LOGINThe Whisper
Nell didn't sleep her first night at Haven House.
Not because she was afraid. Because she was listening.
Old walls breathe. And the walls of Haven House had lungs.
At two in the morning, footsteps came from the hallway. Soft. Deliberate. Not trying to be quiet just used to moving in the dark. A door opened somewhere below her. Then another. Voices followed too low to understand, but the tone was sharp. Angry.
A woman's voice.
Lena's voice.
Then silence.
At three in the morning, Nell heard something else.
A knock. Not on her door. On the floor beneath her. Three slow thumps, like someone hitting a pipe from below.
Knock. Knock. Knock.
She held her breath.
Knock. Knock. Knock.
She slid off the bed and pressed her ear to the cold floorboards.
A whisper came through the cracks. Hoarse. Desperate. A man's voice, rough from disuse.
"Don't trust her."
Nell's heart stopped.
"Don't trust any of them."
Footsteps in the hallway. Faster this time. A door slammed.
The whispering stopped.
Nell lay frozen until dawn bled through her window.
The next morning, Lena served breakfast in the common room.
Oatmeal with honey. Fresh bread. Sliced apples. Rue passed the plates without looking at Nell.
"Here," Rue said, shoving a plate toward her. "Eat."
"Thank you."
Rue snorted. "Don't thank me. It's just food."
Caleb sat across from her. "Did you sleep well?"
Nell thought about the whispering. The knocking. The voice telling her not to trust anyone.
"Yes," she said.
Caleb looked at her. His eyes said he didn't believe her. "Good," he said anyway.
Finn offered her the last piece of bread. "Here, Nell. You look hungry."
"Thank you, Finn." She took it and held it in both hands.
Rue rolled her eyes. "You're going to spoil her."
"She's not a dog, Rue."
"Could've fooled me."
"Rue." Lena's voice was quiet but sharp.
Rue muttered something under her breath and went back to her oatmeal.
Lena watched from the head of the table, stirring her tea, saying nothing.
But Nell noticed something. Lena's eyes kept drifting to the hallway. To the door at the end. The one that led down.
The basement door.
After breakfast, Nell explored.
She wandered the hallways, running her fingers along the cold stone walls. The house was bigger than it looked from the outside. Hallways curved in ways that didn't make sense. Stairs appeared where she hadn't seen them before.
She passed Rue's room. The door was open. Clothes covered the floor. Angry sketches covered the walls wolves, eyes, cages.
She passed Caleb's room in the attic. Sparse. A bed. A chair. A single book. Like he was ready to leave at any moment.
She passed Finn's room. Stuffed animals. Glow-in-the-dark stars on the ceiling. A small hole in the floor, covered by a rug.
She didn't look under the rug.
She kept walking.
At the end of the east wing, she found a door.
Heavy oak. Iron bands. A new lock.
The basement door.
Nell stopped in front of it. The air was colder here. She pressed her palm to the wood.
Don't trust her.
She tried the lock. Solid. The kind that needed a key.
She pressed her ear to the door.
Nothing.
She waited.
Still nothing.
She was about to walk away when she heard it.
A shift. A scrape. Like chains moving against stone.
Then silence.
Nell stepped back. Her heart pounded.
She walked away.
But she didn't forget.
That afternoon, she found Silas.
He was in the garden, sitting on an overturned bucket near the dead fountain. A small knife in his hand. A piece of wood in the other. He was carving something a bird, she realized. Small and delicate.
She'd met him her first night. He didn't talk. Someone had told her he couldn't. A scar across his throat explained why.
But his eyes were kind.
"Hey," Nell said, sitting on the ground beside him.
Silas looked at her. Nodded once.
She watched him carve for a while. The knife moved with careful precision. Wood shavings fell to the frozen grass.
"Can I ask you something?" she said.
He tilted his head.
"The basement door. At the end of the east wing. What's down there?"
Silas's hands stopped moving. He stared at her for a long moment.
Then he picked up a stick and wrote in the dirt.
Nothing.
"You're lying," Nell said.
He didn't deny it. He just looked at her.
"Why won't anyone tell me?"
Silas brushed away the word and wrote another.
Dangerous.
"The basement is dangerous?"
He shook his head. Then pointed at her.
