LOGINAt Blood Oath Academy, no one arrives by chance—except Virelle Noctra. Marked by a power that shouldn’t exist, Virelle is summoned into a hidden world where vampires and werewolves train under fragile, ancient laws. But from the moment she steps inside, something is wrong. Her blood doesn’t belong to either side… yet both crave it. A ruthless vampire heir watches her like prey. A dangerous wolf alpha feels his instincts bend toward her. And beneath the academy, something older than both species begins to stir—something that recognises her. As alliances fracture and desire turns lethal, Virelle is pulled into a power struggle she doesn’t understand but can’t escape. The more her abilities awaken, the clearer the truth becomes: She isn’t just part of the war. She’s the reason it’s starting. And when the blood oath breaks, everyone will have to choose Kneel… or burn.
View MoreThe mark appeared the night the sky split open.
Virelle Noctra did not feel it at first. There was no burning, no pain, no dramatic shift in the air as the stories claimed. It began as nothing more than a faint shimmer beneath her skin, just above her collarbone, like light trying to break through something that refused to let it.
She only noticed it because the mirror flickered; her reflection lagged half a second behind her movement. Virelle stilled. That was wrong, the room was quiet, too quiet, the kind of silence that pressed against your ears until you could hear your own pulse. She slowly lifted her hand and touched the glass.
Her reflection didn’t; her breath caught then, all at once, it moved—but not the same way she did. It tilted its head in a slow, deliberate motion, watching her. Virelle stepped back sharply, her heart slamming against her ribs. The mirror returned to normal instantly, her reflection snapping back into place as if nothing had happened.
But the mark was there now, clear and more visible. It curved along her skin like ink that had been poured rather than drawn, shifting faintly, as if it were breathing beneath the surface. Not a symbol she recognised. Not anything human.
“Okay…” she whispered, her voice unsteady despite her attempt to stay calm. “That’s… new.”
She had lived her whole life in quiet normalcy. No strange abilities, no supernatural encounters. No secrets hidden in her blood, at least none that anyone had told her about. So why did it feel like something had just… claimed her? A sudden crack split the air outside.
Virelle turned toward the window just as the sky fractured; it wasn't lightning, nor a storm, the sky itself—splitting open like glass. A deep crimson light bled through the tear, stretching across the horizon in jagged lines that pulsed like veins. The world seemed to hold its breath.
Then came the sound, a low, resonant hum that vibrated through the ground, through the walls, through her bones and her mark, it reacted. Pain exploded through her chest.
Virelle gasped, dropping to her knees as the symbol burned to life, its shifting lines locking into place for the first time. The glow wasn’t bright—it was deep, almost blackened silver—but it pulsed with something ancient. Something aware.
Something that knew her. “What is happening to me?” she choked, gripping at her shirt as the heat spread through her veins. The air behind her changed; she felt it before she heard it, a presence, something cold, and it was watching.
Virelle forced herself to turn, and there, standing in the corner of her room where shadows should have been empty, was a girl. No, not a girl, something wearing the shape of one.
Her eyes were wrong, too dark, something endless like looking into a void that had no intention of letting you look away. “You finally woke it,” the figure said softly. Her voice did not echo; it sank.
“Who are you?” Virelle demanded, pushing herself upright despite the pain still threading through her body. The figure smiled, “Not who,” she said. “What?”
The mark flared again, and Virelle staggered, but this time she didn’t fall. Something inside her steadied, something… stronger. The figure’s gaze sharpened with interest “That’s new,” she murmured. Before Virelle could respond, the air split open again—but this time, it wasn’t the sky, it was her room.
A vertical tear of crimson light ripped through the space in front of her, humming with the same deep resonance she had felt moments before. Wind surged inward, pulling at her clothes, her hair, her very balance.
“No,” Virelle whispered, stepping back, the pull intensified, invisible and unstoppable. “You were not supposed to be called yet,” the shadowed figure said, watching carefully now. Virelle’s heart raced. “Called where?” The figure met her gaze, and for the first time, there was something almost like concern in her expression.
