come here alone?"
Leron hesitated.
Then:
"I didn't come alone."
Jackline's blood ran cold.
The trees beyond the wall stirred - not wind, not birds - movement.
Many footsteps.
Slow.
Heavy.
Men.
Armed.
Hunters.
The wolf growled - deep, violent, shaking the stones beneath them.
Jackline's grip tightened on her spear.
Leron stepped back slowly, hands still raised.
"I tried to warn you," he said, voice strained. "If they find you - if they see him -"
A horn sounded beyond the trees.
Not a hunter's horn.
A war horn.
Jackline's pulse thundered through her veins.
The diary.
The portrait.
The whispers.
The world was coming for her.
The wolf stood like living steel beside her - no longer wounded, no longer dying.
Power coiled through him like storm light waiting to break.
Jackline exhaled once, steady as a heartbeat.
"We face them together," she said.
The wolf's growl deepened - and for the first time, she felt not fear of him, but fear for those outside.
Because the forest had guarded her for years.
Now it was letting others in.
And whatever came through those trees -
would not leave unchanged.
When the Forest Brought Men
The horn echoed through the trees again - low, drawn out, shaking moss from ancient stone. Jackline's pulse hammered in her wrists, her throat, her skull. The wolf shifted into a stance she recognized instinctively:
Not attack.
Not fear.
Readiness.
Jackline's hand tightened on her spear. The courtyard seemed to shrink, walls pressing closer as the first shadows moved at the edge of the forest line. Figures emerged from between the wet trunks - slow, deliberate, armed.
Five men. Maybe more behind them.
Crossbows.
Daggers.
Silver blades.
They stepped into the clearing as if it were their own.
Jackline stood tall at the center of the courtyard - the wolf at her side like a blade forged from moon and shadow. His teeth flashed in the low light. His eyes were silver fire.
The hunters slowed.
Their leader, broad-shouldered with a scar across one cheek, took a step forward. His gaze cut across Jackline first - assessing her quickly - then fell on the wolf.
He froze.
A muttered curse slipped between his teeth.
"That's the beast," he breathed. "The one the legends warned about."
He reached for his bow.
Jackline stepped forward, spear in hand, voice steady like drawn steel.
"Leave."
The men halted - surprised more by her authority than her presence. She wasn't tall. She wasn't armored. She was a girl barefoot in ruins. Yet her voice carried the weight of command - a command her bones had always known how to shape.
"Leave now," she repeated, "and the forest will let you go."
Silence.
Then rough laughter.
"You think this is your forest, girl?" the scarred hunter sneered. "We're not here for you. We're here for him."
The wolf's growl rumbled like thunder beneath the earth.
Another hunter raised his bow; eyes fixed on the beast. "A wolf that size? Pelts like that? Worth more than a year's wages."
He didn't fire.
Not yet.
But he wanted to.
Jackline's voice cut through the air like a blade.
"You shoot him, you die."
More laughter - uneasy this time.
"You speak like a queen," the leader mocked.
Jackline's heart stilled.
Not because she feared the insult - but because the words didn't feel wrong.
They felt like the truth she had forgotten.
She took another step forward, planting herself between the wolf and the hunters. The breeze lifted her hair. The sun behind her turned the ruins into a crown of broken light.
"Last warning," she said. "Leave."
The leader held her eyes - then lifted his hand in signal.
Bows raised.
The world inhaled.
And broke.
THE WOLF UNLEASHED
The first arrow flew.
It never reached her.
The wolf moved like lightning - a shadow blur striking stone with explosive force. A roar ripped through the courtyard, deep and primal, echoing like mountains splitting. The wolf slammed into the hunter's arm, sending the bow clattering across the ground. The man stumbled back with a shout - more startled than hurt.
Two others swung blades - silver flashing.
Jackline's instinct screamed.
She leapt forward, spear catching one blade mid-swing, the clash vibrating through her bones. Her wrists burned, but she held her ground. The second man lunged for the wolf - and the wolf twisted, fast as breath, knocking him flat, pinning him by sheer weight.
Not killing.
Just dominance.
Power.
The courtyard exploded into chaos - shouts, scraping metal, the thud of boots against stone. Jackline thrust her spear again, turning a strike aside, ducking beneath a swing that would have opened her shoulder.
Every move felt like memory - like she'd trained for this her whole life without knowing why.
The wolf fought beside her, not like an animal, but like something tactical. He blocked one man's path, drove another backward, kept every blade away from her skin.
They were not two bodies.
They were one force.
Jackline jabbed the butt of her spear into a hunter's wrist - wood cracking against bone - and he dropped his dagger. It skittered across the floor. She kicked it aside, breath sharp.
The wolves of the forest hunted in silence.
She hunted with purpose.
The leader stared - stunned, shaken. He hesitated, and in that heartbeat Leron - the man who'd warned her - stepped between them.
"Stop!" he shouted. "She's not your enemy!"
The leader spat, furious. "She shelters a beast!"
"He protected her," Leron countered. "You saw it-he could have killed us already."
True.
None of the hunters lay dead.
Only winded, disarmed, outmatched.
The wolf's chest rose and fell - controlled, steady. His eyes locked on the leader. One wrong move would end him.
Not by Jackline's hand.
By the wolves.
Yet Jackline lifted her palm - a silent command - and the wolf stilled.
Not completely.
But enough.
The courtyard fell into a tense, dangerous quiet.
The hunter wiped sweat from his brow, eyes darting between girl and beast.
"You're just a child," he said - shaken now, not mocking. "Why risk your life for a monster?"
Jackline stepped forward, voice low and unwavering.
"He is not a monster."
The wolf stood beside her, eyes bright like forged metal.
"And neither am I."
For the first time, the hunters looked at her the way the forest had whispered her name.
Not as a feral girl.
But as someone claimed by destiny.
Leron lowered his gaze respectfully.
"Princess," he murmured - not loud, but enough.
The word hung like a spark in the air.
The leader stiffened - realization dawning, heavy and dangerous.
"A lost heir," he whispered. "The stolen child. Gods..."
Fear replaced greed in his eyes.
Not fear of her.
Fear of what her existence meant.
"If the kingdom learns you're alive-"
His mouth snapped shut.
Jackline's grip tightened on her spear.
"If they learn," she said quietly, "then we are already running out of time."
The wolf growled - not at the hunters now, but toward the forest, as if sensing more eyes watching.
More coming.
More danger.
The wind shifted - carrying a scent that made every hair on Jackline's neck rise.
Smoke.
And something darker.
Hunters were only the beginning.
Hunter or Hunted
The courtyard held its breath.
Five men stood wounded, disarmed, or cowed. The wolf loomed over them like shadow and winter combined, silent except for the low rumble vibrating through his chest - a warning more ancient than steel.
Jackline faced the hunters with her spear lowered but ready.
She could end this.
They could leave in peace.
Or they could bleed here, forgotten by the forest as all other legends were.
Leron met her eyes - a subtle plea for restraint.
"These men don't understand what you are," he whispered. "Not yet."
The leader scowled at him but didn't speak. His pride was broken - but not his will. He would carry this story back to the world if she let him.
Jackline's voice was quiet and even.
"You came for a pelt. For a trophy. You thought yourselves hunters."
She stepped forward. Not threatening - but unmistakably in control.
"Look around you now."
Their eyes darted across ruined stone and fallen weapons.
"You are prey here."
A shiver ran through the group.
Leron swallowed, barely audible. "...what will you do?"
Jackline did not look at him.
She looked only at the leader.
"I will spare you," she said, "because blood solves nothing. But you will go back to your village with truth in your mouth - not fear."
The leader's jaw clenched.
"What truth?" he asked, voice hard.
Jackline lifted her chin, spine straight as blade-edge.
"That I live."
The courtyard seemed to tilt - as if even the stones beneath their feet weren't sure whether this was doom or destiny.
Wind stirred Jackline's hair. The sun broke briefly through the clouds.
"And that the wolf is mine," she added, voice like quiet thunder.
"My guardian - not my threat."
A ripple moved between the hunters, disbelief warping into something new. Not mockery. Not dismissal.
Respect.
Uneasy, unwilling respect - but real.
The leader hesitated - then gave a single, stiff nod.
"We will leave," he said, voice rough. "The forest wants you alive. I won't argue with gods."
He gestured to his men. They gathered themselves - weapons retrieved but not raised - and backed slowly toward the trees. Their eyes never left Jackline or the wolf.
Leron lingered last - gaze locked on Jackline.
"You don't realize what your existence means," he said softly. "A kingdom without an heir is a throne of war. They will come for you."