Asking is dangerous.
Nell sat back. Her hands felt cold.
"Who's down there, Silas?"
He held her gaze for a long moment. Then he picked up his stick and wrote one word.
someone.
Then he stood up and walked back to the house, leaving Nell alone in the garden.
That night, Nell pressed her ear to the floorboards again.
She waited.
The house was silent.
Then …
Knock. Knock. Knock.
"You came back," the voice whispered.
"Who are you?" Nell breathed.
Silence.
"Please. I just want to know who you are."
A long pause. When the voice came again, it was softer. Weaker.
"Someone who's been here too long."
"Why are you down there?"
The chains rattled.
"Because I tried to leave."
"Leave where? Haven House?"
"This isn't a shelter, child. It's a cage."
Nell's blood went cold. "A cage for what?"
Footsteps in the hallway. Fast. Getting closer.
"Go," the voice said. "Quickly."
"Wait …"
"GO."
Nell scrambled back into bed just as the footsteps stopped outside her door.
The door creaked open.
Lena stood in the doorway, a candle in her hand, shadows dancing across her face.
"Nell? I thought I heard talking."
Nell's heart pounded. "Just talking in my sleep. Bad dream."
Lena studied her for a long moment. Then she walked into the room and sat on the edge of the bed. The mattress dipped under her weight.
"Do you want to talk about it?"
"No. I'm fine."
Lena reached out and brushed a strand of hair from Nell's face. Her fingers were warm.
"You know you can trust me, right? Whatever you're feeling. Whatever you're thinking. You can tell me."
Nell looked into Lena's dark brown eyes. Warm. Patient. Motherly.
Don't trust her.
"I know," Nell said. "Thank you."
Lena smiled. She stood and walked to the door. Paused.
"By the way. The basement is off limits. Old wiring. Dangerous."
Nell kept her face still. "I didn't even know there was a basement."
Lena turned. Her eyes flickered gold. Just for a second.
"Now you do."
She left.
Nell lay in the dark, her heart hammering, her mind spinning.
Someone was down there.
Someone who had tried to leave.
Someone who said this place was a cage.
She didn't know who he was. She didn't know why Lena had him locked up.
But she was going to find out.
The snow fell through the night.By dawn, it had buried the fire and covered the tracks. The world was white and silent and cold. The pack stirred slowly, their bodies stiff, their faces pale. Vera coughed — a deep, rattling sound that made Caleb's jaw tighten. Finn stayed close to Nell, his small hand cold in hers.Marta sat apart.Her satchel was open in her lap. Her letters were scattered around her like fallen leaves — years of evidence, years of weight, years of grief. She hadn't slept. She hadn't eaten. She hadn't spoken since she broke down the day before.Nell watched her for a long moment. Then she walked to her."Marta."No answer."Marta. Look at me."Marta looked up. Her green eyes were red. Her face was hollow. Her hands were shaking."It's me," Marta said. Her voice was flat. Empty. Like she had finally run out of words. "I'm the one leaving the trail. I'm the one who's been leading them to us."The pack went still.Rue's hand went to her knife. Caleb's jaw tightened. Ve
The fourth day was colder than the others.The wind came down from the mountains sharp and hungry. It cut through their coats and settled in their bones. Vera walked with her arms wrapped around her belly, her face pale, her lips pressed together.Caleb stayed close to her, ready to catch her if she fell.Finn walked beside Nell, his small hand in hers.Rue scanned the trees.Elias watched the sky.Marta clutched her satchel.Silas brought up the rear, his knife in his hand.No one spoke.The hunters had been gone for two days. No sign of them on the ridges. No footprints in the snow. No howls in the night.They were still out there. Nell could feel them.They're waiting,Lena said."I know."For you to slow down."We won't."Someone will.---They stopped at midday.Vera needed to rest. Her face was gray. Her hands were shaking. Caleb helped her sit on a fallen log. Marta gave her water. Rue stood watch.Elias walked to Nell."She can't keep this pace," he said."She has to.""The bab
The first day was the hardest.They walked from dawn until the sun sank behind the trees. No roads. No paths. Just forest and frost and the gray sky pressing down. Nell led the way. She didn't know how she knew the direction. She just did.Behind her, the pack followed.Rue walked with Caleb, who was still favoring his ribs. Marta carried her letters in a leather satchel now, pressed against her chest like a shield. Elias walked with his shoulders back, his eyes scanning the trees. Silas brought up the rear, his knife in his hand, his gray eyes never still.Vera walked slowly, one hand on her belly, her face pale. Finn stayed close to her, holding her other hand.No one spoke.The Council's hunters were somewhere behind them. Nell couldn't see them. Couldn't hear them. But she felt them — a weight at the edge of her awareness, like a thread being pulled.They're following, Lena said."I know."They're not attacking."I know."They're waiting.Nell didn't answer.---They stopped at su
