LOGINThe Move
It was the same thing over again, the same dream. The same eyes followed me for over half of my life, at this point I didn't even feel like a nightmare anymore. It felt like a memory.
I wake up two minutes before my seven am alarm. Because of course I do, that’s who I am now—neurotic, sleep-deprived, and haunted by dreams that always feel too real.
I lie still, staring at the faded glow-in-the-dark stars that Gran stuck to the ceiling for my seventh birthday.
We move today..
Today, I leave everything I’ve ever known behind. The anxiety surrounding this hasn’t let me forget that for a single second since gran barged into my room a few weeks ago and announced that she’d put our home on the market.
First came the dreams—different monsters with red eyes. Then came sleepwalking, gran had to put a bolt on the top of every single door in the house so I didn’t wander off in the middle of the night. Last week I broke out in hives just thinking about walking into a new school where I don’t know anyone.
“Saxa! Gran’s voice calls out from downstairs. Her usual cheerful sing-song.
Groaning, I roll out of bed, dragging my feet as I get dressed. Might as well take my time—it’s the last morning I’ll ever spend in this room. This house won’t be ours anymore after today.
I pause at my window, staring down at the bright red SOLD sign stabbed into our front lawn. A weight settling in my chest..
We’ve lived in Connecticut for as long as I can remember. It was my parents home, the only place I’ve ever felt close to them. Leaving feels like losing the only piece I’ve ever had.
They died when I was just a few weeks old, car crash.
No survivors.
Gran said the doctors did everything they could.
After that, gran gave up everything to raise me here, in their home. She said the therapist insisted it was important—for my emotional development or whatever the hell. That it would be too traumatic to move me somewhere unfamiliar. She took that to heart, leaving her home country to be with me..
But now, we’re doing exactly that.
“Saxa, honey? You okay?” Gran’s voice floats up the stairs, soft and concerned.
She knows I’m not okay, of course she does. But she uprooted her whole life for me, and now it’s my turn.
“Yeah, gran. Just getting a little sentimental,” I call back, my voice cracking on the last word.
She appears a few moments later, leaning on the doorframe with that familiar warm smile that almost makes everything feel okay.
“You’re only seventeen, sweet girl. You’ll make new friends. Better ones, maybe.” she says it gently, but I can hear the subtext behind it—she never liked the people I spent time with. She said trouble followed them around like a shadow. And sure, they weren’t saints, but they were my friends. The people who accepted me…
Still, she’s not wrong.
I’ll meet new people, I'll adjust and we’ll start over somewhere new.
But that’s not what’s tearing me up inside, not really.
“Gran,” I whisper, turning to face her. “I’m scared, I know I was just a baby when they died, but this house… it’s the last real connection I have to them. There’s no pictures.. Nothing. Leaving feels like losing the only piece I have left of them…”
She crosses the room and pulls me into her arms, pressing a kiss to the crown of my head.
“Oh, Saxa. the ones we’ve lost… they never really leave us. They live here,” she says, placing a hand gently over my heart. “Their love doesn’t vanish with time. It stays, always.” Her fingers brush the scar across my chest—the one I’ve had since before I can remember. She hugs me tighter, and I let the tears come.
“I’ll try gran,” I whisper. “I promise to try and make it work in Balestrand.”
She smiles against my cheek. “Jeg lover deg at du er bestemt til store ting, og alt vil bli åpenbart for deg i god tid, min lille ulv.”
I blink, once.
“For fucks sake, Gran—I’m never going to survive in Norway. I didn’t understand a single thing you just said to me.”
She just laughs softly.