Jackline swallowed.
She already knew.
"But so will those who remember loyalty," he added.
He stepped back - then was swallowed by the forest's dark ribs, footsteps fading into leaf and shadow.
Suddenly, the courtyard was quiet again.
Too quiet.
No birds. No wind. Not even settling stone.
As though the world was waiting to see what she would do next.
Jackline slowly lowered her spear.
The wolf exhaled, shoulders easing - but his eyes stayed on the trees, as if expecting the forest to release more than hunters.
The air felt tight - stretched like a bowstring.
Something else was coming.
Something that didn't move like a man or sound like one.
A smell crept through the courtyard - faint at first, then sharp.
Smoke.
And behind it - magic. Old as root and bone.
The wolf stiffened.
Jackline's heart lurched.
She spun toward the distant ridge where the forest rose like a wall of shadow. A thin plume of smoke curled into the grey sky - not wild, not accidental.
Purposeful.
Controlled.
Man-made.
The wolf snarled low, moving toward the gate as if pulled by instinct, hackles raised higher than before. His body vibrated with warning - not fear, not aggression.
Recognition.
Jackline felt it too - deep in her ribs, like a memory she'd never lived.
"That fire wasn't made by hunters," she whispered.
The wolf looked at her - and something ancient burned behind his eyes. Something half-restrained, half inevitable.
She stepped closer, voice barely a breath.
"What are you sensing?"
His gaze bored into hers, and for a terrifying second, she could swear she understood him without words.
Not danger.
Destiny.
Jackline tightened her grip on her spear.
Smoke curled higher, thicker.
Flames snapping - not near, but coming. Closer with every gust of wind.
"We can't stay here," she said.
The wolf responded without sound - by moving to her side, pressing close enough that she felt his warmth through her skin.
Their choice was made.
They leave the ruins.
They face the world waiting beyond.
They walk into a future the forest had hidden for years - now burning at its edges.
Jackline inhaled sharply.
"We go," she said - and the wolves inside the trees seemed to bow to her voice.
The wolf turned with her - no hesitation, no question.
Side by side.
Not captive.
Not a pet.
Not beast and girl.
Two survivors.
Two secrets.
Two halves of a story only just beginning.
They stepped beyond the castle walls as the first echo of something monstrous moved beneath the trees -
and the forest closed behind them like a book finally opening its next page.
FIRE IN THE WOOD
They entered the forest at a slow, deliberate pace.
Jackline kept her spear steady in her grip, stepping over roots slick with morning damp. The wolf matched each footfall, silent as shadow. Nothing moved in the trees - no birds fled, no leaves stirred. Even the wind seemed to hold its breath.
The smoke rising in the distance was their guide - a thin black thread pulled taut toward something unknown.
Jackline did not rush.
Speed got you killed in the forest.
Instead, she moved like she always had - careful, listening, feeling the ground beneath her like a heartbeat. The wolf slipped through the undergrowth beside her, occasionally padding ahead, returning to brush her side like a silent reassurance.
He checked for danger.
She read the signs he didn't see - snapped twigs, disturbed soil, the silence too deep where animals should have been.
They made a strange pair.
But they made sense.
Halfway through the dense thicket, Jackline paused.
The smell was stronger here - not just woodsmoke, but something sharper, unfamiliar. The wolf stopped too, head lifting, nose flaring.
He growled - not loud, but low and cautious.
Jackline's stomach tightened.
"What do you smell?" she whispered.
He looked at her - and she felt it without words:
Not animals.
Not hunters.
Something older.
She swallowed and continued forward.
The forest grew darker - trees packed tighter, light thinning into pale strips. Moss-coated branches arched overhead like ribs. The smoke thickened as they walked until it curled around them in veils, soft but insistent.
Then they saw it.
A camp.
Not large - three tents, one fire pit still smoking. Half-burned logs. Stray footprints in the dirt.
But no people.
Jackline motioned for the wolf to stay low and crept to the edge of the clearing, heart pounding. She crouched near the blackened fire ring, running two fingers through the ashes.
Still warm.
Whoever had been here had left recently.
She scanned the trees.
A broken arrow.
A torn scrap of fabric.
A ring of silver dust around the campsite - like something had been poured carefully in a circle.
She touched the dust.
Cold tingled through her fingertips - unnatural, almost like frost.
"Magic," she breathed. "Like the frost root."
The wolf stiffened beside her.
He stepped closer to the circle - then stopped abruptly, muscles coiling tight. His lip curled back, but he didn't cross the silver ring.
Jackline frowned.
She tried stepping forward - but as soon as her foot reached the edge of the circle, a force pressed against her skin, prickling like electricity. The wolf snapped his jaws, pulling her back gently but firmly by the edge of her tunic.
She blinked, startled.
"You don't want me to cross."
He didn't release her until she stepped away.
Jackline stared at him.
Something passed between them then - something like instinct recognizing instinct. He was not stopping her from possession or control.
He was protecting her.
He remembered this magic.
Feared it.
Or knew what it meant.
Jackline crouched and studied the circle again, tracing symbols burned faintly into the earth. Lines. Runes. Old language she could not read-but her blood responded, humming beneath her skin.
"This was made to trap something," she whispered.
Or someone.
The wolf growled in agreement - ears pricked, body taut with warning.
Jackline rose, scanning deeper into the trees. The forest floor was disturbed beyond the circle - dragged marks, footprints in frantic patterns.
Something had fled.
Or was taken.
And from the darkness beyond, faint movement flickered - like shadows that weren't shadows at all.
"Someone's close," Jackline murmured.
The wolf lowered his body, muscles coiled like a drawn bow.
Jackline tightened her hold on her spear.
Branches parted behind them.
She spun.
Not hunters.
Not villagers.
A woman stepped into the clearing.
Her cloak was deep green like moss after rain, hood drawn low. Silver embroidery shimmered faintly across the fabric - the same pattern Jackline had seen on the royal blanket in the portrait.
Jackline's breath froze.
The wolf growled, teeth bared - yet did not attack.
The woman lifted a hand, slow, unthreatening.
"Peace," she said - her voice soft, aged like old wood and river stone. "I mean you no harm, child."
Jackline swallowed hard.
Child.
No one had ever called her that before.
"You shouldn't be here," Jackline said, voice steady despite the tremor she felt inside. "You were near the castle last night."
The woman's eyes softened beneath her hood.
"Yes."
Jackline gripped her spear.
"Why?"
The woman's gaze did not waver.
"Because I have searched for seventeen years to find you."
Jackline's heart slammed against her ribs.
Seventeen years.
Her age.
The world seemed to tilt. The trees leaned in. The wolf stepped closer to her side, fur brushing her arm - as though grounding her in reality.
Jackline forced her voice to remain steady.
"Who are you?"
The woman lowered her hood slowly.
Moonlight touched her face - lined with grief, eyes bright with something like recognition. Silver hair braided with leaves fell over her shoulders.
Her voice was soft as prayer.
"I was your mother's closest advisor," she said. "I served the crown before it fell. I hid you the night the red moon rose."
Jackline's breath left her lungs in a trembling rush.
Everything inside her went silent.
The wolf stepped forward - not hostile now, but alert, watching, reading.
Jackline's voice broke out of her like a whisper cracked open:
"You know who I am."
The woman nodded once.
"You are Jackline," she said. "Daughter of the last queen. Lost heir to the throne stolen by sorcery and blood."
Jackline trembled.
Not weakly - but like something deep within her bones had woken.
The woman stepped closer - careful, slow.
"And the wolf beside you..."
her gaze flicked to him with something like sorrow,
"...was cursed to find you. To protect you. To return you when the time came."
Jackline stared - heart pounding, mind racing.
Protector.
Not an accident.
Not a coincidence.
Destiny.
The wolf's eyes met hers - and something ancient stirred behind them. Something she had sensed but never named.
He was never meant to leave her.
And she was never meant to stay hidden.
Jackline's voice came out barely audible.
"What am I meant to do now?"
The woman's answer was quiet, heavy with truth.
"You must reclaim what was taken," she said. "Before those who fear your blood burn the world to keep you from rising."
The wind cut through the trees like a warning cry.
The wolf stepped closer - his body brushing hers like a vow.
And Jackline understood:
Her life in the ruins was finished.
THE TRUTH IN FIRELIGHT
Jackline didn't speak at first.
The forest around them felt too quiet - as if every tree leaned in to hear her answer. Her mind raced with scattered thoughts: the portrait, the diary, the whispers, the hunters' fear, the fire in the distance.
All threads of the same story.
