LOGINA 14 year old girl just trying to survive high school is about to have her life uprooted by her grandmothers legacy and something much older and more powerful. Her family has hid everything from her and kept everything secret in the hopes that she could live a normal life . But maybe she might still at least find love.
View MoreCHAPTER 1
The new girl rides in on wheels Freshman Year – Lakeside High School, Hot Springs, AR Fall Semester, August 26 2025 – First Day The mist didn’t chase me from Nashville. It was already here, curled around the Rams marquee like it had been waiting three years for the right set of lungs to breathe it in. Mom’s old Tahoe coughed to a stop in the drop-off loop. “First day of high school, Celeste Valentina Morau. Try not to break any hearts before lunch.” I tugged the hood of my white-and-pink hoodie lower over my platinum bangs. “Hearts are overrated. Bones heal faster.” She laughed, kissed my forehead, smelled like sweet tea, and goodbye. I kicked the door shut, slapped my skateboard to the asphalt, and rolled. Forty-seven steps from curb to front doors if you walk. I counted twenty-three pushes on urethane wheels instead. Inside, Lakeside High smelled like floor wax and boiled peanuts. Lockers slammed like gunshots. A banner screamed RAMS Verses. MALVERN – FRIDAY! in blood-red letters that dripped when the AC kicked on. I kept my head down. Platinum hair + Japanese-German-Romanian cheekbones + skateboard = instant target in a town that still says “yes ma’am” to teachers who fought in Vietnam. 1st period – Arkansas History, Room 108 I took the back corner by the window. The lake steamed outside, upside-down coyotes flickering under the surface if you stared too long. The girl in front of me—Brittany Rae Lynn, cheer captain, ponytail so high it could pick up a satellite—turned around. “Love the hoodie. Hollister?” “Thrift store in Nashville. Five bucks.” She blinked like I’d spoken Martian. “Cute. I’m Brittany. Captain of freshman cheer. You should try out.” I gave her the smile Mom calls my “public polite.” “I fall off moving objects for fun. Not sure that’s cheer material.” Across the aisle, a boy with long black hair braided tightly laughed under his breath. Freshman, but his eyes looked older. Remy Tsatoke—I’d seen the name on the freshman roster taped to the cafeteria window. Caddo Nation blood, quarterback of the freshman team, lives with his grandma in a trailer off Carpenter Dam Road. He didn’t say anything. Just tapped his pencil once against his desk—tap—like a coyote testing thin ice. 5th period – Photo Lab, Room 13 The room smelled like darkroom chemicals and something metallic underneath. Red bulb glowing over the enlargers. Mr. Bathory stood at the whiteboard writing “Expose. Develop. Fix. Repeat.” in perfect cursive. Tall. Pale. Black hair slicked back like he’d stepped out of a 1940s film noir. Rumor said he’d been teaching at Lakeside since the seventies and never aged a day. “Seats, please.” His voice was soft, eastern-European, the kind that made freshman girls clutch their cameras like rosaries. I rolled in late—wheels squeaking on linoleum—and he didn’t even look up. “Miss Morau. The darkroom is sacred. Wheels are not.” I kicked the board up, caught it. “Sorry, Mr. B. Won’t happen again.” He finally met my eyes. Something behind the irises moved—like mist behind glass. “See that it doesn’t.” He assigned partners. “Celeste Morau and… Seras Nakamura.” Seras sat two enlargers down—black hair, red streak, smirk sharp enough to cut film. She didn’t look at me. Just slid a negative strip across the table like a dare. Lunch I didn’t do cafeteria chaos. Too many eyes measuring the new girl. I slipped into the darkroom instead—door code still 1975, because nobody ever changes anything in this town. Red light. Safe. I loaded the disposable I’d shot on the drive down I-40: Nashville skyline fading, Hot Springs mountains rising. Used spring water from my hydroflask instead of distilled. 104 °F. Didn’t matter. The first print came up slow. Me, standing on the dam at 6:03 a.m. yesterday. But in the negative, something stood behind me. Tall. Translucent. Made of mist. It had my face, but the eyes were wrong—too wide, too hungry. The door creaked. Mr. Bathory stepped into the red glow. His shadow stayed in the hallway. “You used spring water.” Not a question. “It develops faster.” “It also remembers.” He reached past me, fingers brushing the print. The paper sizzled where he touched it. “Careful, Miss Morau. Some things prefer to stay undeveloped.” He left. The mist in the tray curled into a coyote head, then sank. After school – Lake Hamilton Dam I skated the service road, wind off the water cold enough to bite through my hoodie. Remy Tsatoke was already there, skipping rocks that didn’t skip—they sank like stones in syrup. He wore a cut-off Rams jersey, scar running from collarbone to elbow shaped like a spiral spring. “You’re the Nashville girl,” he said without turning. “Guilty.” He finally looked. Amber flickers in his eyes, gone fast. “This lake doesn’t like outsiders.” “Too bad. I’m stubborn.” He laughed—short, surprised. “Grandma says the mist marks who it wants. You smell like it already.” I lifted my camera. “Smile.” He flipped me off instead. Click. The shutter sounded like a bone snap. That night, my new bedroom window fogged from the outside in. Phone buzzed—unknown number. Text: “Stay away from the darkroom. Some negatives can’t be fixed. – S” Another buzz. Blocked sender. Photo attachment: Me