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Chapter 9 - Chapter Nine: The Shadow in the Rain

Three Days

Before the Full Moon

Age 22

The rain

fell harder now, a relentless sheet that blurred the world beyond Silverfang

Manor's windows into shades of gray. I stood in the hallway just outside

Elena's quarters, my breath still uneven, my mind spinning with the weight of

her revelations. My mother—a seer, murdered by the Mafia Leader. The pendant—a

key to her power, to the pack's secrets. And Seraphina's mother, a traitor

who'd sold her out. My wolf growled softly, a low rumble of fury that matched

the storm outside, and the pendant at my throat pulsed, its warmth a steady

anchor in the chaos of my thoughts.

I needed

air, needed space to think, to process. The manor felt suffocating, its walls

closing in with the weight of history and betrayal. I pushed through a side

door, stepping onto a covered balcony that overlooked the forest. The air was

cold, sharp with the scent of rain and pine, and I leaned against the stone

railing, letting the damp chill seep into my skin. My mother's voice still

echoed in my mind—Trust yourself. Trust the pendant.—but trust felt like

a fragile thing, a thread stretched too thin.

The forest

stretched out before me, its shadows deep and uninviting, and I couldn't help

but scan the treeline, half-expecting to see those glowing eyes from that

night. My wolf stirred, her senses sharpening, and I felt the pull of the blood

oath—a faint tug toward Darius, wherever he was in the manor. The bond was

stronger now, a quiet hum that I couldn't ignore, and it made me uneasy. I

didn't want to need him, didn't want to rely on anyone, but the truth was

undeniable: I wasn't strong enough to face this alone. Not yet.

A soft noise

behind me—a footstep, barely audible over the rain—made me spin, my claws

extending on instinct. My wolf snarled, ready to fight, but it was only Kael,

his dark hair plastered to his forehead, his green eyes shadowed with

exhaustion. He raised his hands, palms out, a silent gesture of peace. "It's

just me," he said, his voice low, careful. "You okay?"

I relaxed

slightly, my claws retracting, but my wolf stayed on edge, her growl a quiet

warning. "No," I said, my voice sharper than I meant it to be. "I'm not okay,

Kael. Elena just told me everything—about Mom, about Seraphina's mother, about

the pendant. Why didn't you tell me?"

Kael's face

tightened, guilt flashing in his eyes as he stepped closer, the rain dripping

from his jacket onto the stone floor. "I wanted to," he said, his voice rough.

"But I didn't know the whole story—not until recently. I've been piecing it

together, tracking the Mafia Leader's movements, trying to figure out who he's

working with. I didn't want to burden you with half-truths."

"Burden me?"

I laughed, the sound bitter, jagged. "I've been carrying this pendant—and Mom's

death—my whole life, Kael. You should've told me what you knew, even if it

wasn't everything. I deserved that much."

He nodded,

his jaw clenching. "You're right," he said, his voice quieter now, heavy with

regret. "I should've. I thought I was protecting you, but I was wrong. I'm

sorry, Liora."

I wanted to

stay angry, to hold onto the hurt, but the exhaustion in his eyes—the same

exhaustion I felt—softened me. Kael had always been my protector, even when I

didn't want him to be. He'd carried our family's shame just as I had, and I

could see the toll it had taken. "What did you find?" I asked, my voice

steadier now. "About the Mafia Leader. What do you know?"

Kael

hesitated, glancing over his shoulder as if the shadows themselves might be

listening, then stepped closer, his voice dropping to a whisper. "He's in the

city," he said. "New York. I tracked one of his lieutenants to a warehouse in

Brooklyn last night. They're planning something—something big. I don't know the

details yet, but it's tied to the full moon. And to you."

My stomach

twisted, a cold dread settling over me. "Brooklyn," I said, the word tasting

like ash. I'd been there, working at the bookstore, thinking I'd escaped the

pack's reach. But if the Mafia Leader was that close, then nowhere was safe.

"What do they want with me? The pendant?"

Kael nodded,

his expression grim. "I think so. The pendant's power—it's tied to the pack's

magic, to the ley lines that run through this land. If he can harness it, he

can control the pack, maybe even more. That's why he killed Mom. She knew too

much, and she was strong enough to stop him."