And she - unknowingly - stood at the center of it.
The woman watched her silently, eyes lined with grief and hope woven together like roots.
"I don't know you," Jackline finally said, voice raw. "I don't know my mother. I don't know a kingdom. I know stone and hunger and silence. That is my life."
Her voice cracked - not weak, but honest.
The wolf brushed against her hand. Warm. Solid. Here.
The woman's gaze softened.
"You know survival," she said. "You know how to fight when alone. Now you must learn how to fight for something bigger than yourself."
Jackline swallowed hard.
"What bigger thing?" she whispered.
The woman stepped closer and knelt - not in reverence, but eye-level. She opened her palm.
A small object lay there - silver, worn smooth by time.
A crest.
Jackline stared.
Two wolves, intertwined beneath a crown.
Her pulse thundered.
"I took this from your cradle the night they came," the woman said. "Hunters of the Sorcerer-King. They feared what you would become. They believed you would inherit the moon's power and break his rule."
She closed Jackline's hand around the crest.
"You were meant to be queen."
The wolf growled low - not in threat, but like a vow sealing itself.
Jackline's thoughts swirled like wind in a burned village.
Queen.
Heir.
Stolen child.
All her life, she had been no one - a name spoken only by wind.
Now she was someone the world had hunted.
The woman's voice broke through the storm in her head.
"They will come for you again now. The red moon rising stirred old wards. The forest hid you for years, but destiny has woken - and so has your enemy."
Jackline nodded slowly, a tremor running through her body like lightning under her skin.
"What enemy?"
The woman's expression darkened, like a cloud swallowing the sun.
"The one who cursed the wolf. The one who destroyed your kingdom. The one who would rather spill the world into ash than see the rightful heir rise."
Her next words dropped like a stone.
"Your uncle. The Sorcerer-King."
Jackline's breath vanished.
Her uncle.
Her blood.
The reason she grew up alone.
The woman stood, cloak shifting in the wind like wings of shadow.
"You must leave this forest," she said. "You cannot face what hunts you from within forgotten walls. You must learn who you are - outside ruins. Outside fear."
Jackline looked back the way they had come - through trees toward the only home she had ever known.
The castle had been her world.
But a world could be a cage.
The wolf nudged her leg - as if sensing her hesitation. His eyes shone with something fierce, something certain.
Not leaving her.
Not letting her turn back.
Her voice trembled, soft but growing steadier.
"I don't know how to be what I'm meant to be."
The woman stepped forward - placed a hand against Jackline's cheek, gentle but strong.
"No one begins as a queen," she murmured. "You become one by walking toward the fire, not away from it."
Jackline inhaled sharply - and made her choice.
"We go."
The wolf stood tall beside her.
The advisor nodded once - approval silent but powerful.
Then she lifted her hand toward the smoke.
"Three days' journey through the forest," she said. "Reach the river road. Find the village called Elder Reign. There will be allies there - and enemies. Trust carefully."
Jackline tightened her grip around the crest. Silver warmed against her skin.
"What about you?" she asked.
The woman stepped back - cloak drawing shadows around her like mist.
"I must delay those tracking you. I am old magic - but you are new destiny."
Her voice lowered to a whisper like leaves falling.
"They will burn through me to reach you. So, you must outrun the flame."
Jackline's chest clenched.
She wanted to protest - to ask more - to not lose the only bridge to her past she'd ever met - but the woman only smiled, sad and bright.
"I have waited seventeen years for you to breathe beyond these ruins," she said. "Go."
The wolf growled deeply - not defiance, but farewell.
Jackline forced herself to turn - step by step - toward the world waiting like teeth beyond the tree line.
She did not look back.
Not because she lacked feeling.
But because she understood:
Stepping forward meant more than just walking.
It meant beginning.
The forest parted like a door.
Jackline crossed the threshold with a wolf at her side, a crest in her hand, and fire in her blood.
Behind her, the world she had always known began to burn.
CHAPTER 4- LEAVING THE BONES BEHIND
The forest changed.
Not slowly - but with every step, Jackline and the wolf took away from the ruins. The air felt wider, the canopy thinner. Sunlight found them more often, painting their path in silver strips and broken gold. The ground softened from old moss to damp earth, scattered with roots the color of dried blood.
Jackline didn't speak for a long time.
Her heart felt too heavy with everything she knew now - everything she had never been told, never been given a chance to understand. The crest weighed in her pocket like a stone made of truth. Her fingers brushed it every few moments, as if making sure destiny hadn't vanished like morning dew.
The wolf walked at her side the whole way.
Not behind.
Not ahead.
With her.
She didn't command him.
He simply stayed.
Every once in a while, he would flick an ear toward distant sounds she didn't catch - a rustle of branches too far to see, the snap of twigs beneath something heavier than deer. He never looked afraid. Only watchful.
Jackline had lived her life alone, self-reliant in silence - but now she realized she had never truly walked with another presence beside her.
And she found she didn't resent it.
Not yet.
Not anymore.
By noon, the forest became unfamiliar.
Jackline paused at a ridge overlooking a valley draped in morning fog. Beyond it, far but visible, the river wound like a silver vein between trees. On the other side lay Elder Reign - the village the queen's advisor had spoken of.
Jackline exhaled slowly.
"I've never gone this far," she murmured.
The wolf bumped her hand gently with his muzzle - not demanding, but encouraging.
She looked at him, mouth tightening as if trying to shape courage into words.
"We have to keep moving."
And they did.
They descended the ridge through tangled brush. Jackline's legs ached from the steepness; her palms scraped against bark as she slid down a slick slope. The wolf leapt beside her with fluid ease, landing soft as falling shadow.
The whisper of the forest followed them like a memory.
Like goodbye.
SIGNS OF THE OUTER WORLD
Near mid-afternoon, Jackline found the first evidence that she was leaving safety behind.
A rope bridge - broken.
Half collapsed into a ravine where water churned white. Planks dangled like rusted teeth, ropes frayed and blackened as if burned. Someone had destroyed it intentionally.
Jackline crouched, inspecting the damage. The wolf sniffed along the burned fibers, hackles beginning to rise.
"That wasn't age," she murmured. "Someone did this recently."
The wolf growled, soft but certain.
Jackline scanned the forest on both sides - eyes narrowed, breath slow, hunting subtle details only silence revealed. She noticed boot prints in the mud. Seven pairs, maybe eight, heading away from the bridge toward the distant road.
Hunters. Soldiers. Or worse.
"They're ahead of us," Jackline whispered.
Not behind.
Ahead.
The Sorcerer-King's reach had already passed this way.
And she was walking into it.
Jackline's throat tightened, but she forced herself to stand. Fear was a feeling - not a chain. She had survived too much to turn back now.
"We keep to the river," she said.
The wolf nudged her leg - agreement.
Together, they climbed down to the ravine's edge, wading in cold water that bit like needles around her ankles. They crossed on foot, the wolf swimming through a deeper current with steady strokes. On the far side, Jackline pulled herself up over slippery rock and stood gasping, hair dripping, breath sharp.
The forest beyond smelled different.
Less ancient.
Less protective.
More alive with people.
The world she had been hidden from for seventeen years.
She stepped forward into it.
FIRST SHADOWS OF ELDER REIGN
By dusk, the trees thinned enough to reveal distant rooftops - thatched, crooked, wrapped in smoke like tired breath. Fences lined fields where long grass swayed heavy with seed. Lanterns flickered like tiny suns against the dark.
"Elder reign," Jackline breathed.
Not a city.
Not a ruin.
A village - real and alive.
Her stomach twisted with something unfamiliar.
Anticipation.
Fear.
Hope.
She took one step forward - but stopped when the wolf stiffened suddenly, ears sharp, gaze cutting toward the path ahead.
Jackline listened.
At first, nothing.
Then she heard it:
Footsteps.
Soft.
Measured.
Not one pair -
Two.
Or three.
Coming toward them.
Jackline lifted her spear.
The wolf moved in front of her - protective instinct rising like a tide.
Shapes appeared between the trees - silhouettes first, then detail. Three figures in cloaks the color of ash, each carrying a lantern that burned with unnatural blue flame.
Jackline's breath hitched.
She had never felt magic - not like this - but the lantern light scraped her skin like cold fingertips.
One of the figures raised a hand.
"Child of the Crescent," a voice said, smooth and quiet as river stone. "We have been looking for you."
Jackline's heart thudded once, twice, too loud in her ears.
They knew.
Her name, her blood, her destiny.
And they had found her before she reached the village.
The wolf's growl rumbled like thunder, warning of the storm.