“Blood Oath Academy", the force yanked. Virelle screamed as the world collapsed into red light and vanished.
By the time the academy bells rang for the second session, the corridors were full again. Not relaxed, not normal. Students moved with purpose, but the rhythm had changed. Conversations were quieter, tighter, glances sharper and more frequent. Whatever had happened in the medical chamber had spread faster than the official explanation could contain it.Virelle felt it in every stare, in every whisper that stopped when she passed. In the way the space around her shifted, subtly widening, as though people were unsure how close was safe. Soreya walked beside her, hands tucked into her jacket, expression unreadable. “You’re trending,” she said under her breath. “That sounds like a problem.”“It is.” Virelle exhaled slowly. “Good.” Soreya glanced at her. “You say that like you mean it.”“I do.” That wasn’t entirely true, but it felt better than admitting she had no control over any of it.They turned down a side passage that curved away from the main halls. The noise of the academy dimmed
The academy did not recover from Nyxara’s appearance. By the time Virelle left the medical chamber, escorted rather than dismissed, the corridors had shifted into something quieter, tighter, and far more watchful. Conversations stopped when she passed. Doors that had stood open earlier now closed with careful precision. Even the silver torches seemed to burn lower, their light drawn inward as though the academy itself had decided not to be seen too clearly.Soreya met her at the threshold between the central wing and the lower halls, arms folded, expression unreadable. “You have had an impressive morning,” she said. “That’s one word for it,” Virelle replied. Soreya glanced once over her shoulder toward the chamber they had just left. “You brought something into that room.”
The chamber did not return to normal, it pretended. The silver light had died, the runes had dimmed, and the shattered fragments of the blood-testing crystal lay still across the black stone floor. Instructors had begun moving again, speaking in lower, tighter voices, trying to reassemble order from what had just happened.But the air had changed, Virelle felt it the moment she fully came back to herself, and something had crossed a line. She stood where she had been, between Theron and Kaeldryn, both still close enough to reach her if she fell again. Their presence should have been grounding, but it wasn’t because the second rhythm in her chest had not settled.It had sharpened, and now it was listening. Edric Solvane stepped forward slowly, his gaze fixed on her with an intensity that had lost all pretence of neutrality. “You said it was a message.” Virelle swal
The light did not fade; it swallowed. Virelle did not feel the floor beneath her feet when the surge peaked. She did not feel Theron’s grip or Kaeldryn’s hands, though she knew they were there. For a single suspended moment, everything that made the academy real—stone, breath, sound—fractured and dissolved into blinding silver, then the world went silent. Virelle stood alone.The ground beneath her was not ground. It looked like stone, black and smooth, but it reflected nothing. When she stepped, there was no echo. No resistance. Just the suggestion of movement, like walking through a memory of a place rather than the place itself. The air was cold, but not empty. It carried something heavy and ancient, something that pressed against her senses without touching her skin.She turned slowly; there was no academy, no chamber, no walls. Only darkness stretching
The silence after the shattered blood test lasted three seconds, then the chamber exploded. Voices crashed over one another from every side as wolves, vampires, and instructors all started speaking at once. Some sounded alarmed. Others sounded furious. A few sounded a
By the time the academy’s first bell rang, Virelle had not slept at all. The Hollow Residence woke slowly, as though even the old building resented morning. Floorboards creaked, pipes groaned inside the walls, and distant doors opened and shut with muted finalit
The Hollow Residence did not stay quiet for long. Virelle stood by the window, her reflection staring back at her with eyes that no longer belonged to the girl she had been before the rift tore open her world. The silver threading through the gold had not faded. If anything, it had deepened, catchi
Theron Blackveil had spent most of his life mastering control, not winning it, not borrowing it, but mastering it. He had learned early that power meant nothing without discipline. Strength without control was chaos, and chaos got people killed. Wolves understood instinct before reason, blood befor












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