LOGINThe Pull
Three days passed.
Nell fell into a rhythm at Haven House. Breakfast in the common room. Mornings in the garden with Silas. Afternoons wandering the hallways. Evenings at the dining table, where Rue ignored her and Caleb avoided her eyes and Finn asked her to play board games.
She always said yes to Finn.
She couldn't say no to that face.
But something was changing.
She felt it in her bones.
The mark on her palm had stopped itching. Now it just sat there a pale crescent, faintly silver in certain light. Sometimes she forgot it was there. Sometimes she caught herself staring at it for minutes at a time.
She hadn't told anyone about it. Not Silas. Not Caleb. Not even Finn.
The mark felt private. Secret. Hers.
On the fourth morning, Nell woke before dawn.
The house was silent. No footsteps. No voices. No knocking from below.
She lay in bed, staring at the ceiling, her palm pressed against her chest. The mark was warm. Not burning just warm. Like a second heartbeat.
She thought about Elara. The photograph tucked under her mattress. The woman with dark hair and tired eyes. The woman who had her eyes.
Who were you?
The mark pulsed.
Nell sat up.
She found Silas in the garden before breakfast.
He was carving another bird a small one, wings folded close to its body. A sleeping bird. He looked up when she approached and set down his knife.
"I can't stop thinking about her," Nell said, sitting beside him.
Silas tilted his head.
"Elara. The woman in the photograph." Nell pulled her knees to her chest. "I feel like I know her. But I've never met her."
Silas picked up his stick and wrote in the dirt.
She lived here. Long ago.
"I know. You told me."
He nodded. Then wrote again.
She was kind. Like you.
Nell stared at the words. "Did Lena kill her?"
Silas's hands went still. He didn't write anything.
"Silas. Please."
He looked at her for a long moment. Then he brushed away the dirt and wrote one word.
Yes.
Nell's breath caught. She'd suspected it. But hearing it , reading it , made it real.
"Why?"
Silas shook his head. Wrote again.
Not now. Not here.
"Then where?"
He pointed at the forest. Then at the sky. Then wrote.
When the moon is right. I'll tell you.
That afternoon, Nell went back to the library.
She pulled every book she could find. History. Genealogy. Old wolf laws. She was looking for something she didn't know what.
A name. A date. A reason.
She found nothing.
But she found something else.
A journal. Leather-bound, cracked with age, hidden behind a row of law books. The pages were yellow and brittle. The handwriting was small and neat.
Elara's journal.
Nell's hands shook as she opened it.
The first page read: I don't know how much longer I can stay.
She only read a few pages before she heard footsteps.
She shoved the journal under her shirt and grabbed a random book off the shelf something about pack politics just as Rue walked in.
"What are you doing in here?" Rue asked, arms crossed.
"Reading."
"In the dark?"
Nell looked at the window. The sun had set. She'd been in here for hours.
"Lost track of time."
Rue's gold-flecked eyes narrowed. "You're always lost."
She walked out.
Nell waited a full minute before slipping the journal out from under her shirt.
She tucked it into her waistband and walked back to her room.
That night, she read.
Elara's handwriting was small and slanted, like she was always in a hurry. Like she was always afraid.
Lena watches me. She always watches.
Elias says I'm imagining things. But I'm not.
Lena wants something from me. I don't know what.
Yes, I do. I just don't want to say it out loud.
Nell's hands trembled. Elias. The name was familiar. She'd heard it before in the whispers from the basement.
Lena wants me to bond with her. To be hers. She says it's for the pack. But it's not. It's for her.
I can't. I won't. I love Elias.
She'll never forgive me for that.
Nell closed the journal. Her heart pounded.
Elara loved someone named Elias. Lena wanted Elara for herself. Lena killed her.
And now Lena had brought Nell here.
Why?
She pressed her ear to the floorboards.
Knock. Knock. Knock.
"You came back," the voice said.
"Elias," Nell whispered.
Silence.
"Your name is Elias."
A long pause. The chains rattled.
"How do you know that name?" the voice asked. It was sharper now. Tense.
"I found a journal. Elara's journal."
More silence. Longer this time.
"She wrote about you," Nell said. "She loved you."
The voice cracked. "She shouldn't have. Loving me got her killed."
"Lena killed her."
"Yes."
"Because Lena wanted her."
"Yes."
Nell pressed her palm to the floor. The mark throbbed.
"Why did Lena bring me here?" she asked. "What does she want with me?"
The voice didn't answer.
"Elias. Please."
A long, ragged breath.
"Look in the mirror," he said. "Really look. And then ask yourself why Lena brought a girl with Elara's eyes to Haven House."
The chains rattled. Footsteps in the hallway.
"Go," he said. "She's coming."
Nell scrambled back into bed just as the door opened.
Lena stood in the doorway. No candle this time. Just her silhouette.
"You talk in your sleep every night," Lena said.
Nell's heart pounded. "Bad dreams."
"Same bad dream?"
"Yes."
Lena walked into the room. Sat on the edge of the bed. The mattress dipped.