Jackline stepped forward anyway - spear steady, voice calm despite the fire in her veins.
"This forest is not yours," she said. "Speak your purpose."
The lead figure smiled - though no warmth reached their eyes.
"We bring a message from your uncle," they said.
"The Sorcerer-King wishes to welcome you home."
Jackline's blood ran cold.
Home.
To the throne stolen in blood.
To the family who abandoned her.
The wolf moved closer - not attacking yet, but poised like a held weapon.
Jackline's voice cut the night air like a blade-edge.
"I will not go to him."
The figure's smile sharpened.
"Then you will be taken."
The wolf lunged.
The blue lanterns flared like lightning.
And Chapter Four turned from discovery into confrontation.
BLUE FIRE AND MOONBLOOD
The emissaries stepped closer, lanterns held high - blue flames bending with unnatural hunger, casting shadows that moved too independently from their owners. Jackline tightened her grip on her spear until her knuckles whitened.
The wolf stood before her like a barricade of muscle and instincts sharpened by something ancient.
Not fear.
Preparation.
The nearest emissary spoke again, voice low and dripping calm.
"You survived where others expected you to die. Admirable. But destiny does not rewrite itself because a child hides in moss and stone."
Jackline's jaw clenched - something fierce rising inside her, something that was no longer just survival or instinct.
"I hid because the world forgot me," she said, stepping forward. "But now the world remembers."
The wolf growled - the kind of sound that made the earth listen.
The emissary tilted his head, curious, almost amused.
"Confidence. Unexpected."
His gaze slid to the wolf.
"And your guardian - still chained by old magic."
Jackline stiffened.
"Chained?" she repeated.
The emissary lifted the lantern slightly - blue light rippling like water.
The wolf flinched.
Not from pain - but recognition.
"He remembers the curse," the emissary murmured. "Even if his mind sleeps inside fur. When the red moon rises again, he will not protect you. He will tear apart everything he loves."
Jackline's breath froze.
The wolf's body went rigid - as if the words hit him like a blade. His ears flattened, and something behind his eyes flickered like fire trapped beneath ice.
Jackline stepped closer to him, not away.
"He has never harmed me," she said. "He won't."
The emissary smiled like someone watching a candle burn too close to cloth.
"You believe you know him. You believe he is a beast bound by affection."
His voice grew quieter, colder.
"He is a curse wearing loyalty like skin. When the moon calls his blood, he will answer."
The wolf's growl deepened - shaking leaves from branches.
Jackline's pulse hammered.
She didn't know everything about him - yet she trusted him more than she trusted anyone she'd met beyond the castle walls.
"I choose him," she said simply.
The forest held its breath.
The emissary raised his lantern - blue fire flaring.
"Then we will take you together."
The night exploded.
THE CHASE BENEATH LANTERN FIRE
The blue flame shot forward like lightning, not burning wood or moss - but air itself, sucking oxygen with a hiss. The wolf leaped aside, teeth bared, eyes burning with silver fury. Jackline ducked under a streak of fire that seared through the dark, snapping her spear upward to deflect a second strike.
Magic met wood with a crack like thunder.
Sparks broke across the forest floor, igniting brush in blue flame that refused to consume, only spread - unnatural, cold, and bright.
"Move!" Jackline shouted.
The wolf was already moving.
They fled through trees, branches whipping past, roots dragging at Jackline's feet. Leaves flared blue behind them, marking where magic had touched. The emissaries moved fast - silent despite the chaos, stepping through fire like it was water.
One appeared ahead of them - cutting off the path.
Jackline skidded to a stop, breath sharp, spear rising.
The wolf lunged first.
Not wild.
Not thoughtless.
Precise.
He slammed into the emissary with enough force to crush bone - yet instead of falling, the cloaked figure dissolved into smoke, reappearing behind them with inhuman speed.
Jackline exhaled once, steadying herself.
"We can't outrun magic," she murmured.
The wolf turned to her - and she saw it for the first time clearly:
Not animal obedience.
But a decision.
A question.
Fight?
or
Flee?
She felt the answer rise inside her with the certainty of her own heartbeat.
"Fight."
The wolf's body lowered - muscles coiling like a drawn bowstring.
Jackline spun her spear in one hand, stance firm.
The forest wind cut through the clearing like a blade.
THE FIRST STRIKE OF DESTINY
The emissaries advanced, lanterns flaring blue-white in unnatural waves. Jackline and the wolf moved as one - she striking low, he high. Her spear deflected a bolt of magic that would have pierced her chest. The wolf leapt over her strike, fangs snapping inches from a cloaked throat.
No death - but contact.
The emissary staggered.
Blue flame sputtered.
It was the first sign of weakness - but a second emissary appeared behind Jackline, hand reaching toward her as a shadow solidified.
The wolf spun faster than any beast should, intercepting, jaws closing around cloth - ripping it away to reveal something beneath that wasn't skin, but something pale and flickering like moonlight trapped in flesh.
The emissary shrieked - a sound like ice cracking.
The forest froze at the noise.
Jackline drove the butt of her spear into the ground, flipping herself backward and striking the figure full across the chest. Not killing - but breaking form.
The emissary shattered like glass into shards of light.
The other two retreated - not with fear, but calculation.
One spoke, voice calm even now.
"You are stronger than expected. Untrained - but not unchosen."
The wolf snarled, ready to lunge again -
But Jackline lifted a hand.
Not stopping him.
Choosing this moment.
Her voice was low as thunder on the horizon.
"Tell my uncle this."
She stepped forward.
"I am coming for what he stole."
The emissary bowed once - mocking or respectful, she could not tell.
"As he hoped," he murmured.
Then both vanished - lanterns collapsing into dust like burned petals.
Silence returned.
Not peace.
Silence like war paused.
Jackline slowly lowered her spear.
Her heart pounded not with fear but with clarity.
The wolf approached her - not triumphant, but watchful, as though waiting to see whether she regretted her choice.
She placed her hand on his fur - steady, sure.
"We go to Elder Reign," she said.
He pressed his head to her hand in answer.
Not promise.
Not obedience.
Partnership.
Together, they walked toward the village - blue lantern ash blowing behind them like the first breath of a storm.
STEPS BEYOND THE KNOWN
The trees thinned one breath at a time.
For the first time in Jackline's life, she saw open sky without branches cutting it into pieces - a wide blue-grey canvas brushed with smoke from distant chimneys. The wolf slowed beside her, as if sensing the boundary between the wild world and the shaped one.
Beyond the last line of oaks, elder reign waited.
Wooden buildings leaned like weary giants. Lanterns hung from beams, swinging in the breeze. Dirt paths wound between market stalls and cottages, though only a few people lingered outside - hauling water, repairing nets, sweeping stone steps with dull rhythm.
Jackline took a step closer.
Her entire body felt wrong - like she wore skin too new, too soft for the world beyond the forest. The air smelled different here - like hearth smoke and old grain instead of river moss and pine.
She had survived for seventeen years without ever speaking to another person.
And now she was walking into a village with a wolf at her side.
The first villager saw them.
A woman near the well - wide-eyed, hand frozen mid-lift on the bucket. Her gaze dropped to the wolf immediately, throat tightening.
"Gods," she whispered, stumbling back. "Forest-spawn-!"
Her voice carried across the square like thrown stones.
Doors opened. Curtains shifted. Heads turned.
In seconds, Jackline felt dozens of eyes on her - fear-wide, sharp-edged, some curious, some hostile. The wolf stepped closer to her leg, quiet but protective, his gaze sweeping the street like cold silver knives.
Jackline kept her chin lifted.
She did not lower her spear.
She did not hide the wolf.
If she were heir to a stolen crown, she would walk like someone born to be seen.
Still, her pulse hammered beneath her skin as whispers rippled through the air:
Who is she?
A witch, look at her eyes-
No - a hunter's spirit-
Is the wolf tamed? Impossible-
The door of a tavern swung open.
A tall man with grey-streaked hair stepped out, wiping his hands on an apron. His eyes were steady, not panicked - but focused. Calculating. Behind him, patrons crowded the doorway, murmuring.
He approached cautiously, hand raised.
"Girl," he said gently, though his gaze never left the wolf. "This is no place for wild beasts. People here scare easily."
Jackline held her ground.
"He's not wild," she said. "He's with me."
The man's brows drew together. "A creature like that belongs to the moon and blood. You shouldn't-"
Jackline reached into her satchel.
Her hand closed around the crest.
She held it out - silver catching the pale light.
The entire street fell silent.
The man's breath stilled. His eyes widened - not with fear now, but with recognition sharp as broken glass.
