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Chapter 9 - CHAPTER 9

The First Little Bit of Control

My heart beats like a trapped bird. The red

light of the flying machine disappeared fast,

but I was still shaking in the dark. Had I just

imagined it? No. The bad feeling was too real.

I had to get back to my secret hiding place.

Lyra's words about the old ways gave me a

little hope in my big fear.

My hiding place smelled like wet dirt and the

metal thing in my arm.

Days and nights went by as I did what Lyra

told me. The secret place, lit by the thin moon,

felt old and strong. Picking the strange

glowing plants there made me shiver. Every

part of the old way felt wrong but needed. The

air felt strange as I crushed the plants. They

smelled sharp and new.

Finally, the night came. My paws shook as I

mixed the liquid. It glowed strangely. Lyra's

warning about seeing the scary truth stayed in

my mind. I took a deep breath and drank the

bitter liquid.

It happened right away and felt weird. I felt

sick, then a buzzing went through my bones.

The metal taste in my mouth got stronger. For

a moment, I thought I had done something

bad.

The world around me seemed

clearer. The smells of the forest now had a

faint, fake hum.

Then, it started. Not something big, but a

small change in how I saw things. The dull

feeling in my head went away. My thoughts

became clear again, like waking up after a

long sleep.

And then, I saw it. Not with my eyes, but with a

new feeling, a layer under the normal world. It

was a faint web of energy coming from the

chips in all the werewolves. We were all

connected to it.

Fear, cold and sharp, went through my clear

mind. This wasn't just watching us. It was

something else. Something much worse.

The forest, which used to mean

freedom, now felt like a cage made of

invisible threads.

I had to understand. I went back to my hiding

place. For weeks, I had been collecting broken

human things. I hoped I could find a way to

stop the chip. Now, I wanted to know what

this web was, what it was doing to us.

Working in the dim light, I looked at a small

broken screen I had found. It was damaged,

but a small part of its memory looked okay.

Carefully, using sharp stones and metal

pieces, I tried to get the data.

Days went by as I tried hard. The words were

strange, the signs confusing. I felt frustrated

and scared of what I didn't know. Sleep didn't

help. I dreamed of glowing webs and empty

eyes.

Every time I failed, it felt like

another door closing on the truth.

Just when I felt like giving up, I connected

some wires to the chip. A weak light appeared

on the cracked screen. I held my breath. It

was just strange letters and numbers.

But I didn't stop. I needed to protect my group.

I copied the data onto pieces of tree bark,

drawing each sign carefully. I knew Lyra knew

some old human writing. Maybe she could

help me understand this.

The walk back to Lyra's house felt different. I

was still scared, but now I had a little bit of

hope. I had seen something, felt something.

The invisible control was real.

The unknown data felt heavy in my paws.

Lyra looked at the blinking screen and the

bark pieces with worry and interest. She

frowned at the strange signs. "This… this isn't

a language I know well," she said softly, her

fingers touching the drawings. "It's…

technical. From their machines."

Days and nights went by again as Lyra looked

at the data. She read old books. Her

knowledge of forgotten human languages

was more helpful than I thought. Slowly, she

started to understand some parts.

The first thing she understood made me feel

cold. Lyra read a short part: "Change

frequency." Her eyes got big with worry. "They

are changing… signals," she whispered. "Like

sending messages… but not with words."

The idea of hidden messages

controlling our minds was terrifying.

Then came another part: "Change behavior."

The words felt heavy and scary. My blood felt

cold. The tiredness, the doing what they said…

it wasn't normal. They were making it happen.

"They're not just watching us, Lyra," I said, my

voice shaking with fear and anger. "They're

controlling us."

Lyra's face looked serious. "The quietness…

the stillness… it all makes sense now. But

how? And why?"

The parts we understood were small, but they

showed something horrible. Changing

frequency. Changing behavior. The chips

weren't just to see where we were; they were

to control us. Our thoughts, our feelings, our

choices – all might be controlled by the

government.

This realization hit me hard like I

couldn't breathe.

This was terrible. The safety we thought the

government gave us was a lie, a pretty cage

built to stop us from being ourselves. The fear

I felt before got stronger, mixed with anger.

They were taking our group, our history, and

who we were.

"We have to show the others," I said, my voice

urgent. "They need to know what's

happening."

Lyra shook her head, her eyes careful. "We

have to be careful, Elara. If they think we

know…"

"But we can't wait!" I argued. "Every day, they

control us more. We have to wake them up!"

I wanted to act fast, but I knew

we had to be careful. It was hard to choose.

Just then, a low growl came from outside

Lyra's house. It wasn't one of our group. It was

deeper, more like a machine. The spinning

sound was back, closer now.

Lyra's eyes got wide with fear. "They know,"

she whispered, her voice scared. "Someone

saw you. They're coming."

Before we could move, the door broke open.

Two figures in dark armor stood there. We

couldn't see their faces. They held weapons

that hummed strangely.

"Elara," one of them said, their voice sounding

fake. "You are not where you should be."

My heart jumped. Not where I should be? We

weren't just being watched; we were being

kept in a place.

The air felt tight, and I smelled

something like metal.

Lyra stepped in front of me, her old body

trying to protect me. "Leave her alone," she

growled, her eyes angry.

The figures didn't even move. One of them

raised their weapon. A blue light glowed at the

end.

"Old Lyra," the figure said coldly. "Stay back.

You can't win."

But Lyra didn't stay back. She jumped at the

figure fast, her claws out.

A sharp sound broke the air. Lyra fell back, a

red mark on her chest. She fell to the ground,

her eyes surprised and hurt.

"Lyra!" I yelled, my own fear gone for a

moment because I was so sad and angry.

The figures looked back at me, their weapons

pointing. I couldn't run. They knew. They knew

what I had found out. And they were here to

stop me.

The blue light got brighter, and

the weapons hummed louder. Then, one of

the armored figures spoke again, their voice

calm but scary. "Elara, we have something to

show you. Something that will change

everything you thought you knew." Then, a

third figure came out of the shadows, and my

blood ran cold. It was one of our own groups.

His eyes were empty, and a small red light

blinked on his head, like the flying machine in

the forest. And he was smiling.

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