She thought it was just a wounded animal. Until he turned into the most dangerous man she’s ever seen... right in her living room. Dr. Elena Voss was just trying to save a dying dog. She didn’t expect him to shift into a scarred, growling Alpha who claims they’re fated... and that her touch is the only thing keeping his curse from killing him. He’s not just a werewolf. He’s the cursed Alpha of a collapsing pack. And she’s not just human—she’s an Empath, the last of a bloodline so powerful it was wiped out. Now? Everyone wants her dead. Hunters are closing in. Witches want her blood. And Kael—the dark, broken Alpha—wants her in every way imaginable. His body is addicted to her. Her power answers only to him. And every second she spends with him? She's one heartbeat closer to losing herself completely. But breaking his curse might kill her. Loving him definitely will. One touch awakened the bond. One lie could end everything. And the next blood moon? Could be her last.
View More(Elena's POV)
The Crescent Bay Veterinary Clinic is a cocoon of sterile calm at this hour. The fluorescent lights hum softly, a sound that has become my lifeline after a very long day at work.
Hunched over a chart at the front desk, pen in hand, I scribble notes about a cat named Muffin who's finally eating again after a week of fighting an infection.
My fingers tremble slightly from exhaustion. Years of wielding scalpels and syringes have left my hands calloused, but tonight, the ache goes deeper. Still, I feel that quiet glow of satisfaction. Muffin's going to make it. That's what keeps me here, day after day, night after night, stitching together small miracles in a world that feels more broken than whole.
At twenty-nine, sleep rarely comes easily. Exhaustion has settled into my bones, but something else has settled there too. I've learned how to find meaning in the smallest victories, even if it means trading my sanity for them.
My scrubs are wrinkled. A smudge of cat fur clings to my sleeve. Dark hair falls from a messy bun.
I should care, but I don't. This place, with its antiseptic tang and steady rhythm of monitors, is the only space where I feel like I belong.
Out there, beyond these walls, life is messier. Full of questions I can't answer.
Questions like why my parents' car fell off a cliff seventeen years ago. Why the police report came back labeled "inconclusive." Why the hollow ache in my chest never really faded.
The thought gets shoved away as I focus on Muffin's chart. Her fever's down. Her appetite's back. One last note gets scrawled in my rough, fatigue-worn handwriting. The wall clock reads 10:47 p.m.
Too late to call Luna. My assistant clocked out about two hours ago.
She's probably curled up on her couch, scrolling dating apps, sipping something fruity, living the life she's always urging me to try.
Sometimes I envy her. Her easy laugh. Her ability to shake off the weight of the day.
Me? The weight gets carried. It's never easy for me to put it down. I don't even try anymore.
The loneliness doesn't disturb me anymore. It just sits there, quiet and constant. In the empty apartment waiting for me. In the shadows of the memories I can't shake.
Closing the chart, I head toward the recovery room. My sneakers squeak against the linoleum. Kennels line the wall, their tiny occupants sleeping under the soft glow of monitors.
Muffin is curled up in a ball, her tabby fur rising and falling with each breath.
A smile crosses my face as I adjust her blanket, careful not to disturb the IV drip. The steady beep of the monitor calms me. It's proof that I can control something, even if it's just a cat's vitals. Out in Crescent Bay's foggy streets, control feels like something that simply doesn't exist.
The air tonight feels heavier. Like the fog outside is pressing in through the windows.
My body wants to collapse, but my mind stays strong and keeps thinking. Today's cases won't stop replaying in my head. A fractured leg, a litter of kittens, a golden retriever with a limp that won't quit.
This work means everything to me. I really do love it.
But it demands everything, and I give it, maybe more than I should.
Luna's voice floats through my mind. You need to be more lively, Elena.
She's probably right. But what would that even look like? A date? A hobby? The idea feels ridiculous. Like trying to speak a language I haven't used in years.
Returning to the desk, I grab my jacket from the hook. The clinic has grown dark now. Only the red exit sign casts its glow across the floor.
A faint squeaking sound makes me pause, like the building blocks are creaking.
My skin prickles. The shadows get scanned, half-expecting something to move. Nothing does.
Just my imagination. Too much caffeine, and not enough sleep.
Still, the locks on the front door get double-checked. My fingers hover on the cold metal for a beat longer than necessary.
Crescent Bay is usually safe enough, but there are stories. Muggings in the industrial zones. Strange incidents out near the outskirts, where the fog clings thick and low.
No chances. Not tonight.
My phone buzzes in my pocket. Pulling it out, I hope maybe Luna sent a goodnight text. Just a low-battery warning. A sigh escapes as I shove it back into my scrubs.
The walk home is fifteen minutes. Through alleys I know by heart. But the thought of it makes my stomach twist. The fog has been getting worse, rolling in heavier each night. Swallowing the city.
Staying here crosses my mind. Crashing on the couch in the break room. But I know I won't sleep here. Eventually, I need to go home and get rest.
My bag gets slung over my shoulder. The weight of my keys and tools clinks softly against the side. One last look at the clinic, and I head for the door.
The air outside hits me like a slap. Cold and dense, laced with the salty tang of the bay.
My jacket gets pulled tighter. Fog curls around the streetlights, trying to smother their glow. The clinic's security light flickers behind me as I step onto the sidewalk.
My pulse jumps. The shadows feel sharper tonight. The night, darker.
Paranoia, I tell myself. Still, the feeling doesn't go away. It sticks with me. Like I'm not alone.
A glance back at the building shows its windows are dark. Everything's quiet.
Just get home, Elena.
Shower. Food. Sleep.
That's the plan.
The street is deserted. The city's usual hum is muted by the fog. Walking begins. My sneakers echo against the pavement. Each step pulls me deeper into the quiet, and closer to home.