"That," he whispered, voice cracking, "is the royal sigil."
A hush fell over the village - deeper than fear. Deeper than suspicion.
Like the earth itself paused.
Jackline swallowed. "My name is Jackline."
A woman gasped. Another dropped a basket. A child stared round-eyed, clutching his mother's skirts as the wind seemed to bend around the wolf's shadow.
The tavern keeper did not step back.
He stepped forward.
"Jackline," he repeated - slowly, as though tasting history in the name. "There was a child by that name once. Born under an eclipse. Stolen when the kingdom fell."
He met her gaze without looking away.
"You're her."
Not a question.
A sentence.
Jackline's throat tightened - not with fear, but something harder to contain.
Belonging.
Recognition.
The thing she'd lived without her whole life.
The man glanced at the wolf again - expression shifting, equal parts awe and caution.
"And the guardian," he murmured. "Cursed to remain until she was found."
The wolf's tail lowered - stately, grave - as though acknowledging truth.
Jackline's voice - quiet, sure - cut through the crowd.
"I am seeking allies," she said. "And knowledge. I need to know what became of the throne - and who sits upon it now."
A woman from the crowd spoke - voice trembling.
"The Sorcerer-King," she whispered. "He rules beyond the valley. With blood and shadow."
Others nodded. Some bowed their heads as if even speaking his title was risky.
Fear flowed through the air like smoke.
But beneath it - something else stirred.
Hope.
Faint. Flickering. But there.
The tavern keeper stepped aside, gesturing toward the inn behind him.
"You'll find no beds for wolves," he said carefully, "but you'll find a table, warm stew, and ears willing to listen - if you mean no harm to this village."
Jackline hesitated, then nodded.
"We mean none."
The man motioned them inside - villagers parting like water around them, some lowering heads, others watching with wide eyes full of ancient stories waking.
Jackline entered elder reign with the wolf beside her - real air, real voices, real people around her for the first time.
Not wind.
Not silence.
Not ghosts.
Life.
And she was part of it now.
Whether the world wanted her or not.
A SEAT AT THE TABLE
The tavern smelled of woodsmoke, herbs, and something warm simmering - stew, thick and rich. Jackline had never known a room like this: stone walls unbroken by vines, voices trading space with fire crackle, chairs worn smooth from years of use rather than abandonment.
She felt out of place - like a ghost wandering into the living world.
But the wolf walked beside her without hesitation, silent as ever. Patrons pulled back instinctively as they entered, chairs scraping, hands tightening on mugs. Fear rippled through the room - but not panic. Not rejection. Suspense.
Like they were watching the beginning of a story they once believed impossible.
The tavern keeper gestured to an empty table near the hearth.
"Sit," he said softly. "Warm yourself. Food will come."
Jackline nodded once - grateful, though unused to such gestures. She took her seat carefully; spear lay across her knees. The wolf lowered himself at her feet like a silent sentinel, head resting atop crossed paws, eyes sharp.
He did not relax.
Neither did she.
Before long, a bowl of stew was set in front of her - steam rising, heavy with root vegetables and wild herbs. Jackline's stomach clenched with hunger she hadn't acknowledged. She ate slowly, not out of etiquette but caution - tasting, trusting, learning.
The wolf watched but didn't eat, even when a plate of raw meat was slid cautiously toward him. He only sniffed once and turned his head slightly - waiting, guarding.
It struck Jackline then:
He would not eat until she was safe.
Until her place here was certain.
The realization landed like a stone in her chest - weight and warmth mixed.
Before she could speak, another presence entered.
An old man stepped forward, leaning on a carved oak staff. His hair hung long and white down his back, and his eyes - sharp as flint - fixed on Jackline with recognition too deep to be chance.
The room quieted as he approached.
"You carry your mother's gaze," he said - voice low, weathered by years. "And her courage, it seems."
Jackline straightened unconsciously.
"Who are you?"
The man bowed his head lightly - respect, not obedience.
"I am Aldrin. I served your family before the night of blood."
He met her eyes.
"I was here when the last queen fell."
The fire popped sharply - as if the room itself reacted.
Jackline set her bowl aside, hands tightening.
"What happened to her?"
Not whispered. Not timid.
A demand.
Aldrin's breath trembled - not from age, but memory.
"She fought," he said softly. "She stood alone when others fled. But the Sorcerer-King's magic was stronger than our blades."
Jackline's throat tightened.
"And my father?" she asked, though she had imagined him only as a shadow without a face.
"Dead before nightfall," Aldrin replied. "He tried to break the curse placed upon the Guardian-"
His gaze flicked to the wolf - and the room held stillness like a thread.
Jackline's pulse quickened.
The Guardian.
The cursed protector.
The wolf did not move - but something like sorrow glimmered behind his eyes, deep as winter ponds.
Aldrin sank into the chair opposite her.
"The queen hid you," he said. "Hoped you would one day return - not as a child hunted, but as a leader chosen."
Jackline swallowed, voice low.
"And return to what?"
Aldrin's silence was answer enough.
A broken throne.
A kingdom smothered in shadow.
Her future was not a crown waiting - but a battlefield rising.
Footsteps approached from behind. Light but deliberate.
Jackline turned.
A young woman stood at their table, cloak travel-stained, eyes sharp with something like fear and purpose woven together. A thin scar crossed her brow - a mark of survival.
"I know that crest," she said, voice barely steady. "I carry another like it."
Jackline's breath stilled.
The stranger reached into her cloak and revealed a matching piece of silver - not identical, but part of the same sigil, broken like a half-truth waiting to be completed.
Gasps rippled through the room.
Aldrin stood sharply, staff striking the floor.
"You-!"
He stopped himself - stunned, but not disbelieving.
Jackline leaned forward, heart thundering.
"Who are you?"
The girl's voice shook - not with weakness, but intensity.
"My family died protecting this," she whispered. "And their last words were your name."
Jackline's pulse snapped.
Why would strangers die for her?
Why would they carry pieces of her past?
Why would they know her name when she herself barely owned it?
Before she could ask more, the tavern window shattered inward.
Glass exploded across wood.
A scream rose from the street.
Jackline's heart slammed as the wolf leapt to his feet, fur bristling, teeth bared. Outside, flames flickered orange and blue against the dark - spreading fast, unnatural in hue.
A voice echoed through the village square - deep, booming.
"THE LOST HEIR IS HERE!"
Wood cracked.
Horses shrieked.
Silver-armored soldiers poured through the square like a tide of steel.
They had been followed.
The Sorcerer-King's reach had found her.
Aldrin's voice tore through the chaos:
"Jackline - RUN!"
And the wolf moved - not to flee -
but to clear a path.
Fire lit the night like prophecy, igniting.
Jackline rose into it.
Not hidden.
Not forgotten.
Becoming.
The Night Elder Reign Burned
Chaos crashed like a wave.
Villagers scattered in terror as armored soldiers flooded the square - metal flashing beneath torchlight, boots striking dirt like war drums. Horses reared, shadows lunged, fire leapt from rooftop to rooftop, orange bleeding into blue where sorcery twisted the flames.
Jackline didn't run.
She stood.
The wolf stood with her-fur bristling, teeth bared, eyes bright like lunar steel. When the first soldier reached them, blade raised, the wolf met him mid-step-striking not to kill, but to throw him backward like wind made weapon.
No one in the tavern had ever seen a beast move like that.
Gasps broke through the room like cracks in a dam.
Aldrin seized Jackline's arm.
"There is no victory here tonight," he warned, voice trembling with urgency. "You are not ready-they'll take you alive even if we fall dead."
Jackline met his gaze.
She saw desperation in it. Fear. Truth.
But something else flickered inside her, brighter than either:
Refusal.
She shoved open the tavern door and stepped into the burning square, wind slapping embers against her skin. Soldiers formed ranks - three lines deep, shields raised, spears leveled.
Their captain rode forward.
His armor was darker than the others, trimmed in silver that shimmered like frost. His face was hidden behind a half-mask hammered with the symbol of a crescent eclipsed by shadow.
Her mother's house - crossed out.
Jackline felt something cold and fierce rise in her blood.
The captain's voice boomed across the square.
"By order of the Sorcerer-King, the lost heir is to be surrendered!"
People fell to their knees.
Doors slammed.
Children cried.
Jackline did not move.
The wolf stood at her flank, a wall of fur and power, growl vibrating the ground itself.
The captain pointed his blade at her.
"You are outnumbered."
Jackline lifted her chin.
"You underestimate what you face."
