Mag-log in
“Frankie,” Chad, my manager snaps. “Okay, that's it. You’re fired.”
“Oh no,” I say with zero emotion as I pull off my name tag and stroll out the door.
Is it really my fault if the Karen final boss launched a candle at me because I refused to believe it made her cat sick?
No.
Maybe it's my fault that when she demanded a refund, I demanded equal pay and a hugh pierced dick to tuck me in at night.
Fired, again.
I get halfway down the street before the adrenaline crashes and I realize two things:
One; I haven’t eaten since yesterday’s gas station sushi experiment.And two; My bank balance has more zeros than my love life.
Back at my apartment, if you can call a glorified shoebox with questionable plumbing an 'apartment', I collapse onto the floor mattress, kick off my boots, and scream into my pillow.
This isn’t even my worst Tuesday.
When the muffled screaming loses its charm, I roll onto my back and grab my phone. It’s cracked, grimy, and currently displaying four unread notifications: two from my bank (rude), one from Chad, and one from my landlord that simply says:
‘Have you considered selling used underwear?’
Delete. Delete. Trauma delete.
I open the job app with the same energy as someone re-downloading Tinder after a breakup. It’s all pyramid schemes and jobs with the words “vibrant sales environment,” which we all know translates to free labour.
I scroll. And scroll. And scroll. Somewhere between “dog psychic assistant” and “energy drink ambassador (must wear costume),” I find it.
IMMEDIATE HIRE. NO BACKGROUND CHECK. LOVES KIDS A PLUS.
Suspicious? Yes. But also? My standards are currently six feet under and holding hands with my dignity.
No company name. No job description. Just an address, and an offer of a shockingly high hourly rate. Probably an illegal drug front, but what isn’t these days?
I click Apply.
There’s no application form. No CV required. Just a message that says:
‘See you at 7am. Bring snacks.’
Okay then.
******************************************************************************
I tossed and turned all night. I wasn't nervous, now I am, because the Uber driver's just pulled over and said,
“This is as far as I go.”
In a, 'I have a wife and kids and don’t want to be sacrificed in the woods today', kind of way.
I blink at him through smudged eyeliner and the last thread of optimism I own.
“Bro. The address is still a mile away.”
He doesn’t meet my eyes, just stares out the windshield, eyes twitching side to side.
“Yeah.”
I glance out the window at trees, so many fucking trees.
Not friendly trees. No. These are the kind of trees that whisper in Latin and watch you pee. The paved road gives up after a few feet, dissolving into a narrow dirt track.
I squint at the one landmark available; a half-rotted wooden mailbox with faded cartoon paw prints painted on the side.
Howl & Growl. The “o” in “Growl” is scratched out.
Charming.
There’s no visible buildings, no lights or people. Just the buzzing of insects, the caw of a raven doing a great horror-movie impression, and somewhere in the distance…howls.
The moment my foot hits the dirt, the Uber driver slams his foot down and speeds off. The U-turn so fast he nearly clips a bush before he disappears in cloud of dust.
“If I die, at least I won’t have to pay rent.” I mutter.
Sighing, I pull out my phone, and do what any responsible adult would do in this situation.
Take a selfie.
Messy curls, combat boots, forest in the background, caption:
“If I go missing, delete my browser history, then avenge me. Xoxo.”
I post it to my story easily, interesting that the service is so good in the middle of the wilderness. If I’m going to be kidnapped by cultists, I’m at least going viral.
With final resignation I step onto the path. I can do this. I once wore a polyester sausage costume for twelve hours slinging samples of vegan hot dogs outside a strip mall.
Twenty five sweaty, mosquito-infested minutes later my boots are covered in dirt, my hair’s a humid disaster and there’s a twig in my bra that I’ve accepted as part of my personality.
When I finally reach a clearing, I stop dead.
Howl & Growl Therapeutic Daycare.
This is not what I expected.
The building is massive. Two stories of timber and moss-covered stone, more akin to a lodge used to host rejuvination retreats.
I stand there like an idiot, wondering if I should knock or run. I approach slowly, the building might bolt if I move too fast.
The front steps groan under my boots, and as I reach the top, the front door creaks open on its own.
Not ominous at all.
Peeking inside, I can see it’s weirdly clean. Suspiciously clean.
Bleached wood floors, neat cubbies with evenly spaced name tags. Everything symmetrical and perfect.
No juice stains or weird crafts taped to walls.
No children.
I take a cautious step inside and the door swings shut behind me with a soft click.
There’s a mural painted along one wall, wolves howling at a cartoon moon, one inexplicably wearing a tiny backpack, but it’s so good a real artist had to have done it.
What's with all the wolves? I mean, they’ve got a theme and stuck to it I suppose.
It’s so quiet too, where's the chaos?
I clear my throat just to hear something, but the sound falls flat.
The hallway stretches ahead, daring me to explore. I pass a row of tiny lockers, each painted in pastel colors with little paw print stickers.
My spine prickles. I tug my hoodie down over my wrists and mutter,
“Not creepy at all.”
I peek through a half-open door marked 'Cub Den'.
Inside is rows of empty cribs. A mobile spins lazily above one, even though no one is here to wind it.
My eyes are glued to it.
It spins slower.
Slower.
Stops.
Nope.
I back out and shut the door quietly, let's not wake the ghosts.
As I walk deeper into the building, the temperature seems to change, the air thick and heavy.
Is it hot in here, or just me?