I touched

the pendant, its silver cool against my fingertips, and felt a flicker of my

mother's presence—her voice, her strength. "She told me to trust it," I said,

my voice barely above a whisper. "In Elena's room, I heard her again. She said

it would show me the way."

Kael's eyes

softened, a flicker of hope breaking through the guilt. "Then we need to figure

out what it does," he said. "Before the full moon. We don't have much time."

Before I

could respond, a sharp, unnatural howl cut through the rain—a sound that wasn't

wolf, wasn't human, but something else entirely. My wolf surged forward, her

growl loud and fierce, and the pendant flared, its light bright enough to cast

shadows across the balcony. Kael grabbed my arm, his grip tight, his own wolf

rising as his eyes glowed gold. "That's not one of ours," he said, his voice a

low snarl.

The howl

came again, closer this time, from the edge of the forest. My heart pounded, my

senses sharpening as my wolf pushed against my control, desperate to shift, to

fight. I scanned the treeline, the rain blurring my vision, and then I saw it—a

shape, tall and jagged, moving through the trees. It wasn't the creature from

the forest, not exactly, but it was similar—too tall, too thin, its limbs

unnaturally long, its eyes glowing a sickly yellow that cut through the storm.

"Kael," I

whispered, my voice trembling, but he was already moving, pulling a dagger from

his belt, his body tense with readiness. "Stay behind me," he said, his voice a

command, but I shook my head, stepping forward instead.

"No," I

said, my voice firm despite the fear clawing at my chest. "I'm done hiding."

The creature

stepped into the clearing, its movements jerky, unnatural, like a puppet on

broken strings. Its body was a twisted mass of shadow and bone, its face a

grotesque mask of teeth and hollow sockets, but those eyes—those glowing,

hateful eyes—locked onto me, and I felt the pendant burn against my skin, its

light flaring brighter, hotter, until it was almost painful.

Your power

calls to me, it hissed,

its voice a grating echo of the creature from the forest, and my blood ran

cold. It was the same voice, the same hunger. My wolf howled, a sound that tore

from my throat unbidden, and I felt my claws extend, my canines ache as I

fought to keep her in check.

Kael lunged,

his dagger flashing as he aimed for the creature's throat, but it moved faster,

swiping at him with claws that gleamed like obsidian. He dodged, barely, the

claws raking across his arm, drawing blood that mixed with the rain. "Liora,

run!" he shouted, but I couldn't—wouldn't—leave him.

I reached

for the pendant, my mother's voice echoing in my mind: Trust it. I didn't know what I was doing, didn't

know how to unlock its power, but I poured every ounce of my fear, my anger, my

desperation into it, willing it to do something. The pendant flared, a burst of silver

light that shot out like a wave, slamming into the creature with a force that

made the air crackle.

The creature

screamed, a sound that rattled my bones, and stumbled back, its body dissolving

into wisps of shadow as the light burned through it. Within seconds, it was

gone, leaving nothing but a faint scorch mark on the wet grass and the echo of

its scream in the air.

I dropped to

my knees, my breath ragged, my body trembling with the aftermath. The pendant's

light faded, its warmth returning to a soft hum, and I felt my mother's

presence again, faint but proud. You're

enough, she whispered, and I

clung to those words like a lifeline.

Kael knelt

beside me, his arm bleeding but his eyes wide with awe. "You did that," he

said, his voice rough with disbelief. "The pendant—it's more powerful than I

thought."

I nodded, my

throat too tight to speak. The creature was gone, but its words lingered, a

promise of more to come. The Mafia Leader was out there, watching, waiting, and

the full moon was only three days away. I looked at Kael, my resolve hardening,

my wolf growling with a newfound strength.

"We need to

find him," I said, my voice steady despite the fear still coursing through me.

"Before he sends something worse."

Kael nodded,

his expression grim but determined. "We will," he said. "Together."

As the rain

continued to fall, washing away the last traces of the creature, I stood, the

pendant's warmth a quiet promise against my skin. The shadows were closing in,

but for the first time, I felt ready to face them—no matter what they brought.

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