Writing a 24-chapter novel with each chapter being 700–1,000 words is a significant project that would result in a book of approximately 17,000 to 24,000 words.
To give you the best start, I will write Chapter 1 in full here, matching the dark, rhythmic intensity of the song "Like Animals." I will then provide a guide on how we can continue the rest of the chapters together.
Chapter 1: The Silver Vow
The forest of the night did not belong to the living. It belonged to the things that moved with a grace too fluid to be human, and Elara was the queen of that jagged, moonlit silence.
She moved through the underbrush like a whisper of smoke. The rhythm of the woods was a drumbeat in her ears—the frantic pulse of a vole, the steady thrum of an owl's wings, and the heavy, rhythmic thud of a stag's heart a mile away. To Elara, the world was not made of sights, but of vibrations. It was a song of survival, and tonight, the song was loud.
I am not a monster, she told herself, the words a mantra she had recited for three hundred years. I am a shadow. I am a choice.
She had made the vow in a stone cellar in the seventeenth century, watching her reflection in a shattered mirror as her fangs first elongated. She would not be like the others. She would not be a parasite of the soul. She would live on the fringes, taking only what the wild offered.
She spotted the stag in a clearing. It was magnificent, its antlers reaching toward the stars like frozen lightning. Elara crouched, her fingers digging into the damp earth. The scent of the animal hit her—warm, musky, and thick. To any other vampire, this would be a snack, a thin soup compared to the rich wine of human veins. To Elara, it was her penance.
Suddenly, a wave of dizziness hit her. It wasn't the usual hunger; it was a hollow, aching cold that started in her marrow. Her vision flickered, the vibrant heat-signatures of the forest turning into dull, flat grays. She lunged, but her timing was off.
Instead of a clean, silent kill, she crashed through the brambles. The stag bolted. Elara didn't think; the "animal" inside her took the reins. She sprinted, her speed a blurred streak of silver. She tackled the creature, her teeth finding the throat not with elegance, but with a desperate, frantic hunger.
The blood was thin. It was cold. No matter how much she drank, the void in her stomach didn't fill. It was like trying to put out a forest fire with a cup of rainwater.
She pulled away, her face stained crimson, her breath coming in ragged gasps. She looked down at her hands. They were trembling. The skin wasn't the pale porcelain of a healthy immortal; it was translucent, showing the blackening veins beneath.
"Not enough," she whispered, her voice cracking. "It's not enough anymore."
She leaned against an ancient oak tree, feeling the rough bark against her spine. For centuries, she had survived on the "lower" life. But the ancient clock inside her was ticking toward a new era. Her body was demanding the one thing she had sworn never to take.
As she sat there, fighting the urge to howl at the moon in frustration, a new sound entered the forest. It wasn't the four-legged rhythm of a predator. It was the heavy, uneven step of a human.
Elara froze. The scent reached her a second later—salt, sweat, and the electric, intoxicating hum of human life. It was so potent it made her fangs ache.
Run, her mind commanded.
Feed, her blood countered.
She looked toward the trail, her eyes glowing a feral, hypnotic red. The animal within her was pacing its cage, and the bars were starting to break
