The forest exploded.
The thing lunged from the shadows, its bulk blotting out the moonlight, claws tearing at the ground as it surged toward them. Evelyn’s body reacted before her mind did—she stumbled back, heart pounding so hard it felt like it might tear through her ribs.
Jonah shoved her aside, rifle snapping up. The crack of the shot split the night, deafening in its closeness. The muzzle flash lit his face in stark relief—eyes narrowed, teeth clenched.
The bullet didn’t slow it.
The creature roared, a guttural bellow that vibrated through the marrow of Evelyn’s bones. It charged again, massive form blurring between trees, and she realized with sick clarity that it was hunting her.
“Run!” Jonah barked, shoving her toward the path. “Go, damn it!”
Her legs obeyed even as her brain screamed in protest. She stumbled into motion, boots slamming against frozen soil, branches whipping her arms and face. Behind her, the beast’s growl deepened—hungry, intent.
She heard it gaining. Heavy strides, claws raking bark as it pursued. Her lungs burned with cold, each breath a ragged knife.
Another shot cracked through the trees. The blast of the rifle echoed, and the creature’s roar rose higher—angrier.
Evelyn risked a glance over her shoulder. Jonah stood firm in the clearing, reloading with practiced speed, his silhouette taut with defiance. The beast barreled toward him, eyes blazing like molten gold.
Jonah fired again. This time, the bullet hit.
The creature staggered, its shoulder jerking back in a spray of dark liquid. Its roar ripped through the night, louder than anything Evelyn had ever heard—a sound that seemed to shake the very canopy.
And then the woods answered.
Howls erupted all around them. Dozens, maybe more, voices rising in unison—high and low, near and far. The sound was feral, chilling, as if the entire forest had come alive.
Evelyn froze mid-step, the chorus pressing against her skull until her vision blurred. Jonah spun toward her, eyes wide.
“They’re calling back,” he rasped. “Move, Evelyn—move!”
But she couldn’t. Her body locked, rooted by the unholy sound of wolves—or things like wolves—closing in.
The beast roared again, clutching its bleeding shoulder. Then, as if the howls had summoned it elsewhere, it turned. One heartbeat it was there, glaring at them with molten fury, the next it was gone—vanished into the trees, leaving only the rustle of branches in its wake.
The silence that followed was nearly as deafening as the howls.
Evelyn’s breath came in sharp, shallow gasps. She forced herself to lower the flashlight, beam trembling over the clearing. The carcass of the cow still steamed on the ground. Sap still bled from the clawed trees. But the monster was gone.
Only one thing remained.
Blood.
A dark trail led from the spot where Jonah’s bullet had struck, thick droplets staining leaves and grass.
Jonah stepped forward cautiously, rifle raised, eyes scanning every shadow. Evelyn followed more slowly, legs still shaking.
“Careful,” Jonah murmured. “It’s wounded, not dead. That makes it meaner.”
Evelyn barely heard him. Her light caught on something glinting in the dirt near where the creature had stood.
She crouched, hands trembling as she brushed away frost and soil.
It was a pendant.
Old—ancient, perhaps—its surface tarnished but intact. A heavy disc of silver, engraved with a sigil she didn’t recognize. A circle, within it a crescent moon, lines radiating outward like beams. Symbols she couldn’t read curled around the edge.
Her throat tightened.
The pendant lay exactly where the beast had stood—as if it had dropped it. Or left it.
She lifted it carefully, the metal colder than the night air. Her gloves muffled its weight, but she could still feel the strange pull of it, heavy with history.
“Jonah,” she whispered.
He turned, rifle still raised. His gaze dropped to her hand, and for the first time, fear flickered in his eyes.
“You shouldn’t touch that,” he said hoarsely.
Evelyn’s pulse hammered. “It was here. Where it stood.”
Jonah stepped closer, eyes darting between the pendant and the dark woods. “That’s not for us. That’s old. Older than this town, older than these woods. Put it back.”
But Evelyn couldn’t. She stared at the sigil, the lunar engraving gleaming faintly in the beam of her flashlight. Logic strained against the weight of what she’d just seen, what she now held.
A creature that defied every classification. Wolves answering its roar. And now this—an artifact that spoke not of animals, but of ritual, of worship, of something human twined with the monstrous.
She slipped the pendant into her satchel.
Jonah swore under his breath. “You don’t know what you’ve done.”
“Then tell me,” she snapped, her fear sharpening into defiance. “Tell me what that thing is.”
Jonah’s jaw clenched. His eyes flicked once more to the blood trail, then back to her.
“You already saw it,” he said quietly. “You just don’t want to believe it.”
The forest creaked around them, a cold wind rattling the branches. Evelyn’s satchel seemed heavier by the second, the pendant pressing against her side like a heartbeat.
Somewhere deep in the woods, another howl rose—longer, closer, trembling with hunger.
Evelyn gripped her satchel tighter. For the first time in her life, she realized she no longer had words for what she was facing.
And worse—she suspected that words might not save her anyway.
