LOGINKelsey’s POV
Kelsey’s flashlight beam trembled as the low growl reverberated through the narrow stone passage. It wasn’t an echo. It was close. Too close. She pressed her back against the cold, damp wall, heart slamming so hard she could feel it in her teeth. Her camera hung from its strap around her neck, and she instinctively lifted it, switching to video mode with one hand while gripping the flashlight like a weapon in the other. Stay calm. Document everything. This is the story. The air tasted ancient — thick with dust, moss, and something metallic that made her stomach turn. The walls were covered in intricate carvings that seemed to shift in the flickering light: wolves running under a full moon, human figures transforming, and strange symbols that looked almost like a language long forgotten. She took a slow step forward, then another. The passage opened into a larger chamber. In the center stood a stone sarcophagus, its lid cracked and partially slid aside. Moonlight from a fissure high above filtered down like a silver blade, illuminating the space just enough to be eerie. Kelsey raised her camera and began recording. “This is Kelsey Jones, The People’s Gazette. I’m inside what appears to be an ancient crypt in the foggy mountains of the northern Carpathians. The carvings suggest some kind of… cult or forgotten civilization. There are reports of disappearances here for centuries. If anyone finds this footage—” Another growl, deeper this time, came from the shadows behind the sarcophagus. She whipped around. Nothing. Only darkness. Her reporter brain screamed to run, but the desperate part of her, the one facing unemployment, parental disappointment, and a mountain of debt pushed her forward. She approached the sarcophagus. Inside, resting on faded velvet that crumbled at her touch, lay an ornate dagger. Its blade gleamed unnaturally, etched with runes that seemed to pulse faintly. She reached out, fingers brushing the hilt. A jolt shot through her — not pain, but something electric. Images flashed behind her eyes: A woman who looked like her, laughing in the arms of a tall, dark-haired man. Moonlight. Blood. A scream. Kelsey gasped and yanked her hand back. The dagger clattered to the stone floor. That was when the ground trembled. Runes along the walls ignited with crimson light. The fissure above widened, bathing the chamber in blood-red moonlight. A deep, resonant voice seemed to echo from everywhere and nowhere at once. The window opens… The mate returns… Kelsey stumbled backward, camera still recording. “What the hell is this?” Heavy footsteps echoed from the passage she had entered through. Multiple sets. Then a single, commanding voice cut through the growing wind. “Secure the intruder.” Before she could run, strong hands grabbed her from behind. A cloth pressed over her mouth, not chloroform, something sweeter, heavier. Her vision blurred almost instantly. The last thing she saw was a pair of glowing blood red eyes watching her from the shadows, intense and ancient. Then darkness swallowed her whole. Kelsey woke to the crackle of a fireplace and the scent of aged wood and something rich, leather and smoke. Her head throbbed. She was lying on an impossibly soft bed in a room that looked like it belonged in a gothic fairy tale. Heavy velvet drapes, dark wooden furniture carved with intricate wolf motifs, and a massive window overlooking misty mountains under a blood-red moon. Her hands weren’t bound, but the heavy oak door was clearly locked. She sat up too fast and nearly fell back as dizziness hit. Her camera and phone were gone. Her backpack too. Only her clothes remained. “What the actual fuck…” she whispered, voice hoarse. Memories rushed back — the crypt, the dagger, the glowing runes, those terrifying red eyes. She scrambled off the bed and tried the door. Locked, as expected. She moved to the window. It was high up — too high to jump — and the drop below was sheer cliff and forest. Panic clawed at her throat, but she forced it down. Reporter mode. Observe. Document mentally. Find weaknesses. Footsteps approached from outside the door. Heavy. Deliberate. Kelsey backed away, grabbing the only thing she could find — a heavy iron candlestick from the mantel and held it like a bat. The door unlocked with a loud click and swung open. He filled the doorway. Towering. Broad-shouldered. Jet-black hair falling to his shoulders. A scar ran from his left temple down across his cheek. His blood red eyes locked onto hers with an intensity that made her breath catch. Power radiated from him like heat from a forge. Silas. She didn’t know how she knew his name, but it came to her as clearly as if someone had whispered it in her ear. “You,” she said, voice steadier than she felt. “Who the hell are you and why did you kidnap me?” He stepped inside, closing the door behind him with a soft, final click. His gaze never left her face, studying her like she was both a miracle and a curse. “You shouldn’t have come to the crypt, Aylin.” Kelsey’s grip tightened on the candlestick. “My name is Kelsey Jones. And if you don’t let me go right now, I swear I’ll…” “You’re not leaving.” His voice was low, rough, and absolute. “Not for the next seven days.” He took another step closer, and something deep inside her, something she didn’t understand — stirred in response. The air between them crackled with danger… and something far more terrifying.Kelsey spent the next several hours lost in the vast library of the hidden gothic Castle. The sheer scale of it was overwhelming — shelves that stretched two stories high, connected by narrow iron spiral staircases, filled with leather-bound tomes, fragile scrolls, and artifacts that looked older than most countries. Dust motes danced in the beams of reddish moonlight filtering through the tall arched windows.She told herself she was looking for an escape route or a way to contact the outside world. In reality, she was hunting for answers about Silas, the curse, and why her dreams felt more like memories than nightmares.Her fingers trailed over spines embossed with strange symbols. Some books were written in what looked like Latin mixed with an unknown language. Others had illustrations of massive wolves, shifting forms, and battles between wolf-like beings and figures surrounded by glowing red energy — witches, she assumed.She pulled a volume at random. The Eclipse Blood Debt: A T
