The fire had died down to faint embers, casting a soft, reddish glow over the camp. The cold air was biting now, seeping through my clothes and chilling me to the bone, but it wasnât the weather that had me on edge.
Everyone was here. Seth, Clara, Ethan, Mascot, Jacob, and meâsitting around the dying fire like ghosts of our former selves.
There was an unspoken weight in the air, something heavy and unsaid between us, and I could feel it pressing down on all of us. Weâd been fighting together for so long, but the truth was that we didnât really know each other, not deeply, not truly.
It was time to come clean. I hugged my knees to my chest, glancing around the circle. Mascot was sitting beside me, his eyes on the ground, deep in thought.
Jacob sat on the other side, his body language relaxed but his face tense. Seth leaned against a tree, staring into the distance, while Clara and Ethan sat across from us, their expressions hard to read.
âWe need to talk,â I said finally, breaking the silence. My voice was quiet, but it cut through the tension like a knife.
âAbout everything. Weâve all been holding back, hiding parts of ourselves, and itâs time we stopped.â No one said anything at first, but I could feel their gazes shift toward me.
Mascot lifted his head, his eyes meeting mine for a brief second before looking away. Jacobâs hand brushed against my leg, a silent gesture of support. Ethan was the first to respond. He leaned forward, his elbows resting on his knees.
âIâve got nothing to hide,â he said, his tone light but edged with something darker.
âI am what I am. You know that.â I nodded, though Ethanâs words didnât surprise me. He was always the straightforward one, the one who rarely let his emotions get the better of him.
But even he had layers, secrets buried beneath his calm exterior. âI think we all need to go back,â I said softly.
âTo where this all started. Weâve been fighting side by side, but I donât think we really understand each otherâs reasons, our pasts.â I glanced over at Seth and Clara, who had been unusually quiet since we started the conversation.
Seth shifted uncomfortably, his fingers playing with the hem of his jacket. Clara glanced at him, her eyes full of something I couldnât quite place. Guilt, maybe? Sadness? It was Clara who spoke first.
âOur past isnât easy to talk about,â she said, her voice low but steady. She glanced at Seth again, and he nodded slightly, giving her the go-ahead.
âBut youâre right. You deserve to know.â She took a deep breath, her eyes flickering toward the fire before settling on me. âSeth and I werenât always⦠involved in this kind of life,â she began.
âBefore we met Sarah, we were just trying to survive.â Her voice wavered, and Seth took over, his tone rougher, like he was pulling the words from some dark place.
âWe werenât always part of this fight. In fact, we werenât meant to be in this world at all, not at first.â Sethâs eyes met mine for the briefest moment, then he spoke.
âClara and I grew up in a quiet village far from all this⦠chaos. We were simple people back then. I spent most of my days buried in books, studying magicâharmless spells, mostly. Clara, though⦠she was different. She had real power, even as a child.â
Clara looked away, clearly uncomfortable with Sethâs praise. But I noticed how her hands clenched in her lap, her magic sparking just beneath her skin as she recalled the past.
âOur village saw her as a blessing at first,â Seth continued. âBut soon, people began to fear her. They said her magic was too wild, too dangerous. That she was cursed.â Clara winced, and Seth reached over, placing a hand on her arm.
âThey didnât understand. Magic like hersâitâs unpredictable, yes, but itâs not evil. But fear⦠it changes people. It makes them cruel.â Clara swallowed hard. âThey exiled us,â she said softly, her voice barely above a whisper.
âSeth and I were forced to leave our home, with nowhere to go and no one to trust.â I swallowed hard, the weight of their words sinking in. I hadnât known that about them. Theyâd always seemed so strong, so unbreakable, but hearing the pain in Sethâs voice made me realize just how much theyâd been through.
âWe were alone for a long time,â Clara continued, her eyes distant as if she were reliving it. âWe didnât know what to do or where to go. We wandered for months, scavenging for food, trying to stay hidden from the werewolves. It wasnât until we met Sarah that things started to change.â
âSarah saved us,â Seth said quietly, his eyes hardening. âShe taught us how to fight, how to defend ourselves. She gave us a purposeâtold us about Eden and the artifact, and why we needed to stop him. We didnât know what we were getting into at the time, but Sarah made it clear that this fight was bigger than us. So we joined her.â
Clara nodded, her gaze flickering toward the ground.