Three days passed.Three days of rest. Three days of healing. Three days of waiting for the Council to make its next move.Nell spent the mornings in the garden with Silas. He carved. She watched. He didn't ask questions. She didn't offer answers. They sat in silence, watching the frost melt and the sun rise.The afternoons she spent with Finn. He drew. She read to him from Elara's journal — not the dark parts, but the quiet ones. The ones about flowers and moonlight and the way the world looked when no one was watching.The evenings she spent with the pack. Elias by the fire. Rue pacing. Marta organizing her letters. Caleb learning to smile again. Vera singing to her belly. Knox dozing in his chair.Silas carving.It felt almost peaceful.Almost.On the fourth morning, Rue saw them first.She was standing at the window, her arms crossed, her gold-flecked eyes scanning the tree line. She went very still."Nell," she said.Nell crossed the room. Looked out the window.Three wolves stoo
They walked through the rest of the night.The forest was dark, the trees pressing close on either side, their branches woven together like clasped hands. The moon was high not full, not hungry, just watching. Nell led the way. She didn't know how she knew the direction. She just did.Behind her, the pack followed.Rue walked with her arm around Caleb, who was limping. His ribs were bruised maybe cracked. He didn't complain. Marta carried the letters pressed against her chest like they were made of glass. Elias walked with his shoulders back, his eyes scanning the trees. Silas brought up the rear, his knife in his hand, his gray eyes never still.Knox leaned on his cane, moving slower than the others but refusing help.Vera walked with one hand on her belly, her face pale, her lips moving silently counting, maybe. Or praying.No one spoke.The Council Hall was miles behind them now. The fire had spread. The sky in the distance glowed orange, then red, then faded to nothing.Haven Hous
The guards came for her at moonrise.Four of them. Armed. Their gold eyes glowed in the dark like embers. They didn't speak. They didn't need to. Their faces said everything.Nell stood up from the cold stone floor. Her legs were stiff. Her back ached. She had been sitting in the dark for hours, waiting, listening to Lena's silence. But her hands were steady. Her eyes were clear."The Council has made its decision," one guard said. His voice was flat, empty, like he had delivered this same sentence a hundred times before. "You are to be executed. Not severed. Executed. Lena's spirit dies with you."Nell's blood went cold.They lied,Lena whispered inside her head. Her voice was calm. Too calm. They were always going to kill you. The severing was never the plan. They just wanted you to hope so you wouldn't fight."I know," Nell said aloud.The guards exchanged glances."Know what?" the leader asked.Nell looked at him. At his gold eyes. At the torchlight reflecting off his polished armo
The lower chambers were colder than the cells upstairs.Stone walls. Stone floor. Stone ceiling. No windows. No light except a single torch burning in a bracket by the door. The flame flickered constantly, as if something in the room was breathing on it. The air smelled of old blood and older fear
The hearing reconvened at noon.Guards came for Nell two of them, silent, their gold eyes fixed on her like she might try to run. She didn't. She walked between them through the winding hallways of the Council Hall, past doors she hadn't seen before, past windows that showed a gray sky heavy with c
They came for her before dawn.Not guards. Not servants. Wolves Nell didn't recognize three of them, silent, their eyes gold in the dark. They didn't knock. They unlocked the door from outside and stepped into her room like they had done this a thousand times before.Nell was already awake. She had
The east wing was smaller than Nell expected a narrow hallway with a low ceiling and doors that locked from the outside, not the inside. She had tested hers the moment the guard left. The lock didn't budge. The door didn't give.She was not a guest. She was a prisoner.Her room was cold the kind of