Beneath the MountainSaxaSomething beneath us wakes.Not metaphorically, not emotionally, not in some distant magical shift humming quietly through the system.Something real.The moment the convergence locks into place between Elias and I, the entire valley reacts like a living thing inhaling for the first time in centuries.The threads pulse again, just once.Hard.Every glowing line beneath the snow flashes blinding white, racing through the forest and into the mountain faster than lightning.And then—Everything stops.No tremors.No roaring.No movement.Silence crashes over the clearing so suddenly it makes my ears ring.Every creature freezes, every wolf, every thread.The entire world holds still. Beside me Elias goes rigid, his fingers tightening painfully around mine. His pupils blow wide as the glyph beneath his skin begins to burn brighter than I’ve ever seen it.“Saxa,” he whispers.But his voice sounds wrong. Distant.Like he’s hearing something I can’t.The mountain a
The Valley ChangesSaxaNo one moves after the creature speaks.The valley seems to freeze around us. Snow drifts slowly through the clearing, glowing faintly silver where the threads burn beneath the ground.The malformed wolf lies motionless at the creature's feet, his breath ragged but growing more steady.Alive.That should feel like a relief, but it doesn’t.Because the thing kneeling beside him just fixed something none of us understood.And it did effortlessly.Eirik steps forward carefully. Every muscle in his body is tense.Protective.Ready to kill if he has to.The creature turns its silver eyes toward him.Not hostile.Just watching.Learning. The threads around its hands dim slowly.Gran drops beside the injured wolf immediately, her hands trembling as she checks his pulse.“He’s stable,” she whispers.Ingrid stares at the creature. “You just… healed him?”The creature tilts its head slightly.“he … tearing.”Its voice sounds smoother now.Less broken.Like every word tea
The Ones Who WonderSaxaThe creatures don’t stop at the ridge, that’s the first thing that goes wrong.The second is the wolves.Because the moment the boundary pulses again, every wolf in the clearing reacts.Not together, differently.Tobin doubles over first. A sharp curse tears from his throat as he grabs the side of his head. Two others behind him stumble backward violently, claws ripping halfway through their fingertips before snapping back.Ingrid’s eyes widen. “What the hell?”Another pulse rolls through the valley, the threads flare yet again. And somewhere deeper in the forest—Wolves start howling.Not one.Not two.But dozens.My stomach drops. Eirik hears it too, his head jerking to the treeline instantly.“That’s not patrol.”“No,” Kaia says quietly. Her eyes remaining fixed on the mountain, “it’s spreading.”The words settle cold in my chest, because I can feel it now. The system isn’t centered in the clearing anymore.The threads are moving outward, through the valley,
The Boundary that BreaksSaxaThe mountain stops waiting, the moment the thought finishes forming in my mind—The heart pulses again.Hard.The shockwave rolls through the valley like thunder trapped under stone. Snow bursts from the ridge in glittering clouds. The threads beneath the clearing flare so bright the ground looks like it’s made of fractured starlight.Elias gasps, “Okay, yeah, that might be worse.”The glyph beneath his shirt begins burning again, not violently like before. But just as intense. Ike the system just grabbed hold of him and refused to let go. Gran tightens her grip on his shoulder. “You cannot keep channeling this much power.”Elias lets out a strained laugh. “Pretty sure the mountain isn’t asking for my permission.”The creatures on the ridge begin moving again, but differently this time. Not all toward the heart.Some stop, turn.Looking back towards the clearing, toward me.The threads react instantly.Every glowing strand connected to those creatures tig
The Heart's CommandSaxaThe pull becomes unbearable. Not immediately, not violently, it just builds like a tide dragging everything in the valley slowly toward the same point.The mountain, the threads tightening beneath the snow, glowing lines stretching toward the ridge like veins leading back to a single beating heart.Elias stumbles beside me. “Okay—yeah—I’m definitely feeling that now.”His voice is strained but steadier than it was earlier, the glyph beneath his shirt burns a bright silver, but it’s not tearing him apart anymore. It’s guiding him.Gran notices immediately, “that’s wrong.”Kaia’s gaze flicks toward Elias, “no.” she whispers. “It’s functioning.”Gran whips her head sharply, “functioning?”Kaia gestures toward the ridge where the light continues to pour from the split seam in the mountain. “The system is trying to complete its alignment.”The threads pulse around us again, harder.The pull inside my chest begins to sharpen as my breath catches. I can feel the direc
The Pull of the HeartSaxaThe mountain eventually stops roaring.That is somehow worse.The sudden silence spreads across the valley like a held breath, the kind that comes just before something breaks.The threads beneath the snow tighten.All of them.Not violently.Not chaotically.Deliberately.Like something enormous just wrapped its fingers around every line of power running through the valley.Elias inhales sharply beside me.“…that’s new.”The glyph beneath his shirt pulses again, brighter than before but steadier than it had been when the system was tearing him apart.This time the light doesn’t flare outward.It pulls.The threads react instantly.Every glowing strand shifts direction.Toward the mountain.The creatures standing in the clearing feel it too.The seven that turned toward me stiffen, their silver eyes snapping toward the ridge as the pull tightens through the system.The others—those already walking toward the mountain—don’t hesitate.They begin moving faster.
Wolves Don’t Name Their SinsYsabeauThe first thing I learned about prophecy is that it never arrives on time. It shows up early, bleeding into the edges of days that should’ve been simple, or it crawls out too late—after the choices are already made, after the bodies are already in the ground. It
Aftermath is Louder than BattleSaxaThe quarry doesn’t feel right, it feels stunned. Like the earth is holding its breath after realizing it couldn’t get what it wanted.Dusts hands in the air in a thin veil, drifting through shafts of pale light like ash from a fire that never fully dies. The old
Ash and QuarrySaxaI’m not even going to acknowledge the fact that Kaia was in Gran’s cabin when Eirik and I showed up for Elias, she was just sitting there like she belonged.The quarry smells wrong.Not rot.Not death.The air here tastes thin, metallic, like it’s been bled one too many times and
The One Who Holds the DoorEliasPain has layers. There’s the kind that sits on the surface—bruns, cuts, the sharp honesty of something broken. And then there’s the deeper kind.The kind that lives in the marrow and hums when you breathe, when you think, when you remember that your body is not entir







