“Your real family.”
Liya tried to run. But her silver feet, usually so quick and silent, rooted themselves to the ground like trees. The man walked toward her, unhurried, and knelt. With one pale finger, he tapped her shoe. It chimed like a bell. liya silver feet
Liya had always hated her feet. Not because they were ugly—they were perfectly fine, if a little small—but because of what they did every night. As soon as the moon rose and the last light bled from the sky, her skin would ripple, shimmer, and turn into liquid silver. Not fake, painted silver. Real. Metal that flowed like mercury, cool and heavy, leaving perfect mirror prints in the dust of her bedroom floor. “Your real family
Liya didn’t laugh. Werewolves got to turn into something powerful. She just got stuck with feet that couldn’t feel grass, couldn’t feel warmth, couldn’t feel anything except the strange, magnetic pull of the earth beneath her. As if the planet wanted to claim her. With one pale finger, he tapped her shoe
“You’ve been hiding,” he said, his voice soft as rust.