I pause, fanning myself. My skin's flushed and my heartbeat’s doing that weird double-thump. I tug at the collar of my hoodie and taste the regret of wearing this many layers.
There’s a scent in the air I can’t place, warm and spicy. Peppercorn and smoke–
“You’re late.”
The declaration hits low and hot and wrong in a way that makes my body arch beneath him.Ezra groans softly.“There,” he murmurs against my throat as he lowers himself over me. “That’s what I’ve been smelling.”His face buries against my neck, inhaling deeply enough that I shiver all over. He starts rubbing against me slowly, dragging his body along mine with deliberate pressure that dissolves my thoughts.He’s heavy everywhere. Solid muscle and warmth and expensive fabric dragging against my skin while he buries his face against my throat. His hands smooth down my sides, gripping my waist, his nose drags along my jaw, through my hair. Every breath he takes sounds rougher than the last.Horrifyingly, my body responds to all of it. He’s trying to cover me in himself and my eyes flutter shut.The sour lingering wrongness from Darren fades beneath him.“Ezra,” I whisper shakily.“Still smell wrong.” His mouth brushes the sensitive spot beneath my ear. “Can’t stand it.”The possessiveness
I stare at him. Yep, he’s finally lost whatever fragile grip he had on sanity.He stares right back at me, one hand still buried at the nape of my neck, dark eyes fixed on my face.The shopping bags hanging off my arms feel ridiculous. Tiny little paper shields against whatever the hell this moment is becoming.“You can't ask people things like that,” I tell him, trying for offended and landing somewhere closer to breathless. “You sound like a jealous Victorian husband.”Ezra doesn’t blink. “You let another male touch you,”That sends a weird little tremor through me. Those words aren’t sexy, absolutely should not be sexy. But there’s something underneath them, raw, furious in a way I’ve never seen from him.Usually Ezra hides everything behind polished smiles and expensive sweaters and dry little comments that make me want to bite him. Tonight he looks wrecked by me.The evening light catches sharp angles of his face as he stands over me on the deck. Heat blooms low in my stomach.So
“You literally gave me chlamydia.” I blink at him flatly. “In my defense, I didn’t know.”“Strong defence.”His grin widens. “Come get dinner with me.”“No.”“Drink?”“No.”“Coffee?”I hold up my iced coffee. “Already sorted, thanks.”He sighs dramatically, as if I’m being difficult instead of maintaining basic survival instincts. Before I can dodge him, he grabs me into another hug.And does something weird, even for him. He inhales deeply against my hair, sending a shudder violently down my spine.Revulsion simmers as every instinct in my body screams. Darren goes strangely still, his grip tightens fractionally.“What perfume is that?” he murmurs.“I’m gonna need you to stop smelling me like a mutt.”A car horn sounds nearby and my Uber pulls up beside the curb, divine intervention itself.“Thank Christ.”I wrench free and practically dive toward the car. Darren catches my wrist lightly before I can open the door.“You disappeared, Frankie.” The seriousness in his voice catches me
The daycare kids are either tiny geniuses or future supervillains. There is genuinely no middle ground.It’s been four days since the whole naked-balcony-furry-forest-fight incident, and somehow nobody has acknowledged it directly since. Which feels more disturbing than if they’d sat me down with a PowerPoint presentation titled So You Accidentally Joined A Cult.Instead, life has carried on with this bizarre, unsettling normalcy that keeps making me question whether I imagined half of it. The children still growl occasionally. One little girl hissed at a pigeon yesterday. A toddler named Max climbed a bookshelf without using his hands. And this morning, a five-year-old looked me dead in the eyes and said, “You smell happier now,” before biting another child over a juice box dispute.I did paperwork after that. Mostly because I needed a moment.Still, despite the deeply concerning feral undertones, I kind of love it here.Which feels suspicious.The kids are too clever. They absorb in
“The world’s a shitty place,” he says quietly. “So I’m gonna teach you some important things.”The words catch me off guard. Not because they’re dramatic, River doesn’t speak dramatically, he says things plainly.Because nobody’s ever taught me things before just because they wanted me safer. I cover quickly with sarcasm because emotional vulnerability is for people with stable childhoods.“What, like taxes?”“Self-defense.”“Oh.”River steps closer until the toes of his boots are a breath from mine. Slowly, giving me every opportunity to pull away, he lifts one hand and tips my chin upward gently.Heat floods through me as his thumb brushes once across my cheekbone.“You’re small,” he murmurs.“That is the first time anyone has ever said that.” I huff a laugh. “River, my dear, I am not small.”“You’re smaller than me, than us.” His gaze skims down my body. “Perfect.”I blink.“People underestimate you because you smile when you’re uncomfortable.”That one lands directly in my unresol
River does not explain the tail.Which, personally, I think is wildly unfair considering I just watched Corrian tackle three furries who were talking shit about me into the forest like a divorced dad at a rugby match.Instead, he waits patiently while I finish dragging my jeans on the correct way around, leaning against the wall with his arms folded across his chest like this is a completely normal Tuesday morning and not the beginning of my psychological collapse.“You gonna murder me?” I ask finally.River blinks once. “No.”“Kidnap me into your weird woodland mascot cult?”“No.”“Gaslight me about the ears?”A pause.“Yes.”“At least you’re honest.”That almost-smile appears again. Tiny and barely there unless you’re looking for it.I hate that I’m already learning his expressions.He pushes off the wall then and crosses the room toward me with that same unnerving silence that clings to him like smoke. The others fill space naturally, River somehow moves through the world without d







