Chapter 3 Chapter 3 – The First Shift
Ayla's POV
Alpha Jack and Luna Ria didn't stand in my way when I turned toward the door a second time.
They knew. A silent nod passed between us, and I slipped outside before anyone else could notice I was leaving.
The cold hit me immediately—sharper now than before, the kind that settles into your lungs with every breath. My wolf stirred restlessly, urging me forward, and I followed without argument. She knew where we were going before I did.
The forest was quiet. Too quiet.
My old winter boots crunched into the snow louder than they should have, each step announcing itself to the empty trees. The further I walked, the more the packhouse noise faded behind me—the laughter, the music, the warmth—until there was nothing left but the creak of pine and birch branches heavy with ice and the soft sound of my own breathing clouding in the air.
No one was following.
No one was coming.
I already knew that. I'd known it before I left.
Coming-of-age wolves had their first shift in the clearing. The pack was supposed to gather, witness it, and celebrate it. Afterward, there would be a run with the whole pack together beneath the moon.
I pushed the thought aside before it could settle. There was no use thinking about things that weren't going to change. At least the snow had stopped.
My gaze shifted toward the sky as I walked. The clouds had cleared by the time I reached the edge of the clearing, pulling back to reveal a deep, star-scattered sky. The moon hung full and bright above me, its light spilling into the open space ahead and making the untouched snow glow faintly at the edges.
I stopped and stood there for a moment, fingers closing around the pendant at my throat.
Cold metal. Solid. Real.
I held onto it a little longer than I needed to. Then I let go.
I stepped into the center of the clearing. The cold bit into my skin the moment my clothes hit the ground—sharp, immediate, unforgiving. I barely felt it. My wolf was pushing hard now, urgent in a way that left no room for hesitation.
I closed my eyes.
For a moment, nothing happened.
Then it hit.
No warning. No build-up. Just pain—tearing through me like a hot blade dragged slowly through everything at once. My knees buckled, and I went down hard into the snow. My body locked, then jerked violently, bones cracking and shifting in ways that made my stomach turn. The sound echoed around the empty clearing, too loud, too wrong.
My fingers dug into the snow. My spine snapped back. What little air I had left was stolen clean from my lungs.
Heat followed the pain—flooding through my veins, burning under my skin, and spreading through my chest and down every limb until I couldn't tell where one ended and the other began. It kept going. Too long. Too much.
Goddess, will it ever end—
Then something changed.
The pain didn't stop. It shifted, stretched, then sharpened into something else entirely. Power. Surging upward through the burning sensation, it felt sudden, overwhelming, and unmistakable.
My senses cracked open all at once.
The earth beneath the snow. A small heartbeat somewhere deep in the trees. The cold air was suddenly carrying a dozen things I couldn't have named an hour ago.
I opened my eyes.
The world was sharper. Edges cleaner. Everything was brighter in a way that felt more right than anything I had ever seen before.
I shifted my weight and stopped.
Four paws in the snow.
I tested it without thinking, and something in me recognized it before my mind caught up. It felt like remembering something I had never actually been taught.
I looked down.
White fur. Pure and bright, catching the moonlight and holding it.
"Well," a voice said, dry and thoroughly unimpressed. "At least we didn't come out disappointing."
I went completely still.
"Wait—what?" I thought.
"Oh good, you heard that," she said, and paused. "I was about to start judging you out loud."
My ears flicked forward.
"You're... you're my wolf?" I asked, still trying to catch up.
"Yes," she said flatly. "Congratulations. Took you long enough to notice."
I inhaled slowly, trying to settle the rush of everything happening at once. I hadn't expected my wolf to be verbal. Was that even normal?
"It is," she said, unimpressed. "How else do you think we communicate with our human?"
I ignored her, trying to understand what I was feeling.
"What's your name?" I asked.
There was a pause that suggested she was deeply reconsidering her situation.
"Seriously," she started. "Did the Moon Goddess pair me with—"
A name surfaced from somewhere I couldn't explain. "Tala," I said quietly.
Silence.
"...Mm." Almost satisfied. "That works. At least you didn't say Shadowfang. That would have started things off badly."
The air shifted.
My body reacted before my mind did—ears snapping forward, muscles pulling tight, every instinct going still and alert at once.
My gaze moved to the tree line.
Something stood there.
Not moving. Not shifting weight. Not breathing visibly—and at this temperature, in this cold, everything breathed visibly. It just stood at the edge of the clearing, completely still, entirely focused.
On us.
A shiver rolled down my spine that had nothing to do with the cold.
"That's not—" I started.
"Normal?" Tala said, her voice lower now. "No. It isn't."
We watched it. It watched us back.
That cold feeling in my chest wasn't new. I had felt it before—thirteen years ago, at the edges of smoke and fire and a pair of red eyes that had watched me the same way. With the same patience. The same certainty.
"It sees us," I said.
"Yes," Tala replied. The sharpness had gone out of her voice entirely.
I blinked.
The figure was gone.
No movement. No sound. No footprints disturbed the snow at the tree line. Just—gone, as if it had never been there at all.
I stretched my senses outward, searching for a scent, a sound, or any trace at all.
Nothing.
"That's worse," Tala said quietly.
My chest tightened. "What was it?"
"I don't know," she said. "And I don't like not knowing."
That landed heavier than anything else she could have said.
"It wasn't afraid of us," I said.
"No," she agreed. "Definitely not."
The certainty of it settled over me, cold and solid. Whatever that was, it hadn't stumbled across me by accident. It knew I would be here tonight. It had come to see me shift.
And it would come back.
"We should go," I said.
"Look at you," Tala said, a dry edge returning to her voice. "Making decisions. I was starting to wonder."
I turned toward the packhouse, its light barely a glow through the trees now. I gathered my clothes and ran—snow kicking up beneath my paws, the forest blurring past, my body moving faster and more easily than it ever had before.
But the feeling didn't fade with the distance.
It sharpened.
"It chose us," I said. "Specifically. It was waiting."
Tala was quiet for a long moment.
Then—nothing. No sarcastic comeback. No dry observation. Just silence, sitting heavily between us as the packhouse lights grew closer through the trees.
And somehow, that was the most frightening thing of all.
