Chapter 134 THE MOON NO LONGER LISTENS
“I am becoming a boundary,” I said quietly to Damien as we stood overlooking the keep’s lower hall, where messengers clustered like storm clouds, each one heavy with things they could not fix. “Not a person. Not even a judgment. Just a line people draw to tell themselves where safety ends.”
Damien’s jaw tightened. “They need somewhere to put the fear.”
“And they chose me.”
“They chose what they could see.”
I laughed then, a sharp, broken sound that surprised both of us. “They cannot even see me,” I said. “They see a shape that makes their suffering make sense.”
That afternoon, a delegation arrived from a distant port city, their leader a woman with salt-stiffened hair and eyes that did not flinch when she looked at me. She bowed with the stiff precision of someone who had rehearsed the motion until it no longer meant anything.
“We ask nothing of you,” she said. “We only wish to understand how to avoid your notice.”
I stared at her. “My notice?”
“Yes,” she replied calmly. “The storms that broke our harbor last week spared one quarter entirely. The quarter that burned your symbol into the docks.”
I felt Damien shift beside me, the air around him tightening.
“I do not have a symbol,” I said.
She reached into her satchel and withdrew a scrap of cloth, darkened by salt and smoke, bearing a rough circle crossed by three uneven lines, an abstract echo of the Moonfire mark that burned faintly at my collarbone.
“They say you pass over those who acknowledge you,” she continued. “That you punish those who deny you. We wish to know which is worse.”
The question hollowed me out.
“There is no acknowledgment that will save you,” I said, my voice hoarse. “And no denial that will doom you. I am not watching. I am not choosing.”
Her expression flickered, doubt breaking through composure for the briefest moment. “Then why,” she asked softly, “does the world answer when your name is spoken?”
I had no answer.
That night, I walked the altered land alone, the glow beneath my feet responding faintly to my presence, not eagerly, not violently, but attentively, like a thing that had learned my weight and adjusted accordingly. The wind carried distant sounds, too far to be voices, but close enough to feel intentional, and I wondered how many people were speaking my name at that very moment with fear clenched between their teeth.
I knelt and pressed my palm to the ground.
“I did not ask for this,” I whispered, not to the land, not to the Goddess, but to whatever part of the world was still capable of listening without translating everything into myth.
The ground warmed beneath my hand.
When I returned to the keep, a single parchment awaited me on the long table in the council chamber, unsealed, its contents already known by the way Damien stood beside it, shoulders rigid, eyes dark.
“It came from farther than the others,” he said. “From beyond the mountain passes.”
I unfolded it slowly.
The message was brief, written in a careful, unfamiliar script.
We have learned the word that stops the fires.
We will teach it to our children.
If the sky darkens, we will speak Selene and hope it chooses elsewhere.
My vision blurred.
“They are teaching fear,” I said. “They are teaching it to survive me.”
Damien’s voice was low. “They are teaching it to survive the world as it is becoming.”
I looked up at him, something brittle and sharp taking shape behind my ribs.
“And what happens,” I asked, “when my name stops being enough?”
He said nothing in response to my question.
The first sign was not dramatic.
There was no thunder, no scream from the sky, no sudden tearing of light.
It was simply morning that did not arrive.
I realized it when my eyes opened to a dimness that felt wrong in a way I could not immediately explain, because darkness had rules and this had none. Night was supposed to loosen its grip gradually, allowing pale light to bleed into corners and edges, but this darkness lingered like a held breath, thick and undecided, as though the world itself had forgotten what came next.
I sat up slowly, heart already tightening, and turned toward the narrow window carved into the stone wall.
The moon was still there.
Suspended in the sky as if dawn were merely a suggestion it had chosen to ignore.
For a long moment, I could not move.
I had lived my entire life by its certainty. Every wolf did. The moon rose and fell, waxed and waned, dictated blood and bone and breath. Even when it terrified us, it was reliable in its terror. It listened to something older than fear. It obeyed structure.
This did not.
I rose and crossed the room barefoot, the floor cold beneath my soles, and pressed my palm to the glass. Moonlight touched my skin without warmth, without pressure, without the familiar hum that usually answered my presence.
I reached for it instinctively.
Nothing responded.
The Moonfire stirred late, sluggish, like something waking from a dream it did not want to leave, and even then it did not reach outward. It waited.
For me.
A sound carried up from the courtyard below, sharp and panicked, followed by another and another, voices overlapping in confusion rather than alarm. I dressed quickly and made my way down, my steps echoing too loudly in the stairwell, as though the stone itself were listening harder than usual.
The courtyard was full.
Not crowded with urgency, but thick with uncertainty, bodies turned upward, faces pale in the wrong light, guards gripping spears they had not yet decided how to use. Wolves stood among them in half-shifted states, claws flexing and retracting without rhythm, their eyes reflecting silver in a way that made my stomach twist.
“It did not set,” someone said as I stepped into view.
“It did not pull,” another whispered. “I waited. I always feel it when it pulls.”
A young patrol wolf stood near the well, breathing hard, sweat beading at his temples despite the cold. His shift had begun and stopped and begun again in stuttering fragments, fur breaking through skin only to recede as though the command had been withdrawn mid-sentence.
“It won’t tell me what to do,” he said hoarsely. “I’m listening, and it won’t answer.”
I felt Damien at my side before I saw him, his presence steady, grounded, his shadow stretched long and dark beneath the unmoving moon. His gaze followed mine upward, and I saw the moment his understanding shifted from concern to something closer to dread.
“It is not cycling,” he said quietly. “It is stalled.”
We waited.
An hour passed, then another, and the sky did not change. Birds refused to sing. Wolves did not shift when they should have, or shifted when they should not. A healer collapsed near the gate, blood streaming from her nose as she tried to stabilize a patient whose body no longer recognized the rhythm it had been born to obey.
I knelt beside the young patrol wolf and placed my hand against the center of his chest.