The first thing Evelyn felt was warmth. Not the feverish burn of the mark that had tormented her all night, but a steady, enveloping heat that pulsed like a hearth fire. Her cheek rested against something solid, her body cocooned in strength. For a fleeting moment she thought she was safe, that the nightmare had finally ended.Then memory crashed into her.The growls. The fire under her skin. The silver in her vision. Her own voice snarling like a beast.Her eyes flew open.The cabin glowed faintly with dawnlight, dust motes drifting lazily in golden shafts that cut through the shutters. Her body ached everywhere, her muscles limp as though she had fought battles in her sleep. She blinked up—and froze.Kael’s arms were wrapped around her, his chest rising and falling beneath her cheek. His face hovered close, strands of dark hair falling across his brow. His eyes were closed, but even in sleep his features were taut, as though ready to snap awake at the slightest disturbance. The fain
The cabin was no longer quiet.It trembled under the storm building between the three men, every breath charged with violence. Kael’s fangs hovered just above Evelyn’s skin, his silver eyes blazing with an unearthly fire. His growl had deepened into a thunderous rumble, vibrating through the floorboards.Jonah raised his rifle higher, jaw clenched tight. “Let her go, Kael!”Rowan’s crossbow aimed straight for Kael’s chest, finger tense on the trigger. “You’ve lost control. Release her before you regret it.”But Evelyn could hardly hear them. The fire in her mark had spread through her entire body, an inferno beneath her skin. Her heart hammered so violently she thought it would shatter her ribs. Her senses were no longer her own—she could hear the faint crackle of embers as though it were thunder, smell the sweat and fear rolling off Jonah, taste the metallic tang of Kael’s growl vibrating in the air.She wanted him. Needed him. His touch was the only thing anchoring her as her humani
The fire in Rowan’s hearth had burned low, the logs collapsing into glowing embers that popped and hissed softly. The air in the cabin was taut, thick enough to choke on. Evelyn sat on the edge of the cot, arms folded across her chest, her eyes fixed firmly on the floor.Kael stood a few paces away, still as a statue, his presence filling every inch of space. Jonah lingered at the far wall, rifle hanging loose but ready, while Rowan crouched by the hearth, adding herbs to the flames that gave off a sharp, biting scent.Nobody spoke.Finally, Evelyn broke the silence with a bitter laugh. “So that’s it? I’m your—what did you call it? Mate?” She scoffed. “I’m supposed to believe that because of some mark, and this… this necklace?” She clutched the pendant under her shirt like it might burn her fingers. “Do you even hear yourselves?”Kael’s gaze stayed fixed on her, unflinching, patient in a way that rattled her more than his glowing eyes ever could. “You don’t have to believe my words, E
The cabin was a pressure chamber. The air thickened, each breath heavier than the last. Jonah and Rowan stood braced, weapons trained on the man at the door. Evelyn sat stiff on the cot, unable to move, unable to look away.The fire cast his face in shifting light—shadow over cheekbone, flame glinting off eyes that glowed faintly, impossibly, like embers stirred to life.“You shouldn’t have run,” he said again, his voice a low rumble that seemed to vibrate in her ribs.Jonah’s rifle didn’t waver. “You’ve got three seconds to explain yourself, Kael, before I put silver in your chest.”Evelyn’s head whipped toward him. “Kael?”The man—Kael—smiled faintly, though it never reached his eyes. “So you do remember me, Jonah.”Rowan’s crossbow tilted slightly but stayed steady. His expression was unreadable, but his knuckles whitened against the wood.“You’re not welcome here,” Rowan said flatly.Kael stepped fully into the room, closing the door behind him with deliberate calm. The scent of e
Evelyn ran.Branches whipped her arms, tearing skin, but she didn’t stop. Every step cracked twigs beneath her boots, the forest a blur of black and silver. She didn’t know where she was going—only away, away from the man’s voice, away from his words echoing in her skull.One of us.It couldn’t be true. She wasn’t one of them. She wasn’t a monster.Her body betrayed her with every stride. She could still hear the rabbit’s heartbeat beneath the soil, still smell the musk of the beast that had torn into her flesh. Her senses clawed at her, sharper than they had any right to be, but she shoved them aside.“This isn’t real,” she gasped, lungs burning. “None of this is real. Just shock. Trauma. That’s all.”The pendant banged against her chest with each desperate stride, heavy, mocking, glowing faintly beneath her jacket. The mark on her arm tingled, burning in rhythm with her heartbeat.The man had called it infection. She called it madness.By the time she stumbled out of the trees and o
The nightmares grew sharper.What once blurred into formless shadows now had teeth, claws, and breath she could smell—wet fur, copper blood, the musk of the hunt. Evelyn woke each morning drenched in sweat, lungs straining as if she had been running for miles. And always, always, those golden eyes followed her into waking.The pendant no longer sat quietly on the nightstand. She swore it shifted in the dark, sliding closer to her hand no matter where she left it. Sometimes, when she touched it, she felt a faint vibration—like the beat of a heart.Her days blurred. She stumbled through the lodge and down Black Hollow’s narrow streets with heavy lids and aching bones. The townsfolk watched her differently now—not just as an outsider but with sidelong glances sharpened by suspicion.It wasn’t until the third morning that she understood why.She had been washing her face in the lodge’s small bathroom, cold water splashing her skin, when she saw it.On the underside of her forearm, pale ag