The wolf lunged the instant the soldiers stepped forward. He moved like darkness come alive-silent and unstoppable. He knocked men aside as if they were saplings in the wind, never pausing, never faltering.
But there were too many.
Dozens.
Maybe more are still advancing through the trees.
The girl with the matching crest stepped beside Jackline, eyes blazing with the fire of someone who had already lost everything once.
"I don't know you," she said breathlessly. "But I will not watch another heir fall."
Before Jackline could answer, she darted into battle - fast and precise, daggers flashing silver. She held her ground like someone who'd trained for war her entire life.
Aldrin limped into view next, staff raised, and when he struck the earth, the ground shuddered - roots whipping up like serpents to trip soldiers and drag them down.
Magic older than steel.
Villagers - timid moments before - scrambled for buckets of water, weapons, stones, anything. Not all dared fight - but some stepped forward, and that mattered.
It mattered more than fear.
Jackline felt destiny shifting like storm wind through her hair - but she knew one truth sharply:
If she stayed here, the village would burn because of her.
The wolf's growl thundered behind her as he intercepted a soldier's strike meant for her spine. He saved her without hesitation - but his movements grew sharper, more violent.
Jackline's breath caught.
His eyes flashed-
not silver.
Red.
Just for an instant.
A fragment of the curse exposed.
Her heart lurched painfully.
He was choosing control - for now. But if the moon rose high enough... instinct might turn him into something even she could not stop.
Jackline's decision crystallized like frost.
"Retreat into the forest!" she shouted. "I will not let Elder Reign die for me!"
Her voice cut through screaming and steel like a command forged in blood.
Even the soldiers froze.
The wolf moved to her side immediately-waiting for her next word, trembling with suppressed power.
The girl with the matching crest sprinted to her, breath ragged.
"You have people willing to fight," she gasped. "You could build resistance-"
Jackline shook her head.
"I won't start my rule by burning the innocent."
Their eyes locked - understanding forming like fire catching dry wood.
Aldrin limped toward them, face lined with grief and resolve.
"You must go," he said. "Tonight. Now. We'll hold them long enough. But if you fall-hope falls with you."
Jackline's throat trembled - not with fear, but with ache.
For the first time, she had something to lose.
She stepped back, hand gripping the wolf's fur. He pressed against her leg as if to anchor her - or to be anchored himself.
Then she turned to the girl.
"Come with us."
The girl nodded once without hesitation.
And in that moment, Jackline felt the first piece of her own army fall into place.
Not through conquest.
Through choice.
Trees cracked behind them - soldiers forcing entry. Magic surged. Horses screamed. The night bent with violence waiting to spill.
Jackline stood one heartbeat longer in the burning square - claiming it with memory.
Then she spoke only one word:
"Run."
And they ran.
Into the dark.
Into the unknown.
Into the future that would either break her-
or crown her.
The wolf led them into the shadow.
Fire lit the world red behind them.
And the heir to a fallen kingdom vanished into the night like prophecy reborn.
CHAPTER 5 - THE ROAD OF EXILES
The forest swallowed elder reign behind them - firelight fading like a memory burning itself into the sky. Jackline didn't look back. The screams had quieted. The clash of steel was distant. She carried the weight of what she had left behind like a second heartbeat.
She had wanted to stay - to fight - but some battles were seeds, not storms. Tonight, survival was resistance.
Beside her ran the wolf.
Behind her, the girl with the matching crest.
Ahead - only shadow, river light, and miles of unknown.
Branches snapped beneath their feet. The river guided them - silver and restless - water churning over dark stones as if urging them onward. Jackline breathed through ache, lungs burning, each step pulling her further from the only safe place she'd ever known.
The wolf slowed first.
He stopped abruptly - muscles tense beneath moon-pale fur, head lifted toward the sky. His breath came harder, deeper, like something inside him was climbing to the surface with claws.
Jackline felt it before she understood it.
The moon - rising.
Full, white, enormous - a pearl bleeding light through branches. Its edge climbed from behind the tree line like a silent chorus she couldn't hear but could feel.
The wolf shuddered.
His eyes flashed silver-red.
Jackline's pulse snapped tight.
"Stop," she whispered - though she didn't know if she was speaking to him or to what lived inside him.
He didn't attack.
He didn't snarl.
But his body leaned into something unseen, as though gravity had shifted.
The girl stepped behind Jackline - cautious, blade ready.
"What's wrong with him?"
Jackline didn't answer.
She moved closer slowly - hand out, palm steady, voice low.
"You're still you," she murmured. "I know you are. Look at me."
The wolf's gaze flicked to hers - recognition shining through defiance like stars through a storm.
Blood-red flickered again.
Then silver returned.
He exhaled - a long, shaking breath - and the moonlight lost its grip.
For now.
Jackline placed her hand on his fur - grounding him, grounding herself. He leaned into her touch for the briefest moment, not as a beast seeking command but as a creature fighting something larger inside him.
The girl looked between them, brows knit.
"That curse," she breathed, "it's stronger than stories said."
Jackline nodded slowly.
"And it's waking with the moon."
The First Camp
They didn't stop until the river widened into a calm glade - water reflecting moonlight like shattered glass. Jackline set her spear in the soil and knelt to fill a flask, hands trembling from exhaustion she refused to show.
The girl built a small fire - orange, normal, safe - and finally spoke without hesitation.
"My name is Elara," she said quietly. "My parents died protecting that crest. I should have given it to you at the tavern - but I didn't know if you were real."
Jackline turned the silver piece she carried in her fingers - weight familiar, heavy like inheritance.
"We're both real," she said.
Her voice sounded older tonight.
Elara sat beside her, eyes reflecting firelight.
"You carry a kingdom's last hope," she said gently. "But hope is a fragile thing to hold alone."
Jackline breathed slowly.
"It isn't alone."
She glanced at the wolf.
He lay near the fire - restless, eyes half-closed, body taut beneath fur like storm beneath sky. One paw twitched as though even in stillness, he ran from something inside him.
Jackline's voice softened.
"He protects me. Even when he's fighting himself."
Elara nodded - seeing it clearly for the first time.
But the moment didn't last.
A branch cracked in the dark.
Not animal-light.
Human-heavy.
The wolf stood instantly - no hesitation - growl deep but controlled, his body between Jackline and the sound before thought could move.
Elara rose with him - blades drawn.
Jackline just breathed, steady, spear ready.
Something - or someone - shifted at the edge of the clearing. A figure cloaked in shadow, watching, waiting, unmoving. Not rushing them.
Studying them.
The wolf's growl lowered - not a threat now.
Warning.
Jackline's voice cut through the dark - calm, unwavering.
"Show yourself."
The figure stepped forward - pale moonlight catching a face too young to be a soldier, but too sharp to be harmless. A boy - maybe sixteen - cloak torn, breathing ragged as though he'd run miles without stopping.
His voice trembled when he spoke.
"You don't know me," he said, "but I know you."
Jackline didn't lower her spear.
"Speak."
The boy swallowed hard - eyes flashing with fear and urgency.
"They're coming," he whispered. "Not soldiers. Something worse."
The wind stilled.
The river fell silent.
Even the fire paused in its crackle.
Jackline stepped closer.
"What hunts us?"
The boy's answer was a shiver.
"Wraiths of the Sorcerer-King. They follow moon-blood. They follow you."
Elara's breath hitched.
The wolf growled like thunder cracked open.
Jackline's heart steadied - not because she had no fear - but because the path was no longer uncertain.
Only forward.
Only onward.
Only destiny.
MOONBLOOD AND WRAITH-SHADOW
The boy's warning settled over the glade like frost.
Not soldiers. Wraiths.
Creatures not born of flesh or steel - but spell, shadow, and the king's whisper.
Jackline's breath steadied. Her spear point did not waver. The river at her back murmured like teeth grinding underwater.
"When will they arrive?" she asked.
The boy shook - not with cold, but something deeper.
"They don't arrive," he whispered. "They appear."
His eyes cut toward the wolf, who stood tense, gaze locked on the tree line.
"They hunt wolf-blood. Moon-blood. Royal blood."
The wolf growled - deep, low, like thunder rumbling inside the earth.
Jackline stepped closer to him, one hand brushing his flank.
"I won't let them take us."
The wolf's breath hitched - something flickering behind his eyes. Silver. Red. Silver again. The moon climbs in him, stirring, unfurling like a second heartbeat he could barely contain.
Elara moved beside Jackline - shoulders squared.
"If they're wraiths, blades won't stop them."
Jackline tightened her grip on her spear.
"Then we learn what will."
