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Something was watching her.
Tyra felt it the same way she felt weather changing. Not with her eyes. Not with her ears. Something older than both. A slow pressure at the back of her neck, warm and deliberate, like a gaze that had settled there and decided to stay. She had been feeling it for weeks. She shifted her basket to her other arm and kept walking through the Grimwall morning market, chin up, brown curly hair falling loose around her shoulders, her light brown eyes scanning the crowd the way they always did. Sharp. Careful. Missing nothing. "Flowers! Two copper a bunch! Fresh this morning!" A woman in a green shawl slowed down. Tyra turned her full smile on her like a weapon. "White roses ma'am. Best ones in the market today I promise you that." The woman looked at the roses. Looked at Tyra. "They look a little tired." "They have had a long morning," Tyra said. "Haven't we all." The woman laughed and bought two bunches. That was the trick. Make them feel something. People buried under the weight of their own hard lives reached for their coin purse the moment something made them feel warm. Tyra had built her entire survival on that one truth. She was seventeen, an orphan, and she sold flowers alone in these streets every single day. Smiling was not happiness. Smiling was strategy. "Two copper!" she called again. "One copper," an old man offered. "One copper and my dignity," she replied. "I'll keep both thank you." He bought three bunches at full price. By evening she had sold nineteen bunches. Not enough to eat well but enough to eat. She wrapped her unsold stock in damp cloth carefully, tucked her coin pouch inside her coat, and started the walk home through Grimwall's crooked streets as the last light left the sky. The feeling came back the moment she left the market. Stronger this time. She turned down Marren Lane, past the old mill, past the butcher shop that always smelled of iron and cold stone, and into the narrow alley behind it where she rented a small room above the stairs. The lanterns were coming on one by one, throwing unsteady gold light across the wet cobblestones. She stopped at the alley entrance. Looked into the dark. Nothing. She took one step forward. Then she saw them. Two lights at the far end of the alley, right where the lamplight died and the darkness swallowed everything. Low to the ground. Burning a deep impossible gold. Perfectly, absolutely still. Every muscle in her body locked. Not a dog. The size was entirely wrong for a dog. Not any animal she could name that belonged in the middle of a town. Whatever crouched at the end of that alley was massive. Dark furred and completely motionless, watching her with those gold eyes like it had been waiting for her to finally look back. Her heart was very loud in her ears. Run, every sensible part of her said. Run right now. Her feet did not move. She stood at the alley entrance with her basket against her chest and stared into those gold eyes and felt something move through her that had no clean name. Not fear exactly. Something older than fear. Something that lived in the part of her that existed before she had words for things. The wolf was enormous. Bigger than anything she had seen outside of story books. Dark fur, almost black, swallowing the shadow around it. Its ears were forward, not flat. Its body was still, not coiled. It was not preparing to attack. It was simply watching her. With a focus and an intelligence that made her skin prickle. "You are not going to hurt me," she said out loud. Her voice came out steady. That surprised her. The wolf did not move. Did not growl. Did not look away. It blinked. Once. Slow. Deliberate. Like a yes. Tyra exhaled one long careful breath. She stood there a moment longer, holding those gold eyes with hers, something wordless moving through the air between them like a current looking for somewhere to land. Then she went inside, locked her door, and sat on the edge of her bed in the dark with her hands pressed flat on her knees. Her heart was still loud. She pressed her thumb into her palm and stared at the wall and told herself it was just a wolf. Just an animal. Just a strange thing that happened in a strange alley on a strange evening and tomorrow everything would be completely normal. She almost believed it. She was up before sunrise. She did not know why she opened the door. Proof maybe. Proof that she had imagined it. Proof that loneliness had not finally cracked her open enough to start seeing things. She looked down. The mud outside her door was soft from last night's rain. It was covered in tracks. Wolf tracks. Large and deep, pressed into the mud with the weight of something enormous. They ran the full length of the alley, back and forth, back and forth, like something that had walked the same path hundreds of times. She crouched down slowly. These were not from last night only. She had lived above this alley for two years. She knew this mud. Knew how it dried and how it settled and how it held marks. These tracks had been pressed into it over and over, layered on top of each other across many nights. Worn into the ground like a path that had been walked so many times it had become permanent. Weeks of tracks. Months. Her fingers hovered over the nearest print. Enormous. The span of it wider than both her hands placed side by side. She straightened up slowly and looked down the empty alley. It was never just watching. It had been here every single night. And she had never once known. Three streets away, in the narrow gap between two buildings where the dark was deepest, Troy was on his knees in the mud. Shifting back hurt the way it always hurt. Like his body could not decide what it wanted to be and was angry at being forced to choose. His bones reset themselves one by one, each one a separate small agony, his spine straightening, his hands flattening, his jaw reshaping from something broad and animal into something human and sharp. He pressed one hand against the cold wall and breathed. In. Out. In. Out. His gold eyes were the last thing to change. They always were. He stayed on his knees until the shaking stopped. Then he stood, pulled his dark coat from the ground where he had left it, and put it on with hands that were almost steady. His wolf was quiet now. It was always quiet after being near her. Settled in a way it was never settled anywhere else. Like something that had been restless its whole life had finally found the one