Get the APP hot
Home / Werewolf / The White Wolf's Secret: His Unexpected Luna
The White Wolf's Secret: His Unexpected Luna

The White Wolf's Secret: His Unexpected Luna

5.0
10 Chapters
Read Now

I am only three years old, but I have the ancient soul of a Seer and the monstrous strength of a warrior. When my caretaker died, he gave me a blood-pact stone and told me to find my new guardian, Ryker Blackwood. I crossed the dangerous forest alone. I even slaughtered three massive rogues with a silver dagger and healed a dying noblewoman along the way. But when I finally tracked Ryker down in the pack market, he wasn't the strong protector I was promised. He was a disgraced outcast, kneeling in the dirt, bound with burning wolfsbane ropes. The pack's cruel enforcer was raising a silver whip to sever his leg for unpaid debts, while the entire crowd jeered and called him useless trash. He was utterly broken, penniless, and couldn't even defend himself, let alone protect a child. Silas had sworn Ryker was a good man. How could this pathetic, hated pariah be my destined guardian? Yet, seeing them humiliate Silas's only friend ignited a cold fury in my ancient wolf. I stepped out from the crowd, a tiny silver-haired pup facing down the pack's most feared enforcer. "Stop. You are not worthy to punish him." I exposed her darkest secret to the whole market, shattered Ryker's chains, and decided to save this broken man-even if my kraken-like appetite meant he'd have to hunt monsters just to afford my dinner.

Contents

The White Wolf's Secret: His Unexpected Luna Chapter 1

Lyra's POV:

The flame of the oil lamp flickered, casting dancing shadows across the rough-hewn walls of the cabin. A cold draft snaked through a gap in the logs, making the tiny light shudder as if it, too, was taking its last breath. It illuminated the face of the man on the cot, Silas Hawthorne. His skin was as pale as parchment, stretched thin over his bones.

My small hands, steady and sure, dipped a cloth into a basin of cool water. I wrung it out and gently wiped his forehead. There were no tears in my silver eyes. My focus was absolute. This was a process, a transition I understood with a clarity that belied my three years of life.

A rattling cough shook Silas's frail body. A wisp of black vapor escaped his lips, and my nose wrinkled. The scent of soul-decay. My ancient spirit recognized it instantly. It was the smell of a thread being cut from the great tapestry.

His hand, as dry and brittle as an old branch, shot out and gripped mine. It was cold. "The time has come, Little Moon," he rasped, his voice a faint scratch of sound.

From beneath his pillow, he pulled a flat, black stone etched with swirling runes. A single groove, a blood channel, was carved down its center. "Take this, Lyra."

With the last of his strength, he dragged a fingernail across his own thumb, drawing a single, dark drop of blood. He guided it into the stone's channel. For a moment, the runes glowed with a faint red light, then went dark again.

"Go down the mountain," he instructed, his breath catching. "Go to the territory of the Blackwood Pack. Find your kinsman, Ryker Blackwood."

I listened, committing the name to memory.

A deep worry etched itself into Silas's features. "He... he may not be living well. But his heart is good. Give this to him. He will understand."

His voice faded to a near-whisper. "Tell him... I am sorry. And... make sure... make sure you feed her."

I gave a solemn nod, my small fingers closing around the cold stone.

Silas's breathing grew shallow. He looked at me, his gaze filled with a love and sorrow that transcended words. "Sing, child. Send me home."

I climbed onto the edge of the cot, my lips near his ear. In a language older than the mountains around us, I began to hum the Sending Song. The melody was ethereal, a lullaby for a soul returning to the Goddess.

As the ancient words flowed from me, the lines of pain on Silas's face softened. His expression became peaceful.

Outside, a single beam of moonlight pierced the clouds, spilling through the cabin's small window and bathing him in a silver glow. It was the Goddess, come to collect her own.

He exhaled one last time, and the life-scent of him vanished completely.

I stopped singing. For a long moment, I simply watched him in the quiet. Then, I leaned forward and pressed my forehead to his, a final, silent farewell.

There was no time for grief. I slid off the cot and dragged my plain-looking backpack from underneath. It was time to honor my promise.

I placed the blood-pact stone carefully into a protected inner pocket. Then I went to the larder, packing the last few strips of venison jerky and the entire remaining sack of flour.

I swung the backpack onto my shoulders. To any observer, its weight would seem impossible for my small frame, but I stood straight and tall, as if it weighed nothing at all.

I took one last look around the cabin that had been my only home. Then I went outside, to the grave I had dug for him days ago.

Using a strength that no child should possess, I gently placed Silas's body within the earth. I covered it with a heavy stone slab I had prepared, one large enough to keep the wild beasts away.

When it was done, I bowed deeply to the makeshift grave.

The moon illuminated my path. My short, silver hair ruffled in the night wind. Without a backward glance, I turned and started down the mountain, walking toward a world I had never known.

Continue Reading
img View More Comments on App
MoboReader
Download App
icon APP STORE
icon GOOGLE PLAY