Snow hissed against the cottage glass, moonlight turning the oaks to black ribs; a scent of iron rode the wind. From the ridge came distant baying and the thud of hooves, a sound that always tightened throats in Eichenhain—because when the Wild Hunt rides, even the bravest hearts count the cost.
Long before iron rails carved the earth and lamplight tamed the night, the forests of Thuringia sprawled unbroken, their secrets deep as ancient roots. It was an age when villagers still whispered about things unseen, when winter’s darkness seemed alive, and every howl of the wind might be more than just the cold. Among the tales told beside flickering hearths, none sent shivers like the legend of the Wild Hunt: a phantom cavalcade that surged across the midnight sky, hooves drumming thunder, hounds baying wild, riders trailing mist and chill. Some said the Hunt was led by a restless king, condemned to roam eternally.
Others spoke of witches, forest spirits, or the god Wodan himself, sweeping through the clouds to claim lost souls. For the small, timber-walled village of Eichenhain, nestled among moss-draped oaks and half-lit glades, the Hunt was no distant myth. It was a shadow that returned every winter, scarring dreams and, sometimes, cruelly thinning their numbers. To grow up in Eichenhain was to know that not all fears faded with the morning sun.
One winter, when snow lay thick on eaves and the moon hung low and swollen, a girl named Ada pressed her face to the window of her grandmother’s cottage, heart thrumming with dread and curiosity. The Hunt had taken from her family once—her father had vanished beneath a storm’s roar years ago, leaving only his hunting horn tangled in a holly bush. Now, as howls echoed across the white-cloaked hills and spectral lights flickered in the woods, Ada felt the old stories coil around her like brambles. Tonight, as the wind soughed and the fire crackled low, she would learn what it meant to live beneath the shadow of the Wild Hunt—and perhaps what it took to break free of its spell.
I. Whispers in the Snow
Outside Ada’s cottage, winter pressed in with a quiet, relentless hand. Wind moaned through black branches, swirling icy dust over narrow lanes and huddled houses. Each window glowed with candlelight, but none dared open a door after nightfall—not when the Hunt was abroad. The world seemed wound tight with tension; every sound was magnified in the hush of frost.
Ada’s grandmother, Marta, sat knitting by the hearth, eyes clouded not just with age but with memory. She hummed an old tune; the notes trembled each time the wind howled. Ada watched her, torn between wanting to ask about her father and fearing the answers she might hear.
Her gaze drifted to the ancient hunting horn above the mantle—a battered relic, silver chased with runes no one in the village could read. It was all Ada had left of her father, except his stories. Marta had told them over and over: how he had vanished the night the Wild Hunt thundered from the clouds. They said the dead rode with the Hunt, and those taken could never return.
But Ada, stubborn as mountain stone, clung to hope. She had seen lights in the trees on some nights—dancing orbs, blue as ice, leaving frost prints where they touched. Always she felt something in the forest call to her.
A sudden chorus of hounds erupted from the darkness, drawing Ada to the window. Through the frost-laced glass she saw them: spectral horses rearing, riders crowned in tangled antlers and wolf pelts, eyes burning green beneath twisted helms. Hounds swirled, mouths gaping with light, paws skimming snow without leaving prints. The Hunt swept past the edge of Eichenhain, wind shrieking in their wake.
One rider turned—a woman with hair like storm clouds and a horn slung at her hip. For a heartbeat, Ada thought she saw her father’s eyes staring back from beneath that rider’s helm.
She stumbled back, heart hammering. Marta looked up, lips pressed thin. “Don’t watch them,” she whispered. “The Hunt sees who sees it. If you meet their eyes, you may follow them into shadow.”
Still, something tugged her toward the door—a memory, a longing, or perhaps fate itself. As she slipped outside, snow crunching beneath her boots, cold bit deep into her bones. The sky churned with cloud and mist; the path ahead vanished into gloom. Ada pressed forward, driven by a hope she dared not name.
Somewhere out there, she believed, her father’s spirit waited—or something older, darker, bound to her bloodline. Behind her, the last lamp flickered out. In the darkness, the wind whispered secrets only the hunted and the hunters could understand.


