asleep on the dam railing, taken from inside the water. Caption: “Welcome home, Celeste.” I looked out the window. The mist pressed against the glass like it wanted to kiss me. It waved with five foggy fingers. Then it wrote a single word on the pane, backward so I could read it from inside: MINE. Freshman year just started. And the valley already knows my name..Chapter 165: After the Storm Celeste finally let herself breathe. The gold in her eyes faded back to ruby, and the electricity in her hair settled until it lay smooth against her shoulders again. For a moment she stood still on the beach, listening to the tide, the wind, and the slow return of her own pulse. The tension that had carried her through Ares’s presence finally began to drain away, leaving behind the unmistakable ache of effort and the sharper ache of what still had not been solved. For now, the immediate danger was handled. That did not mean the war was over. She closed her hand around the gold coin Ares had left behind. It felt warm, almost alive, the stamped face of the god catching the last light of the afternoon. A token. A warning. A line of contact she did not fully trust and did not intend to ignore. The thing was too deliberate to be casual and too useful to throw away. Remy stood beside her in the surf-washed silence, watching her with the same calm he
Chapter 164: The Real Game As the last of the tension began to leak out of the shoreline, Celeste finally turned away from the water and looked at Remy.Her eyes were still shimmering gold, the light in them not fully settled, her hair drifting in the salt wind as if the storm inside her had not quite finished deciding whether to rest. Her expression sharpened into something more personal, more dangerous in a quieter way.“Darius is insane,” she said.Remy didn’t need the explanation she gave next to understand the weight of it. He had heard enough already, seen enough already, to know that the threat was never only brute force. Darius was the kind of man who would set a forest on fire just to smoke one fox out of its den.Celeste’s jaw tightened.“He’d cause a war between the gods just to get rid of Nico,” she said, voice low with disgust, “so he could steal Elara Voss from him.”The words hung there over the wet sand.Not because they were uncertain.Because they were ugly in the w
Chapter 163 — A God’s Measure Ares did not move. That was the first victory. Not because he had surrendered—he hadn’t—but because he was no longer acting on instinct. That changed everything. Gods of war were at their most dangerous when they were certain. Certainty made them fast. Clean. Brutal. Uncertainty made them think. And thinking, Celeste had learned, was where leverage lived. The wind rolled around them in slow, salt-heavy currents. The tide crept and retreated at her back like a living boundary line. Her gold eyes remained fixed on Ares, calm and unblinking, while the power in her blood settled into a deeper rhythm. The system tracked it all in the background. > **DYNAMIC STANDOFF DETECTED** > **DIVINE TARGET: STATIC** > **USER ADVANTAGE: PSYCHOLOGICAL / ENVIRONMENTAL / BLOODLINE COMPOSITE** Celeste almost smiled at that. Almost. Instead she kept her voice level. “You’re still thinking like this is only about your son,” she said. Ares’s expression hardened,
Chapter 162 — Lineage and WarningThe tide held its line.So did Celeste.The wind shifted around them, carrying salt and pressure and something sharper now—something that had nothing to do with the ocean and everything to do with what had just been set in motion between them.Celeste lowered Hellebore a fraction.Not in surrender.In control.Her eyes, still threaded with gold, held Ares without wavering.“It’s simpler than you’re making it,” she said.No heat.No theatrics.Just clarity.“Leave Nico alone.”The words cut cleaner than a threat.Ares didn’t move.Didn’t interrupt.But something in his posture shifted—not outwardly, not enough for most to notice—but Celeste did. The way his attention sharpened, not just with anger now, but with something more deliberate.She continued.“Your son made a choice,” she said. “A bad one. He went after someone he shouldn’t have.”Ares’s jaw tightened.Celeste didn’t slow.“He wasn’t forced. He wasn’t manipulated into that moment. He escalate
Chapter 109 – Parade Prep & Future Plans**September 1, 2032 – Friday, Lake Hamilton High School**English class passes in a soft blur. Mrs. Hale reads more *Romeo and Juliet*—the balcony scene today—but Haru and Mia barely hear the words. They sit side by side in the back row by the window, kn
Chapter 101 – Chicken Wire and Flames**August 2031 – Thursday afternoon, Lake Hamilton High School art room**Last period drags—math, equations blurring on the board while my mind keeps drifting to tissue paper wolves and glue guns.When the final bell rings, I’m out the door fast, backpack slung
**Chapter 95 – Heart of the Void **March 22, 2031 – Final Nest, Antarctic Convergence**The last nest is buried under miles of Antarctic ice—a frozen fortress hiding the swarm’s true heart.A black cathedral of carapace and void, pulsing beneath the polar cap, feeding on the planet’s core ley li
**Chapter 91 – Hidden Realms **March 17–19, 2031 – Shambhala Gateway to Inner Sanctum**The portal spits us out into a world that shouldn’t exist.One moment, the cold silence of the Celestial Court launch bay.The next—warm wind carrying pine, incense, and something older, like the breath of mou












Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.