When the Shadows Arrive
Fog rolled across the ground - silent, cold, unnatural. It didn't drift like mist - it crept, hungry. The trees hushed. The river dimmed. The moon sharpened until the night looked carved from bone.
Elara's breath trembled.
The boy's knees buckled.
Jackline held her spear like a spine.
The wolf lifted his head - ears pointed, body rigid.
They're here.
Not words.
Feeling.
A shape materialized at the far side of the clearing - tall, thin, draped in darkness like liquid cloth. No feet touched earth. No eyes shone. Only absence - hollow and pulling.
Another formed beside it. And another.
Three wraiths.
Their voices slid through the air like cold hands.
Heir of blood.
Tainted moon-child.
Come quietly.
Jackline felt their pull - soft, persuasive, terrifying. Like sleep after exhaustion. Like surrender dressed in comfort.
She planted her spear butt in the soil.
"No."
The wraith nearest her tilted its head - not curious, but assessing.
You carry power unopened.
We can unmake your burdens.
We can still overcome your fear.
Jackline's voice rose - steadier than she felt.
"Fear is not my enemy."
Elara held her knives low, chest rising quickly. The boy pressed against a tree, shaking.
Then the wolf stepped forward.
His fur stood on end - every muscle drawn tight as if lightning threaded through his bones. The wraiths shifted toward him like magnets to metal.
Moonblood.
Broken guardian.
Yours is the hunger we seek.
Jackline's heart lurched.
The wolf snarled - the sound splitting the night open. His eyes flashed red-bright now, not for a moment but long enough to see war inside him. The moon was claiming him, piece by piece.
Jackline moved in front of him.
The wraiths paused.
The wolf's breath hitched behind her - not anger, but fear of himself. Fear of what he might become.
Jackline lifted her chin.
"If you take him," she said, voice iron-true, "you take me first."
The wraiths rippled - darkness bending in surprise.
Would you bind yourself to the curse?
Her answer came without hesitation.
"Yes."
Silver light sparked beneath her skin - faint, but real. It pulsed like a heartbeat she hadn't known was hers. The moon felt different now - less distant, more alive.
One wraith recoiled.
Her blood wakes.
Another hissed.
Too soon.
The wolf staggered to her side - fur bristling, gaze locked on her. Not with confusion this time.
With recognition.
Jackline felt electricity hum up her spine - not pain, not fear.
Power.
She gripped her spear - and for the first time, it responded. Wood warmed beneath her palm. The silver crest in her cloak shimmered.
The wraiths moved - quick, predatory.
Elara grabbed Jackline's arm.
The boy cried out.
The moon blazed.
And Jackline thrust her spear into the earth.
Light burst.
Not blinding - but pure. Like moonlight made solid. It rippled through the clearing like wind through grass, touching every shadow.
The wraiths shrieked soundlessly - not wounded, but repelled. Their forms blurred, thinned, tore like smoke in a gale. The forest bent with the force of it - branches whipping, water surging white as if tasting storm.
And then-
Silence.
The wraiths evaporated.
Gone.
Jackline fell to one knee, breath ragged, pulse roaring in her ears. The wolf pressed against her shoulder, steadying her not as protector or curse, but as presence. His eyes flickered silver again - red fading like a nightmare at dawn.
Elara stared - awe and disbelief mixing like lightning.
"You did that."
Jackline swallowed hard.
"I didn't know I could."
The boy exhaled shakily. "You're more than heir."
Jackline looked at her hand - still trembling.
"No," she breathed.
"I'm just beginning."
The night around them felt different now - like the world recognized something that had always been waiting.
The air was awakening.
The curse was stirring.
The hunt was only beginning.
And dawn was hours away.
When the Light Fades, Truth Emerges
For a long moment, no one spoke.
The clearing still hummed with the residue of power - faint silver drifting across the grass like frost. Jackline's hand still tingled where the spear had connected with earth. Not pain. Not burn.
A call.
Elara sheathed her knife slowly, eyes wide but sharp.
"What you did..." she murmured, "it wasn't survival. It was a command."
Jackline wanted to deny it. She wanted to say she had acted on instinct - to protect them, not to lead them. But her words felt small next to what she'd felt when the moonlight surged through her blood.
It hadn't been an accident.
It had been awakening.
The boy finally moved - staggering forward, cloak torn, cheeks streaked with river-mud.
"They will come again," he said hoarsely. "Wraiths don't stop. They only learn."
Jackline felt ice crawl up her spine.
She glanced at the wolf.
He stood too still - body taut, ears stiff, breath harsh as if restraining something inside him. His eyes locked onto Jackline with intensity too human to ignore.
Silver - then red - then silver again.
He was fighting himself.
The moon was winning ground.
Jackline moved toward him slowly - letting him see her, letting him smell her, letting him decide. She placed one hand on the thick fur behind his neck.
He didn't pull away.
He leaned into her touch - shoulders trembling, breath shaking against her palm like a storm held in skin.
Elara watched, voice softening:
"He trusts you more than he trusts himself."
Jackline swallowed.
She could feel his fear beneath bone and muscle - not fear of the wraiths, not of the king, not of death.
Fear of what he might become.
What the curse might turn him into when the moonlight hits its fullest.
She whispered into the night - not pleading, but promising:
"I won't leave you to face this alone."
The wolf's eyes softened - silver shining like dawn through cloud.
A vow passed between them.
No words.
Only truth.
Refuge at Moonball
The river bent east into a rock-sheltered hollow - steep enough to hide them from searching eyes. Elara gathered what dry branches she could. The boy collapsed near the firepit and pulled his knees to his chest, shivering with exhaustion and terror held too long.
Jackline sat beside the wolf.
He lay down, body tense as if every breath might break something inside him. She rested her hand on his shoulder. His fur was warm - too warm - like fever.
Moonlight brightened across his spine.
She felt him change, but not visibly - in presence, in breath, in awareness. His heart beat faster beneath her palm.
Stronger.
Louder.
Less human.
Elara sat across from them, voice low.
"If the wraiths return, we won't survive without more power. Not just magic. Strategy."
Jackline nodded slowly.
Strategy, she knew. Survival, she understood. Leadership - she was learning with every step she took away from the ruins she'd called home.
She turned to the boy.
"You said you know me," she said gently. "How?"
He lifted his head - a young face worn by sorrow that didn't belong to someone so small.
"My mother was a palace handmaiden," he whispered. "She saw the queen hide you. She fled with the story in her throat. She told me until the night she died."
He swallowed, voice cracking:
"She said, if you ever find her - serve her. The kingdom rises only if she stands."
Jackline's breath shook.
No forest wind.
No diary words.
No single advisor.
But a child grown on loyalty to a girl he'd never met.
"Your name?" she asked softly.
"Terin."
Jackline nodded.
"Then you're not alone now either."
He bowed his head - not for duty, but gratitude.
Elara's gaze flicked to Jackline with new weight.
"You're gathering followers without trying."
Jackline looked into the fire - watching flame curl like the future, uncertain and rising.
"I don't want followers," she said quietly.
Elara shook her head.
"You don't get to choose that anymore."
The words settled in Jackline's bones like truth.
She didn't ask to be heir.
She didn't ask to be hunted.
She didn't ask to rise.
But she was rising anyway.
A Decision Made
Midnight deepened.
Wraiths did not return - for now.
Soldiers would soon.
The king would not stop.
Jackline stood - spear in hand, wolf at her side, Elara and Terin watching her like sunrise waiting to break.
"We travel at dawn," she said.
"Not aimless. Not hiding."
Elara stepped forward.
"Where?"
Jackline turned north.
To the mountains.
To the heart of the kingdom.
To the truth.
"To find those still loyal," she said.
"Then we build an army."
The wolf lifted his head - no growl now, only readiness.
Jackline looked at him - and something inside her settled like a blade into a scabbard.
"We face the curse together," she whispered. "I won't let it take you."
His eyes flickered - red stirring like a storm behind the horizon.
He leaned into her hand.
It was enough.
DAWN ON THE ROAD OF OATHS
Dawn crawled across the river like pale gold spilled from the sky. Birds returned in hesitant song, as if testing whether night still ruled. Smoke from their small fire thinned into cold air, carrying the scent of wet earth and ash.
Jackline didn't sleep.
Neither did the wolf.
He lay beside her all night, muscles taut, breath uneven - as though the moon had threaded itself through his veins and refused to let go. When sunlight finally reached them, he relaxed - only slightly - as if day gave him temporary mercy.
Jackline rose quietly.
Elara and Terin stirred awake near the remnants of the fire, exhaustion carved into their faces but resolve brightening behind it.
"We move," Jackline said softly.
