Fire smelled like the end of everything.
Seren Blake stood in the middle of what used to be her living room, surrounded by ash and melted photo frames. Her bare feet pressed against scorched tile. The house was gone-nothing left but smoke, ruin, and a silence too loud to bear.
Her mother was dead. The fire had taken her five days ago.
Now there was nothing left but this... and the strange, burning symbol glowing on her forearm.
She hadn't seen it until this morning. It had appeared when she woke, seared into her skin just below the elbow-pulsing with light like it was alive.
At first, she'd thought it was a dream. But the sigil was still there after she splashed cold water on her face. Still there when she wrapped it in a bandage. Still there now, burning beneath the gauze.
Her phone buzzed in her pocket.
A single message lit the cracked screen:
Transportation arranged. Ashmoor awaits.
No number. No sender. Just those three words.
A chill slid down her spine.
"What the hell is Ashmoor?" she muttered aloud.
As if summoned by the question, a long black car rolled to a stop in front of the burnt remains of her house. The engine purred like a beast, too smooth to be comforting.
The driver's door opened.
A man in a charcoal suit stepped out. Tall, pale, and emotionless, with silver rings on every finger. He held a manila folder.
"Seren Blake?" he asked.
She hesitated.
"Yeah?"
He handed her the folder. Stamped on the front: ASHMOOR ACADEMY – Immediate Transfer.
"I didn't apply to any school," she said, hugging herself tightly.
"You didn't have to."
His voice was clipped and cold.
"You've been chosen."
"I'm not going anywhere with some stranger in a creepy car."
"You'd rather stay here?"
He gestured to the wreckage behind her.
"With nothing? With no one?"
Seren clenched her jaw. That wasn't fair. But it was true.
She opened the folder. Inside was a sleek black brochure:
Ashmoor Academy: Where the Forgotten Become the Chosen.
On the last page, written in ornate script:
All Marked must return before the next moon. Or be claimed by the curse.
Her hand trembled.
"Is this a joke?"
"No. It's a warning."
The man opened the car door.
"Now get in."
Seren looked back one last time.
The ruins of her past smoldered behind her. Nothing left. No mom. No answers. Only questions. Only the mark.
She got in.
The door shut with a soft click that sounded far too final.
Inside, the car smelled like leather, old books, and something faintly floral-like lavender and ash.
The man didn't speak again. He simply drove, long fingers tapping the wheel to a rhythm only he could hear.
Seren clutched the folder to her chest and watched the world blur by. The city thinned. Then disappeared.
Asphalt gave way to cracked gravel, then dense trees. Forest swallowed everything-light, sound, sense of direction.
Her signal had vanished two hours ago. Not even a bar.
"I should've brought pepper spray," she muttered under her breath.
The driver cracked the smallest smile.
"It wouldn't work here."
She blinked.
"What?"