"What do you dream about?"
Nell thought fast. "My mother."
Lena was quiet for a moment. Then she reached out and touched Nell's face. Her fingers were cold.
"What about your mother?"
"She died. I was alone."
Lena's thumb traced Nell's cheekbone. "You're not alone anymore."
"I know."
"Do you trust me, Nell?"
Nell looked into Lena's dark brown eyes. Warm. Patient. Motherly.
Don't trust her.
"I trust you," Nell said.
Lena smiled. "Good girl."
She stood up. Walked to the door. Paused.
"Get some sleep. Tomorrow is a new day."
She left.
Nell lay in the dark, her heart racing, her mark burning.
She didn't sleep.
She just stared at the ceiling and thought about Elara. And Elias. And Lena.
And the girl in the mirror who had Elara's eyes.
The valley was hidden.Nell stood at its edge, looking down at the green expanse below. The mountains rose on all sides, their peaks white with snow. The valley floor was covered in grass and wildflowers, untouched by the winter that had followed them for weeks. A stream ran through the center, clear and cold. Birds were singing. The air smelled like earth and water and life.It felt like the world had forgotten this place.She heard footsteps behind her. Elias."It's beautiful," he said."It is.""Almost too beautiful."She glanced at him. "What do you mean?"He looked at the valley. "Places like this don't stay hidden forever. Eventually, someone finds them.""Then we make sure no one finds us."Elias didn't answer. But he didn't argue either.---The pack moved into the valley.They found a small clearing near the stream — flat ground, sheltered by trees. Perfect for building. Vera immediately started gathering stones for a fire pit. Caleb went to find wood. Rue scouted the perimet
The valley was hidden.Nell stood at its edge, looking down at the green expanse below. The mountains rose on all sides, their peaks white with snow. The valley floor was covered in grass and wildflowers, untouched by the winter that had followed them for weeks. A stream ran through the center, clear and cold. Birds were singing. The air smelled like earth and water and life.It felt like the world had forgotten this place.She heard footsteps behind her. Elias."It's beautiful," he said."It is.""Almost too beautiful."She glanced at him. "What do you mean?"He looked at the valley. "Places like this don't stay hidden forever. Eventually, someone finds them.""Then we make sure no one finds us."Elias didn't answer. But he didn't argue either.---The pack moved into the valley.They found a small clearing near the stream — flat ground, sheltered by trees. Perfect for building. Vera immediately started gathering stones for a fire pit. Caleb went to find wood. Rue scouted the perimet
The mountains rose before them like a wall.Snow-capped peaks, jagged and ancient, cutting into the sky like broken teeth. The air was thin and sharp. The wind was cold and constant. The valley lay at their feet — green and hidden and secret, cradled between the mountains like a secret the world had forgotten.They had made it.Nell stopped at the edge of the valley. The pack stopped behind her."We're here," she said.No one spoke. No one moved. They just stood there, staring at the place that had been their destination for weeks. The snow had stopped. The wind had died. The sun was setting, painting the peaks in shades of gold and purple.Vera shifted Hope in her arms. The baby was sleeping — still too small, still too quiet, but alive. Her tiny face was peaceful. Her tiny chest rose and fell with each breath.Caleb put his hand on Vera's shoulder. His jaw was tight. His eyes were wet.Rue looked at the valley. Her gold-flecked eyes were wet, too."We made it," she said. "We actuall
The snow didn't stop.It had been falling for five days now — soft at first, then heavy, then relentless. It covered the tracks behind them and the path ahead of them. It clung to their coats and their boots and their eyelashes. It turned the world white and silent and cold.Twelve days since they had left Haven House. Twelve days of walking. Twelve days of running. Twelve days of waiting for the Council to catch up.Nell led the way. Her feet ached. Her back ached. Her eyes burned from staring at the white for too long. But she didn't stop. She couldn't stop.Behind her, the pack followed in single file.Rue walked with her hand on her knife, her gold-flecked eyes scanning the tree line. She hadn't slept properly in days. None of them had.Caleb walked with Vera, his arm around her waist, taking as much of her weight as she would allow. Her pregnant belly made the climb difficult. Her face was gray. Her lips were blue. She didn't complain. She never complained.Elias walked with his
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
What silas knewThe journal lived under Nell's mattress.She read it every night by the light of the moon. Small bits at a time. Elara's handwriting was shaky in some places, careful in others. Some pages were stained tears, maybe
The MarkNell didn't sleep.She sat on her bed with her palm facing the moonlight, watching the crescent mark glow faintly in the dark. It wasn't painful anymore. Just warm. Present. Like a second heartbeat under her skin.Sh
The NameNell didn't sleep after Lena left.She lay in bed with her eyes open, staring at the ceiling, her palm itching and burning by turns. The name Elara kept circling through her head like a song she couldn't forget.S
The lockNell woke on her third day at Haven House with her palm itching.Not burning. Not painful. Just a strange, persistent itch in the center of her right hand, like something was trying to wake up under her skin.She l