âWe didnât have a choice. Sarah was the only hope we had. She was the one who gave us a reason to keep going.â There was a pause, and I could feel the weight of their story settling over the group. I hadnât realized how deeply their past was tied to Sarahâs quest, how much they had lost before they even met her.
âHow did you meet Sarah?â I asked softly, my voice barely above a whisper. Clara sighed, her shoulders slumping slightly.
âWe were hiding out in an old cabin, deep in the woods. It was falling apart, barely standing, but it was the only shelter we had. We were hungry, scared, and exhausted. Thatâs when Sarah found us.â
âShe came out of nowhere,â Seth added, his voice tight with emotion. âOne minute we were alone, and the next, there she wasâlike sheâd been tracking us. We thought she was one of them at first, a dark werewolf. But she wasnât. She was⦠different.â
âShe was fierce,â Clara said, a small smile tugging at the corners of her mouth. âAnd determined. She told us about Eden, about the war that was coming. At first, we didnât believe her.
We just wanted to survive. But Sarah had this way of making you believe in something bigger than yourself.â
âAfter that, we stayed with her,â Seth said. âShe trained us, taught us how to fight. She became like a sister to us. We wouldâve followed her anywhere.â My heart ached as I listened to their story. Iâd known Sarah for a while now, but I hadnât realized how much she meant to Clara and Seth.
She wasnât just their leaderâshe was their savior, the one who had pulled them out of the darkness.
âDo you still believe in her?â I asked softly, my voice hesitant. Clara and Seth exchanged a glance, and I could see the anger in their eyes. Claraâs hand tightened into a fist, and she looked away for a moment before answering.
âShe was like a sister to us,â Clara admitted. âShe practically gave up her life to make sure we escaped Eden. Why won't we believe in her?â Seth nodded, his expression grim. âI still believe in the cause. I still want to stop Eden. But I donât know how we will survive without her.
But I'm determined to see this through.â The silence that followed was heavy, each of us lost in our own thoughts. Seth and Claraâs story had opened up a floodgate of emotions, not just for them, but for all of us.
We were all fighting for something, but maybe we hadnât been honest about what that something was. Jacob shifted beside me, his hand resting lightly on my knee.
âWhat about you, Tasha?â he asked softly. âWhat are you fighting for?â I blinked, surprised by the question. Iâd been so focused on everyone else that I hadnât stopped to think about my own reasons for being here. What was I fighting for?
âI donât know,â I admitted quietly. âI guess⦠Iâm fighting for all of us. For the people Iâve lost, and for the ones I still have. For Mascot, for you.â I glanced around the circle, my gaze lingering on each of them.
âI donât want to lose anyone else.â Mascotâs eyes met mine, and I could see the flicker of understanding there. He knew what I meant, even if I hadnât said it outright. We were all fighting for each other now, not just for some distant cause or a promise made long ago.
âI think weâre all in the same boat,â Ethan said, his voice breaking the silence. âWeâre fighting because we have to, not because we want to. But that doesnât mean itâs any less important.â Clara nodded slowly, her eyes distant.
âWeâve come too far to turn back now.â Seth glanced at her, a flicker of determination in his eyes. âYeah. Weâve lost too much to give up.â I felt a surge of resolve wash over me, the connection of our shared pasts binding us together in a way that I hadnât felt before.
We were all broken, scarred by the lives weâd lived and the battles weâd fought. But we were also stronger because of it. âWeâll get through this,â I said softly, my voice steady despite the uncertainty that still lingered in my heart.
âTogether.â There were no more words after that, just the quiet crackle of the dying fire and the steady breathing of the people around me. It wasnât a perfect resolution, but it was a start.
And for now, that was enough. But then, my eyes wandered over to Ethan, our famed werewolf hunter.