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Chapter 10 - Echoes of the Past

The wind carried the scent of rain as

Lira stepped into the old library built deep in the heart of the Blackwood

camp. It wasn't much—a square stone building tucked behind the alpha's den—but

it was quiet, hidden, and filled with history.

She needed quiet.

Her fingertips brushed the worn spines

of leather-bound journals, most covered in dust. Scrolls were stacked

carelessly on shelves, mixed with ancient texts and faded maps of Silver Hollow

before it was even called that.

 

"Looking for bedtime stories?" a voice

asked behind her.

 

She turned. Cassian leaned against the

doorframe, arms crossed.

 

"Looking for answers," she replied.

 

He nodded, stepping inside. "Found

any?"

 

"Not yet. But I can feel something

here. Something old." Her fingers hovered over a dark green tome. "The curse.

My bloodline. It's all tied to this place."

 

Cassian approached slowly. "Your

mother spent time in here. Mara Kane. I remember."

 

Lira looked up sharply. "You knew

her?"

 

"I was young," he said. "She came here

often. Always with questions. And always alone."

 

Lira opened the green book, its pages

yellowed with age. Symbols lined the margins—ones she'd seen in her visions.

Her breath hitched.

 

"She was trying to seal the Veil,"

Lira murmured. "But something went wrong."

 

Cassian nodded grimly. "The rift in

the Veil weakened the balance. Your mother tried to close it, but the magic

needed… it demanded sacrifice."

 

Lira's chest tightened. "She

sacrificed herself?"

 

Cassian hesitated. "Some say yes.

Others… say she sacrificed someone else."

 

Lira slammed the book shut.

 

"I won't be like her," she whispered.

 

 

 

Outside, Zane stood watching the

training field. Wolves sparred, growling and shifting, their muscles tense with

effort and aggression.

 

But his mind wasn't on the fight.

 

It was on her.

 

Everything about Lira unsettled

him—the way her voice lingered in his ears long after she'd spoken, the way her

scent wrapped around him, soft and wild.

 

And the bond… that bond burned.

 

Cassian's words from earlier echoed in

his head: You can't keep pretending this isn't real.

 

Zane clenched his jaw. He wasn't

pretending.

 

He was surviving.

 

The last time he'd trusted someone

with that kind of closeness, they'd died. And now here was Lira—cursed,

dangerous, unpredictable—and somehow, he couldn't stay away.

 

He turned sharply and headed toward

the library.

 

 

 

Lira stood frozen in front of a

mirror.

 

But it wasn't her reflection staring

back.

 

It was Mara.

 

Younger. Strong. Eyes blazing with the

same fire Lira had seen in her visions.

 

The mirror shimmered with magic,

glowing faintly around the edges. A whisper slipped through the glass, soft and

ancient.

 

"The blood calls. The Veil opens.

Choose wisely."

 

Lira's heart raced. "What does that

mean? What am I supposed to choose?"

 

The reflection flickered—Mara's face

replaced with the bloody symbol from her nightmares. The mirror cracked at the

edges, but the image burned into her mind.

 

Zane burst through the door.

 

She jumped, turning to face him,

breathless.

 

"What happened?" he asked, eyes

scanning the room.

 

She pointed at the mirror. "I saw her.

My mother."

 

Zane approached slowly, looking into

the glass.

 

It showed only their reflections now.

 

"You're sure?"

 

"She said something. About a choice.

About the Veil." Lira pressed her hand to the glass. It felt warm.

 

Zane studied her. "Your magic is tied

to the rift. Maybe she's trying to warn you."

 

"She's dead."

 

"Magic doesn't die. Not like we do."

 

Their eyes met.

 

Neither of them said it out loud—but

they both felt it: something was coming.

 

And it was getting closer.

 

 

 

Back in the main camp, Seraphina

circled a group of younger wolves near the fire pit, her smile pleasant, her

words sharp.

 

"She's manipulating him," she said

softly. "The Alpha doesn't see it yet, but she's driving a wedge between us

all."

 

"Shouldn't we trust his judgment?" one

asked.

 

Seraphina arched a brow. "Even leaders

can be blinded by lust."

 

The wolves looked uneasy. Doubt

planted its first roots.

 

"She's dangerous," Seraphina

continued. "And if we wait too long, we won't be able to stop her."

 

No one spoke, but the tension in their

eyes was enough.

 

She smiled.

 

Good.

 

 

 

That evening, Lira found herself

walking the edge of the warded forest, guided by instinct more than reason.

 

The trees whispered to her.

 

Literally.

 

Voices—faint, echoes of the

past—rippled through the branches. Her mother's voice. And another… unfamiliar

but sharp. Male. Cold.

 

Julian.

 

She pressed her hand to a tree, eyes

fluttering closed.

 

Suddenly, the world around her

vanished, replaced by a vision.

 

She was in Silver Hollow—but twisted.

Broken. The sky bled red. The Veil was torn open, shadows pouring through.

 

And at the center—her.

 

Eyes glowing. Blood dripping from her

palms.

 

Zane stood across from her, wounded

and angry.

 

"You chose wrong," he whispered.

 

Then everything exploded into white.

 

 

 

Lira gasped awake, falling to her

knees in the dirt.

 

Zane was already beside her, his arms

catching her just in time.

 

"You keep collapsing like that and

I'll start carrying you everywhere," he muttered, voice tight with worry.

 

She clutched his shirt, shaking. "I

saw the future. A version of it. Silver Hollow… it was gone. And you—"

 

"I'm fine," he said. "You're safe."

 

"No," she whispered. "None of us are."

 

He pulled her to her feet, but he

didn't let go.

 

The glow between them sparked again,

brighter this time.

 

"Why does this keep happening?" she

asked, voice hoarse.

 

"The bond's growing," he said.

"Whether we want it to or not."

 

She looked up at him. "And do you?"

 

His jaw clenched. "I don't know."

 

But his hand didn't leave her waist.

 

And her fingers didn't release his

shirt.

 

 

 

Later, alone in her den, Lira opened

Mara's journal again.

 

Her mother's handwriting was neat,

controlled—until the last few pages, where it turned frantic.

 

"The Veil weakens every cycle. Blood

can anchor it, or destroy it."

 

"If they find her—if they find

Lira—they will use her blood to break it for good."

 

"The eclipse… it's the key. And the

end."

 

Lira stared at the page, her fingers

trembling.

 

The eclipse was coming.

 

And with it—Julian. Elias. The hybrid.

 

She wasn't just cursed.

 

She was the lock.

 

And maybe the weapon too.

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