LOGINThe doors did not open like doors; they parted, slowly and silently, as if the stone itself had decided to let them pass. Virelle stood at the threshold, her body still humming faintly from the oath, her palm tingling where the wound had already sealed.
The chamber behind her felt different now—distant, almost—like stepping out of something that had already begun to claim her.
Bound, the word echoed uncomfortably in her mind. She flexed her fingers, testing her hand again. No pain. No blood. Just that faint silver line, barely visible, like the memory of something that should not have disappeared so quickly, like magic, real magic.
She swallowed hard and stepped forward. The moment she crossed the threshold, the air changed.
It was colder out here—not the biting cold of winter, but something deeper, sharper. The kind of cold that slid beneath skin and settled into bone. The corridor stretched ahead in long, arching shadows, lit by tall silver torches that burned without flame.
The light they gave off was wrong, too steady, too aware. Virelle forced herself to keep walking; behind her, footsteps followed. Many of them, students spilt out from the ritual chamber, their voices low again but no less intense. The whispers hadn’t faded. If anything, they had sharpened.
“She turned the oath silver.” “I’ve never seen that before.”
“That wasn’t just power. That was—” “Don’t say it.”
Virelle clenched her jaw, say it, she wanted them to. She wanted someone to actually explain what was happening instead of speaking in half-sentences and looks that made her feel like she had already crossed some invisible line.
The corridor opened into something vast. Virelle stopped, not because she meant to, but because she had to. The academy unfolded before her; it wasn’t just a building, it was a kingdom carved into darkness and light.
Towering gothic structures rose into the sky, their black stone spires cutting sharply against the crimson glow of the fractured moon above. Windows lined the walls in endless rows, each one lit with a warm golden light that flickered like distant fire.
Bridges stretched between towers at impossible heights, and balconies curved outward like watchful eyes. The entire place felt alive, breathing and watching.
The courtyard below spread wide, paved with dark stone that gleamed faintly under the strange, moonlit sky. Students moved through it in quiet clusters, some walking with purpose, others lingering just long enough to observe.
All of them were watching her. Virelle exhaled slowly. “Okay,” she muttered under her breath. “This is insane.” “You’ll get used to it.” The voice came from her left; she turned. Theron.
Up close, he looked even more dangerous than he had in the chamber. Taller than most, broad-shouldered, his presence heavy and grounded in a way that made everything around him feel… smaller. Contained. His golden eyes were still too bright, too aware, like something inside him hadn’t settled since the moment they touched.
“Doubt it,” she said. He didn’t smile. “I did.” Something in his tone made her look at him more closely. “You weren’t born here either,” she said; it wasn’t a question. He shook his head once. “No one is.”
That didn’t answer what she had meant, but it told her enough. “Then how long does it take?” she asked.
“To get used to this.” Theron’s gaze shifted briefly to the towering academy, then back to her. “You don’t.” Virelle huffed out a breath. “Great.” A movement behind him drew her attention. Kaeldryn, of course.
He stepped into the light as if he belonged to it, his red eyes locking onto her immediately. There was no hesitation in his gaze, no discomfort, just interest, sharp, focused and unrelenting. “You’re staring,” Virelle said flatly. He didn’t look away, “I’m observing,” he corrected.
“Feels the same.” A faint smile touched his lips. “Not even close.” Theron shifted beside her, his stance tightening. “Find something else to observe, Voss.”
Kaeldryn’s attention flicked to him briefly, unimpressed. “Concern doesn’t suit you.” “It’s not a concern.” “Then what is it?” The tension between them snapped tight. Virelle felt it like a wire pulled too far.
“Can we not do this?” she cut in. “I just got dragged through a hole in reality, forced into a blood ritual, and now I’m apparently living in a haunted castle. Whatever this is between you two—schedule it.”
That earned her a few looks, one of them… almost amused. Kaeldryn’s gaze returned to her. “You adapt quickly.” "Or I’m still in shock,” she said. “We’ll find out.”
He tilted his head slightly, studying her again. “You’re not.” Before she could respond, a sharp sound cut through the courtyard, a bell, low yet resonant. It echoed across the academy, rolling through the stone and into the air like a warning.
Everything stopped, and students paused mid-step. Conversations died instantly. Even the tension between Theron and Kaeldryn seemed to still be under the weight of that sound. Virelle frowned. “What was that?” Theron didn’t take his eyes off the courtyard. “Curfew warning.”
“It’s not even dark.”
“It doesn’t need to be.”
That did not make her feel better. The gates at the far end of the courtyard began to move. Virelle’s attention snapped toward them. They were massive—taller than any structure she had seen in the academy so far.
Twin slabs of black iron reinforced with silver runes, embedded directly into the stone walls. As they shifted, the sound they made was not mechanical. It was… alive, grinding and groaning like something old and unwilling was being forced to move.
“What is that?” she asked quietly. “The boundary,” Kaeldryn said, glancing at him. “Between here,” he continued, “and everything else.” The gates opened slowly. Beyond them, I saw nothing, no landscape, no sky, no distant forest or mountain; it was just darkness.