place it wanted to stay. That was the problem. His phone was in his coat pocket. He did not need to look at it to know Alpha Drak's message was still there from yesterday. "Confirm the target. Report by the next moon." Troy looked up at the thin strip of grey morning sky between the rooftops. The girl with the curly brown hair and the light brown eyes who smiled at strangers and fed her dinner bread to a wolf she thought was just an animal. His target. He picked up his phone. Typed nothing. And walked into the grey Grimwall morning with his jaw tight and his wolf already pulling him back toward her alley.They came out of the south gate running.Not sprinting. Troy had taught her that sprinting in the dark told everyone within two streets exactly where you were and exactly how scared you were. So they walked fast. Purposeful. Like two people who had somewhere to be and were not afraid of anything.She was afraid of everything."Both worlds," she said under her breath. "At the same time.""Yes," Troy said."How does that happen," she said. "Wolves and vampires hate each other. They do not coordinate.""They do when the target is worth more to both of them than their hatred of each other," he said.She absorbed that while they turned left past the broken fountain."I am worth more than a century of supernatural war," she said."Yes," he said simply.She almost laughed.Almost.They cut through the tannery gap and came out on the river road and Troy pulled her into the shadow of the old bridge and stopped.He looked both ways.Listened."We have maybe four minutes," he said."Then talk fa
They were already moving before Troy finished the sentence.Tyra stuffed the diary into her coat and they were out the back window of the tailor shop and dropping onto cold cobblestones before the footsteps on the street reached the front door.She landed hard. Troy landed beside her silent as always."East road," he said."They came from the east road," she said."Second crossing," he said. "Gap in the watch. Move."They moved.The gap was exactly where Troy said it would be.Twelve feet of unwatched street. Troy timed it and grabbed her hand and they crossed in eight seconds and were into the alley on the other side before either of Drak's men turned around.She exhaled.Troy pulled her into a doorway and looked back.Nothing following."Clear," he said.She was already opening the diary.He looked at her. "We should keep moving.""We are clear," she said. "You said so." She found her page. "Stand watch. Let me read."He said nothing.Leaned against the wall beside her.Let her read
She read for two hours without stopping.Eve's diary was not what she expected.It was not a confession. Not a message. Not something written for anyone except the woman writing it. It was just a person's private thoughts pressed onto paper day by day and Tyra read every word with the particular intimacy of someone looking through a window they were never supposed to find.Twelfth of March.I saw him again today. He was at the bread stall on the east road. He did not see me. Or he pretended not to which with him amounts to the same thing. He is very good at pretending.I am also very good at pretending.We would be terrible for each other.Tyra almost smiled.Fifteenth of March.His name is Aldrian.I found that out by accident. Someone called it across the market and he turned and I saw his face properly for the first time and I thought oh. Oh that is a problem.He has gold eyes.I have never seen gold eyes on a wolf before. Most of them are amber or brown. His are gold. Proper gold.
The note was at the bottom of her basket.She found it when she got home. Small. Folded twice. Slipped in so carefully she had carried it all the way from the market without knowing it was there.She opened it.One line. Same handwriting as the message inside the necklace.Briar Street. The orphanage. Third loose floorboard under the window in room four.She stared at it.Briar Street.The orphanage where she had spent the first twelve years of her life not knowing who she was or where she came from.She was out the door before she finished the thought.The orphanage was dark.She had kept her key for five years out of a habit she had never examined too closely. It lived at the bottom of her coat pocket like something she could not bring herself to leave behind.She let herself in through the side door.The smell hit her first. Old wood and lye soap. Twelve years of that smell pressed into her lungs and she stood in the dark corridor for one second and felt seven years old again.She
Troy was sitting on her front step when she got home.She stopped walking.He stood up.They looked at each other across the lamplit street and she told herself she was only here because she needed information and he was the only person in Grimwall who might have any."I need to show you something," she said. "That is all this is.""Okay," he said.She walked past him up the stairs.He followed.She lit the candle, sat on the edge of her bed and held the necklace out toward him without a word.He looked at it.Then he crossed the room, crouched in front of her and looked at it properly.His face changed.Not the careful managed shift she was used to. Something real. Something that moved through him fast and left him looking at the pendant with an expression she had never seen on him before.Not recognition exactly.Something closer to unease."Where did you get this," he said quietly."A woman at the market," she said. "Said it belonged to my mother. Said I deserved to know the truth.
Tyra was packing up her stall when the woman found her.She came from the direction of the east gate, moving through the thinning market crowd with her hood pulled forward and both hands clasped in front of her. Not rushing. Not hesitating. Moving like someone who had been walking toward this moment for a very long time and had finally arrived.She stopped at Tyra's stall.Tyra looked up.The woman was older. Sharp dark eyes. A face that carried something heavy in the set of it. Not grief exactly. Something older than grief. Something that had been carried so long it had become part of the bone structure."You are Tyra," the woman said."Depends on who is asking," Tyra said pleasantly."Someone who knew your mother," the woman said.Tyra's hands stilled on the rose stems."My mother is dead," she said carefully."That is what they wanted you to believe," the woman said quietly.The market kept going around them. Loud and ordinary and completely unaware. Tyra looked at the woman and fe







