THE AUREUM TRIAL: BLOOD OATH
re breathing, watching. Shadows slithered between the gnarled branches, twisting and stretching beneath
I knew, with every frantic beat of my heart,
a warning. Then, the snap of jaws, the thudding of hea
hen my ankle twisted and I fell, and the ground was suddenly gone, a sheer drop beneath me. My scream caught in my throat as I tumbled, crashing throug
before the wolves emerge
nes. I was trapped. I scrambled back, and my hands clawed at the damp earth, but the mom
kness, moving faster than my eyes could follo
ground with a force that cracked the earth. The creature whimpered, stunned, before scurrying back into the shad
there was
adow against the moonlight, towering above me, broad shoulders wrapped in darkness. My
gle gaze. In the deep at the center of his iris, was a piercing blue, sharp as ice, endless as the ocean, a secret hidden beneath frozen waters. But at the edges, where the light kissed his irises, emerald g
pounded so violently I thought he could hear it. I opened
se, as if I were still lying on that cold
d worn leather. My surroundings came into focus and the cracked vinyl seat beneath me, the rhythm
ta
impatience, broke through t
is
ing. The taxi driver was watching me through
ved. Ashwoo
my, my pulse erratic, the ghost of his touch still lingering on my wrist.
he window. And as I looked
HWOOD A
soaring stained-glass windows, their jewel-toned hues casting dappled light across the cobbled courtyard. Ivy draped itself like silk over the aged walls, softening the fortress-like presence of the academy, while towering oak doors,
every hair on my arms rising. I had never stepped foot here before. And
handle, and the air was cold the moment I stepped out, the scent of rain-soaked earth and pin
SHB
ptic clung to the air, but beneath it, I could still pick up traces of chamomile tea, my aunt's favorite. She l
murmured, "Com
in mine. "You should be resting," I wh
e luxury of time, sweetheart." A small cough rattled her
d. "Don't talk like...lik
girl. Not yet." Her fingers tightened around mine. "Bu
y voice cracked. "I
asping, like paper-thin glass on the verge of shattering. "You nee
happening. "This is my home," I had pleaded, my
for you. I kept you safe, but I can't keep you hidden anymore." She had brushe
oat and nodded, because what else could
ES
memory burned behind my eyes. The weight of her w
here I
rom the cold or the feeling that, despite never settin
licking softly against the cobblestone as I took my first ste