Kelsey didn’t sleep much after Silas left.She lay on the massive four-poster bed, staring at the ornate ceiling carved with wolves and crescent moons, replaying every second of what had just happened. The way his body had been changing — bones shifting, eyes glowing, claws lengthening. The raw pain in his voice. And the strangest part: how her touch had calmed him.She rubbed her palm, still feeling the faint echo of that electric warmth. It terrified her. Not because it happened, but because some deep, instinctive part of her had wanted to help him.“This is Stockholm Syndrome setting in already,” she muttered to herself, sitting up. “Get it together, Kelsey.”The blood moon still hung heavy in the sky outside the tall window, casting the room in an eerie crimson glow. She had no idea what time it was — her phone and watch were gone — but the castle felt quieter now, as if the worst of the night had passed.She spent the next hour searching the room again, more methodically this tim
Kelsey’s POVThe snarling grew louder, closer — a guttural sound that vibrated through the stone floor and into Kelsey’s bones. She pressed herself harder against the heavy wooden headboard, eyes locked on the door. The candlestick lay useless on the floor where Silas had left it. Her mind raced through every survival article she’d ever skimmed: Stay calm. Look for weapons. Find an exit. There was nothing. Another roar shattered the silence, this one laced with pain rather than pure rage. It sounded almost… human. Almost like Silas. Kelsey’s breath caught. The dreams flashed behind her eyes again, the woman who looked like her, the man with Silas’s face, the blood. None of it made sense, but her body reacted anyway, a strange mix of terror and an inexplicable urge to move toward the sound. The heavy bolt on the outside of her door scraped open. She grabbed the candlestick anyway, holding it like a baseball bat as the door swung inward. Silas stood in the threshold. Or what was
Kelsey’s POV Kelsey’s heart hammered against her ribs as the man — Silas — stepped further into the room. The candlestick felt ridiculously inadequate in her hands, but she refused to lower it. “I don’t know who you think I am,” she said, voice sharper than she felt, “but kidnapping journalists is a fast way to end up in jail and on the front page. Let me go. Now.” Silas’s silver-grey eyes narrowed. He moved with predatory grace, circling her slowly, as if studying every detail. Up close he was even more overwhelming — tall, powerfully built, with an aura of raw authority that made the air feel heavier. The scar on his face only added to the dangerous edge. “You truly don’t remember,” he murmured, more to himself than to her. “Not yet.” “Remember what?” Kelsey snapped. “Look, I came here for a story. Disappearances. Strange activity in these woods. If you let me go, I won’t mention any of this. We can both pretend it never happened.” A dark, humorless chuckle escaped him.
Kelsey’s POV Kelsey’s flashlight beam trembled as the low growl reverberated through the narrow stone passage. It wasn’t an echo. It was close. Too close. She pressed her back against the cold, damp wall, heart slamming so hard she could feel it in her teeth. Her camera hung from its strap around her neck, and she instinctively lifted it, switching to video mode with one hand while gripping the flashlight like a weapon in the other. Stay calm. Document everything. This is the story. The air tasted ancient — thick with dust, moss, and something metallic that made her stomach turn. The walls were covered in intricate carvings that seemed to shift in the flickering light: wolves running under a full moon, human figures transforming, and strange symbols that looked almost like a language long forgotten. She took a slow step forward, then another. The passage opened into a larger chamber. In the center stood a stone sarcophagus, its lid cracked and partially slid aside. Moonlig
Kelsey’s POV The little coffee shop on Maple Street was called Luna’s which Kelsey had always found pretentious for a town that had exactly one moon and no particular mythology attached to it. But it was two blocks from the Gazette, it had a working Wi-Fi, and the barista, a Romanian teenager named Luca, knew her order by heart. "Americano, double shot, no room for milk," Luca said as she approached the counter. "You look like you fought a bear and lost." "I fought a desk job and lost," Kelsey said, digging for her wallet. "Same thing, basically." Luca laughed and proceeded to get her order. Her phone rang. Mom. She almost let it go to voicemail, but guilt won. “Hi, Mom.” "Kelsey! Finally. I was starting to think you'd fallen off the face of the earth." "Just busy, Mom. Working on a story." "Working, working, always working." Her mother's voice had that particular quality of affection wrapped in disappointment, like a gift in ugly wrapping paper. "You know, Becca c