Thick, endless and moving, Virelle took an involuntary step forward before she could stop herself. Something about it pulled at her; it was like the rift, it wasn't violent or consuming, but familiar, wrongly familiar
“Don’t,” Theron said sharply, his hand closed around her wrist before she could take another step. The contact hit her like before, not as strongly, but enough to surge, to flicker something inside her reacting to him again.
Virelle inhaled sharply. Theron stiffened, his grip tightening for half a second before he forced himself to let go. “Don’t go near the gates,” he said, his voice lower now. “Why?” she asked, though she already knew she wouldn’t like the answer. Kaeldryn stepped closer, his gaze shifting briefly to where Theron had touched her before returning to the gates.
“Because what’s out there,” he said, “is not bound by academy law.” Virelle looked back at the darkness. It moved, and she was sure of it, not like wind or a shadow, like it was shifting, watching and waiting.
“And the gates keep it out?” she asked. “No,” Theron said. Her stomach dropped “They keep us in.” The words settled heavily in her chest. Virelle folded her arms, forcing herself to step back from the edge of the courtyard. “So this is a prison.”
Kaeldryn’s gaze flickered. “If you think of it that way.”
“What else would I think?” she said
“A sanctuary,” Kaeldryn replied
She laughed under her breath. “Right.” The bell sounded again, louder this time. Students began moving quickly now, heading toward the towers, the bridges, the archways leading deeper into the academy. Whatever that sound meant, it wasn’t optional.
Theron stepped back slightly. “You need to move.”
“Where?” she asked.
“The Hollow Grounds.”
Virelle frowned. “That doesn’t sound welcoming.”
“It’s not meant to be,” Theron responded
Of course it wasn’t.
She glanced between them. “And you’re both…?”
“Not assigned there,” Kaeldryn said.
“No,” Theron added.
“So I’m on my own.”
Theron hesitated; it was brief, barely noticeable. But Virelle saw it.
“You won’t be alone,” he said finally. She raised an eyebrow. “That didn’t sound convincing.”
Kaeldryn’s mouth curved faintly. “You’ll attract attention.”
“Already noticed.”
“That was before.”
Before what, the oath and before the silver, before whatever has awakened beneath the academy?
Virelle didn’t ask because she already knew the answer. The bell rang a third time, and the gates began to close. The darkness beyond them seemed to pull back reluctantly, folding in on itself as the iron slabs moved together again. For a split second—just a fraction—Virelle thought she saw something in it....Eyes?
Then the gates slammed shut, and the sound echoed through the entire academy. Virelle exhaled slowly.“Okay,” she said. “That’s definitely not normal.” “Nothing here is,” Theron replied. Kaeldryn’s gaze lingered on the gates for a moment longer before shifting back to her.
“You should go,” he said. “Before the academy decides to enforce curfew for you.” Virelle looked between them one last time. Two completely different presences, two completely different dangers. Yet somehow both were connected to her now in ways she did not understand.
“Great,” she muttered. “New world, new rules, and apparently new enemies.” Kaeldryn’s expression darkened slightly. “Not all enemies announce themselves.” Theron’s eyes flicked to him again.
Virelle caught that, interesting. She turned toward the path leading deeper into the academy, the Hollow Grounds, whatever that meant. As she stepped away, she felt it again, that subtle shift beneath her skin, that second rhythm, an awareness that had not been there; the oath had bound her, but something else, older, and it had awoken.
She walked into the shadows of Blood Oath Academy for the first time, and Virelle knew one thing with absolute certainty: this place wasn’t just dangerous, it was watching her and waiting for her to become something it had been expecting all along.
Virelle did not sleep; she lay awake in the darkness of her room inside Hollow Residence, staring at the ceiling, the events of the past few days replayed endlessly in her mind: Nyxara’s warning, the forbidden door, the silver eyes behind the seal, the strange pulse in her blood, as if none of it made any sense, yet every part of her knew it was real. Outside her window, the academy grounds rested beneath a pale moon.The towers of Noctis Academy stretched toward the night sky like silent guardians, their silver-veined stone glowing faintly beneath the stars. Most students were asleep; Virelle wished she were one of them. Instead, the mark beneath her collarbone burned; it wasn’t painful on purpose, and the sensation pulled her attention downwards, towards what hid beneath the academy, toward something waiting.Virelle sat upright immediately; the second heartbeat inside her chest had begun again, slow and heavy as the pulse echoed through her body…BOOM, another followed; this time t
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 afraid. Virelle heard fragments through the pounding in her ears. “She corrupted the test.” “No bloodline does that.” “The runes answered her.”“Lock the chamber.” “Get away from her.” That last one struck harder than the rest.Not because it was unexpected, but because part of her agreed. She pulled her arms free as Theron and Kaeldryn released her, the three of them stepping apart in one swift, strained motion. The air between them felt charged and unstable. Virelle looked down at her palm; the cut was gone, but it wasn't healing. Only the fine silver line re
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
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