No hesitation this time.
Terin packed quickly. Elara doused the embers. The wolf stood as Jackline reached for her spear, and something passed between them - silent, strong, not command but connection.
She started north.
And they followed.
The Mountains of High Mist
The forest thinned by midday.
Ahead, jagged peaks cut the horizon - grey-blue, ancient, dusted in white where winter never fully left. Wind rushed down from them like cold breath, stirring Jackline's hair and tugging her cloak like a warning.
Elara studied the ridges with sharp eyes.
"The Order of High Mist lives somewhere beyond that range," she said. "Before the fall, they swore themselves to your mother's bloodline."
Jackline nodded slowly.
"And they might still keep that oath."
Might.
Not would.
Her grip tightened on the spear.
Terin stepped beside her, quiet but steady.
"If the Order stands with you, others will follow. Villages. Houses. Whole armies."
Jackline exhaled - not shaken, only aware.
Armies.
She had never seen one.
But one day she would face one - her uncle's.
The wolf brushed against her hand gently - grounding her. Reminding her, she did not walk toward fate alone.
First Lesson of Power
They walked until shadows stretched long. At a clearing, Elara stopped.
"You need to train."
Jackline blinked. "Train?"
Elara stepped back and tossed her a wooden staff.
"You fought soldiers on instinct. You repelled wraiths by luck and bloodline. But instinct and luck won't keep you alive forever."
Jackline hesitated.
The wolf watched - ears pricked, tail low, as if sensing something important.
Elara spread her stance.
"Show me how you fight. Not survive. Fight."
Jackline inhaled slowly.
She lifted the staff - like spear, but lighter, unfamiliar. The balance felt wrong in her hand. Her movements were raw but natural - like rain falling without pattern.
Elara struck first.
Not to harm - to test.
Jackline blocked - barely.
Elara moved again - faster. Jackline dodged, rolled, swung too wide, and corrected too slow. Her breath sharpened. Sweat built on her brow. The wolf rumbled softly, anxious, protective - but he didn't interfere.
This was Jackline's fight.
Her first lesson.
Elara stepped back eventually, chest rising, face calm.
"You move like someone who never learned fear," she said. "But also, like someone who never learned discipline."
Jackline lowered her staff - gaze steady, unashamed.
"Then teach me."
Elara held her eyes for a long moment.
Then nodded.
And Jackline felt the first stir of leadership not as a burden - but as a choice.
The One Who Watches
As they set camp near the mountain's base, night approached again - bringing longer shadows, colder wind, and a moon not yet full but bright enough to pull at the wolf's blood.
He paced the perimeter.
Slow. Repeated. Almost ritual.
Jackline watched him - heart tight - as his breaths grew heavier, gaze flicking to the moonlight like a tether pulling him upward. She stepped close, one hand reaching.
He leaned into it.
Not lost.
Not gone.
Holding on.
Elara built a fire. Terin prepared dried roots for stew. Jackline sat beside the wolf, fingers buried in his fur as if anchoring both him and herself to the earth.
Then she felt it.
Eyes.
Not wraith.
Not soldier.
Something else.
Watching from beyond the firelight.
Jackline rose slowly, spear in hand.
"Show yourself."
Elara and Terin froze. The wolf spun toward the dark - no growl, only stillness too sharp to mistake.
A figure stepped from behind the trees.
A man - cloaked in tattered blue, beard-streaked silver, eyes clouded like storm-swept ice. He carried no weapon. His steps were steady. Unafraid.
His gaze landed on Jackline.
On the crest at her side.
On the wolf.
And he bowed.
Not deeply.
But with recognition earned, not given.
"I have waited many years for the moon-child to rise," he said.
His voice carried power and grief intertwined.
"I am Maelor. Keeper of the Curse."
Jackline's breath stilled.
Elara stepped protectively between them.
Terin stared in disbelief.
The wolf - for the first time - did not snarl, did not tense.
He bowed his head in return.
As if he knew this man.
As if the curse did too.
Maelor's eyes softened with sorrow, ancient and heavy.
"You have found him," he said to Jackline.
"But you do not yet know what you hold."
Jackline stepped forward.
Her voice was steady.
"Then teach me."
Maelor's gaze deepened - not judging, but measuring destiny inside her.
"I will," he said.
"But first, you must hear the truth of the Guardian's curse - and the price of breaking it."
The wolf lifted his head - eyes red-silver, breath shaking.
The truth waited.
And it would change everything.
The Keeper of the Curse
Night folded around them like a deep cloak.
Stars hung sharp as embers.
The moon watched - pale, patient, unblinking.
Jackline sat with her spear across her lap.
Elara and Terin listened in stillness.
The wolf lay near the fire, awake but quiet - like he already knew what they were about to hear.
Maelor lowered himself onto a stone across from them, cloak pooling like a storm cloud around his feet. When he spoke, his voice carried the weight of history - not written, but lived.
The History They Never Told
"Once," Maelor began, "there was no curse. Only loyalty."
His eyes flicked to the wolf - with pity.
"He was not always as you see him."
Jackline's breath hesitated.
Her voice was barely a whisper.
"He was... human?"
Maelor nodded.
"A knight. The strongest swore to the queen's guard. He loved the old kingdom more fiercely than any sword could protect."
Jackline's heart struck hard inside her chest - not with romance, but with awe.
To think the creature she shared her life with once stood on two feet, spoke with a voice, carried purpose shaped by oath-
Maelor continued:
"When the Sorcerer-King rose, the knight defied him. Too loyal. Too brave. Too willing to die before surrender."
The fire cracked.
The wolf's ears lowered - not in weakness, but memory.
"So, the king cursed him," Maelor said softly, "to serve as guardian - neither fully beast nor man. Immortal as long as the heir lived. Bound to protect her... yet doomed to turn on her when the red moon returns."
Elara inhaled sharply.
Terin's hands shook.
Jackline felt the world tilt - not with fear, but with sudden gravity.
"He was bound to protect me," she whispered. "But also, to destroy me."
Maelor nodded once - slow, sorrowing.
"The curse ensures no heir can rise to claim the throne. If the world does not kill you... Your guardian will."
The wolf flinched - a wound without a blade.
Jackline placed her hand on his fur - firm, grounding.
"No," she murmured. "He has saved me every time."
Maelor's gaze wrapped around them both like old wind through ruined halls.
"Because his human heart is not gone," he said. "Only buried."
Jackline met the wolf's eyes - silver trembling beneath red like dawn beneath storm cloud.
Not mindless.
Not monster.
Trapped.
She steadied her breath.
"Can the curse be broken?"
Maelor looked into her - through her - as if searching for what she did not yet know she carried.
"Yes," he said.
Silence shivered.
Elara leaned in.
"How?"
Maelor's voice dropped like truth on an altar.
"Three things are needed. A choice, a sacrifice, and trust without condition."
Jackline felt the words like iron.
Choice.
Sacrifice.
Trust.
But what must be chosen?
What must be sacrificed?
Whom must she trust?
Maelor continued:
"To free the wolf, you must break the bond that binds him to you. But if you break it wrong... he will vanish. Body and soul."
Jackline froze.
Vanishing - not dying violently, not turning beast entirely - but simply ceasing to exist.
She tightened her hold on his fur.
"I won't lose him."
"And if keeping him means he one day turns against you?" Maelor asked gently.
Jackline swallowed - breath shaking.
"I will save him before that day."
Her voice didn't tremble.
Her certainty did not falter.
Maelor exhaled - slow, as if the answer was both too brave and too dangerous.
"Then we walk to the mountains. There lies the first key to the curse - within the ruins of the old stronghold."
He rose, staff, sinking into the earth.
"The Sorcerer-King will send soldiers. Wraiths. Worse things you have not yet seen. Every step forward awakens more of your power - and more of his."
Jackline stood with him - wolf rising to her side.
Elara and Terin followed, resolve forming like steel in young hearts.
Jackline raised her chin.
"We go at dawn," she said.
Maelor nodded.
"And once we reach High Mist, your real training begins."
The fire hissed.
The moon lowered.
Morning drew close like a blade of light.
Jackline knelt beside the wolf - her hand resting on his neck, not claiming him, but promising him something she had not spoken aloud before:
"I will free you," she whispered. "Not by abandoning you - but by breaking the curse itself."
His eyes met hers - silver, steady, fierce.
And in them, she saw the truth:
He believed her.
Maybe more than she believed herself.
The night breathed again.
And for the first time since leaving the castle, Jackline did not feel like a hunted child.
She felt like something awakening into power.
Not queen yet - but rising.