The alleys ahead are familiar, but they feel different tonight, like everything else.
The fog hangs thicker than usual. It softens the edges of everything, makes the world feel like it's holding its breath.
My mind drifts, uninvited, back to my parents. Their faces. Their laughter. The way they made everything feel safe. I haven't thought about them like this in a while. Not this clearly. Not this sharply.
The ache cuts deeper than I expect.
Maybe it's the fog. Or the silence. Or the loneliness, creeping in where I can't block it.
My hands shove into my jacket pockets. My fingers brush the canister of pepper spray I keep there. Just in case.
Fear isn't what I'm feeling. Not really.
But I'm ready.
If there's anything out there, I'll face it.
The sellers in this section speak in hushed tones, and their customers appear more serious, and desperate."That's it," Kael says, nodding toward a stall draped in deep purple. Herbs hang in loops along the rafters, and the air beside it radiates with something that may be magic or merely incense smoke. A sign claims "Curses... And every other thing was written in a language that's not English."The woman standing behind the counter is in her thirties, with auburn-colored hair and piercing green eyes. She is rummaging through what may be a set of crystals, each containing a different color of inner light."Excuse me," I speak up as we enter. "Are you Mira Blackwood?"The woman looks up, and for an instant I see something flick across her face. Surprise? Recognition? But it is so fleeting that I might have imagined it."No," she says, her voice lightly accented with something I don't recognize. "My name is Kaia. Mira Blackwood died three years ago. Heart failure. I bought her stall out
The words hit me like ice water, but Kael's tone is more urgent than panicked. Not an attack on the doorstep, but close enough to matter."Who is here?" Luna asks, looking back and forth between us with growing worry."Elena," Kael says. "We need to go. Now."I can see him trying to hide his senses from being obvious. His nostrils flare slightly, feeling the air, and his entire posture was starting to be unstable. But to Luna, he probably just seems like some guy who's suddenly dashing around."Okay," I say, getting out my emergency medical kit from the desk. "Luna, I'm sorry, but we actually do have to leave.""Elena, what is wrong?" Luna follows us to the door, her voice laced with alarm. "You're dashing around as though something's chasing you.""It's actually not like that," I say quickly. "But we're fine. Just... close up early today, okay? Leave. Go home. Don't hang around here late by yourself.""You're scaring me.""I don't mean to." I move to embrace her hastily, and I catch
he sunlight streaming through my apartment windows is different. Less promise of a new day and more like a spotlight on what I'm leaving behind.Kael's at my kitchen table, oddly normal considering he became a wolf and killed three people less than twelve hours ago. He's wearing the clothes i borrowed from my neighbor under the pretense of a plumbing emergency, and he's managed to make coffee without burning down my kitchen like I'd assume. The only reminder of last night is the silvering of his scars on his arms and the occasional flash in his eyes from that otherworldly light."You have to call your clinic," he says to me without looking up from the document in his hand. Another strange flash of normalcy in what's otherwise become a completely abnormal situation."I know." I look down at my phone, trying to figure out how I'm going to tell Luna that I won't be coming in today. Or tomorrow. Or maybe never again. "What do I even say?""Family emergency. Someone has died in family. Som
"Sit on the edge of the bed. And don't move until I get back with my med kit."He say on the bed with a pain-filled groan, blood still oozing through the makeshift bandages we'd ripped from my spare shirt. In the harsh light of my bedside lamp, the silver scars look worse than they did in the car. Red veins fan out from each wound, and the skin around them is an ugly gray that makes my stomach knot up."Elena," he says to me as I search my closet for the first aid kit I keep at home. "You don't have to do this. Werewolves healing isn't human-like. I'll be fine in a couple of hours.""You have silver pieces stuck in your system." I step out and set down my kit on the nightstand. "From what I learned from those books, werewolves don't like silver. Those pieces need to be taken out now, or your supernatural healing mechanism won't be able to work as it should.""Did you read about silver poisoning?""Dr. Blackwood' work." I pull on latex gloves and begin to lay out tools on a new towel.
The man in the car with me is covered with blood, panting like he has just run a marathon, and telling me to drive faster down the empty streets so he can be at rest, his super-healing mechanisms can work effectively.Three hours earlier, the most unbelievable thing to ever happen to me was a difficult surgery on a German shepherd.Now I'm driving home with a werewolf who just killed three armed hunters with his bare hands, and it feels normal."Hurry up, Elena," Kael says through his gritted teeth, his hand pressed against the silver cut in his ribs. "The longer the bits of silver stays in me, the more difficult it'll be it for my body to heal."I press the gas harder, taking the turns to my apartment way more faster."How do you know so much about it?" I asked, taking the turn too sharply once again. "About silver poisoning and healing and all of that?""Because I've been living with it my entire life. We need to discuss. What I am. What you are. Why those hunters knew where to look
Instead of collapsing, instead of fleeing, something changes in his eyes. His body spasms and jerks, and I stand frozen with horror, looking at the transformation that began in my apartment three nights ago now at last complete.This time, there's no transforming back and forth. This is raw, unrelenting, fierce.His bones creak and stretch with sounds similar to splintering tree branches. His back arcs impossibly, his muscles straining and reforming under flesh that breaks out in thick black fur. His face changing completely and his canine shine in the streetlight.He's no more the dog I've known over the last three weeks. He's becoming something more terrifying.When the transformation is finished, a gigantic black wolf takes Shadow's place. Not dog-sized, but wolf-sized in the same way ancient legends had described them. Quite five feet tall at the shoulder, with a body made for speed and power and murder. His eyes burn with human intelligence, but the fury that shines from them is
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