Chapter 3—The Shifted Balance
Elara's POV
I heard them before the bus doors even opened.
The moment I stepped off at Draven Wolf Academy the noise changed, dropping into something lower and more pointed. Students who had stayed behind were gathered near the entrance and every single one of them was looking at me.
I kept walking.
"She shifted on a blood moon," someone said. "Do you know how rare that is?"
"Her parents are Moonfalls," another voice answered, like that explained everything.
"Still. She didn't shift on her birthday. That's not something you just forget."
I did not turn around. I focused on the doors ahead and kept moving.
Freya fell into step beside me. "You realise half the school is losing their minds right now."
"I noticed."
"You should be enjoying this."
"I'm really not."
By the time we reached the main corridor it had gotten worse. Boys I had never exchanged a single word with were suddenly finding reasons to exist near me, appearing beside my locker with questions about homework, walking too close, laughing too loudly. One of them, a senior named Callum who had sat two rows behind me in History for a year and a half without once acknowledging I existed, stopped directly in front of me with a smile that had clearly been practiced.
"Elara, right? Shifting on a blood moon, that's impressive."
I stared at him. "You've sat two rows behind me in History for a year and a half."
His smile flickered. "Yeah I know, I just never got the chance to—"
"Okay," I said, and walked around him.
Leo was waiting at the classroom door with his arms crossed and the satisfied expression of someone watching a very entertaining film. "That was beautiful," he said.
"Stop."
"The look on his face when you said History—"
"Leo."
"I'm just saying, the era of wolfless Moonfall is officially over and I am here for every second of it." He fell into step beside me. "Also at least four boys have been watching you since we got off the bus and I counted."
"That is not information I needed."
"You're welcome," Leo said.
***
I dropped into my seat and tried not to notice the weight of eyes finding me every time I moved. Across the room a group of senior girls who had always moved through these halls like they owned them were watching me with expressions that had nothing warm in them. I caught fragments of what they were saying without trying to, my senses still too new for me to filter properly.
"She thinks she's all that now."
"One shift and suddenly she thinks she is the most popular girl in Draven? Please."
"Her wolf probably isn't even that strong. Blood moon or not."
Nyx appeared beside me, set her bag down and said without looking up, "Three of them have been talking about you since first period."
"I know."
"They're jealous."
"I know that too."
"Good. Just making sure you weren't about to feel bad about it."
I was not feeling bad. I was feeling irritated, which was harder to sit with because irritation required energy I did not have to spare. Two days back and already I was exhausted by the version of myself everyone had decided I was now, like the blood moon shift had rewritten everything about me overnight and nobody thought to ask if I felt any different on the inside.
It was during lunch that Alpha Kael walked across the hall toward me and every conversation in the room dropped a notch.
He was broad shouldered and unhurried, carrying the kind of confidence that came from never once questioning whether he belonged wherever he was standing. The senior girls who had been glaring at me were now watching him, and every boy hovering near my table found somewhere else to be.
He stopped in front of me.
"Elara Moonfall. Blood moon shift. First one at Draven in over a decade."
"So I've been told," I said.
"Your wolf. How does it feel?"
It was a real question, not an opening line. "Stronger than I expected," I said. "Still getting used to it."
He nodded once. "We should talk more about that," and then he left, clean and without ceremony.
Freya turned to me slowly with the expression she wore right before saying something I could not argue with.
"Absolutely not," I said before she opened her mouth.
"I didn't say anything."
"You were about to."
"I was simply going to observe that Kael, who has never once walked across this lunch hall for anyone outside his inner circle, just walked across it for you specifically."
"It was about my wolf."
"Sure it was."
Leo pointed his fork at me. "For what it's worth, half the girls in this room want to dissolve you where you sit."
"That's not worth anything, Leo."
"I know. Just thought you should have the full picture."
Nyx said nothing. She looked at me over the edge of her notebook with an expression that said she had already formed an opinion and decided it was not yet time to share it, which was somehow more unsettling than anything Freya had said.
***
Later that afternoon I was crossing the courtyard when the feeling came back.
Not the general awareness of being watched by half the school but something else. More deliberate. Coming from a direction I could not pin down no matter how many times I turned to look.
I stopped and scanned the space behind me. Students crossing between buildings. A group near the benches. The path toward the training field, empty.
Nothing.
I kept walking and told myself it was just my new senses still adjusting, too raw and unfiltered to be trusted yet.
But as I reached the far side of the courtyard I looked once more toward the treeline beyond the academy fence.
Nothing I could see.
But the feeling did not leave, and I could not reason it away no matter how hard I tried. Something beyond those trees had been watching me, patient and completely still, and whatever it was, it was still there.