Raindrops clung to Han Bond's hair, sliding down his cheeks like tears the world refused to cry with him. He huddled beneath the cracked concrete arch of the old overpass, watching headlights sweep across puddles and the wan silhouettes of distant city dwellers, each person hurrying home. Han wondered what it would feel like to run toward warmth, to have an address not scribbled on scraps of cardboard, to be met at a door with a parent's worried scold.But he only had questions: Why had his parents left? Were they dead, as some whispered, or had they simply given up on him? When the streetlights flickered on, Han's memories grew sharper, bittersweet as the aftertaste of a lollipop from a happier time.He pulled the hood of his battered sweatshirt tighter and peered at his reflection in a rain-soaked window—a fifteen-year-old boy with haunted eyes and a stubborn chin. The world had offered him lessons in toughness, but never in trust. His left wrist ached: a reminder from last night's odd encounter, but the pain was familiar. Scratches, bruises, hunger—these were aches he understood.Today felt heavier. Han sensed it in the distant rumble of thunder, in the way the air seemed thick with meaning. He slipped from his hiding place and jogged toward the junkyard, backpack bouncing against his spindly frame. Mr. Bell, the foreman, often allowed Han to pick through metal and wires, selling what he could for spare change as long as he didn't disturb the guard dog.The junkyard's gates were already open. Han squinted at the heaps of tangled metal, searching for easy targets: copper wire, maybe a half-dead car battery. His sneaker splashed in a puddle, its chill biting through a hole in the sole. He barely noticed as he navigated familiar chaos.A low growl pulled him up short.There it was—at the end of a row of shattered fridges—a dog, but not the angry Rottweiler Mr. Bell kept. This animal was otherworldly: fur shimmering dark and pale like moonlight on water, eyes mismatched gold and silver, standing so still it could have been a shadow carved from mist.Han's instincts warned him to run, but he held his ground. Every muscle tensed. Somehow, he felt as though the dog was waiting for him.He crouched slowly, extending a hand as one might to a skittish child. "Hey," he murmured, "I won't hurt you."The dog's tongue flickered over pointed teeth. Its gaze locked with his and, for an instant, Han glimpsed images—blink-fast and disjointed—in his mind's eye: endless forests, a circle of glowing stones, a pair of hands reaching out. He shivered.Without warning, the dog lunged. Han recoiled, but not fast enough—the dog's jaws caught his wrist. Pain seared through him, but just as quickly the bite softened; a warm tongue soothed the wound. Han gasped for breath, blinking at the wet grass, the trembling in his limbs.The dog's eyes met his once more, ancient sorrow within them. Then it vanished between heaps of discarded tires.Han pressed a trembling hand to his wound. No blood, only a faint blue glow beneath the skin, like veins bathed in starlight. Panic fluttered in his stomach, swallowed by curiosity when pale symbols shimmered before his eyes—bizarre shapes, beautiful and unreadable.Suddenly, words formed, crisp and soundless:
