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(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.
(Continuing the brother I knew)"The Howlstone Pack was one of the oldest packs in the whole of North America," Kael begins, his voice taking on the cadence of a man relating a nightmare. "Four hundred years or more of family bonds traced back their heritage. Their territory spanned sixteen states. They had agreements with dozens of packs, seats on several regional councils. They were beyond suspicion.""Passed," I echo."Dexter opted he coveted their throne." Kael stands up and walks over to the window again, like he can't sit still to relate this story. "Not because he craved their land or their properties. He did it to make a point. To prove that nothing inside the world of the supernatural was ever really out of reach if you are Dexter."I pull my legs onto the couch and hug my knees. "How in the world did he even go about doing something like that?""Cautiously. Methodically. Which is what made it so terrifying." Kael's face in the window looks troubled. "Dexter spent six months
Kael doesn't say anything for a really long time, his expression distant in a manner that I've never seen. When he finally speaks, his tone is laced with past wounds."Dexter is seven years older than I am. By the time I was old enough to understand what was happening, he was already an issue our father couldn't resolve."I collapse onto the couch, aware this is going to take a while. Kael remains at the window, looking out into the darkness."Our father was the leader of the Draven pack. Respected, old-fashioned, intensely devoted to the Council that keeps packs and humans at peace." His jaw tightens. "He believed in order, hierarchy, rules that had lasted for centuries. And Dexter defied them all.""What do you mean?""I mean he liked destroying everything our dad built." Kael appears, coming closer to me. "From the time he was a teenager, Dexter was violent. Not the contained rage you possess naturally as a werewolf, but something nastier. More sinister. He'd fight wolves twice his
He gestures toward the thin couch in front of the hearth, but I hold my ground. Standing is safer somehow, like having my feet firmly on the ground provides me with more traction in a situation that is rapidly getting away from me."Then talk," I say. "Tell me everything."He runs a hand through his dark hair, one of those irritability motions I've come to recognize. "The curse is exactly what Rebekah described. A trap designed to bind an Empath's life force to mine. If you attempt to shatter it with traditional methods, the magical blowback will kill us both.""Traditional methods," I repeat, clinging to the adjective. "So there are untraditional ones?"His silver eyes lock on mine. "I've been looking for a way. A means to break the curse without killing you in the process."My breath hitches. To have him start mentioning it now, after I'd asked myself."So what do you have," I say to him, attempting to sound calm. "How do we break the curse without incurring the penalty of death?"K
My hands shake as I start the car.The engine rumbles to life with a familiar sound, but everything else is off. Different. As if the world tipped on its axis while I was sitting in that bar, and I'm the only one who noticed."The curse is a trap. Breaking it will bind your life to his. If either of you dies, the other follows."I grip the steering wheel hard enough my knuckles turn white, trying to hold on to something solid. The parking lot is almost empty, just a few cars scattering the ground under the screaming brightness of streetlights. Ordinary. Everything looks so painfully, ruinously ordinary.But nothing is ordinary now.I was already on the main road, heading back toward the woods. Toward Kael and the pack and a battle I'm in no shape for. The city lights blur across my windows as I try to force my thoughts into something coherent.Rebekah's words echo in my mind. "She knew an Alpha like your werewolf would come searching for an Empath one day. And she made sure that when
I've got my second glass of wine in my hand when he appears."Hey there," the man says, sliding onto the stool beside me with the practiced ease of a man who's done this a hundred times. "Want to let me buy you a drink?"I didn't even look at him. "No.""Come on, don't be like that. Just making an effort to be friendly.""I'm not in the mood for friendly." My tone is very harsh, and I didn't even attempt to tune it down. The last thing I want to do is deal with unwanted male attention to add to everything else."Bad day?""You have no idea." I take another swig of wine, hoping he'll pick up the hint and leave.He doesn't. He pushes in closer, his cologne choking in the tight space between us. "Maybe I could help with that. I'm a pretty good listener.""And I'm pretty good at being left alone." I face him straight and whatever I see in his face makes him finally move back."Okay, okay. Just being friendly." He raises his hands in a gesture of surrender and steps back, muttering somethi
By the fourth day in the pack settlement, I was already at my breaking point.Each day begins the same way. Wake up drained from the work of the day before as an empath. Force down breakfast with the pressure of the pack's demands weighing on my mind. Spend hours from dawn till dusk traveling from one in pain werewolf to the next, soaking up their agony until my own body aches to be pulled asunder. Collapse within the cabin as Kael looks on with worry he attempts to conceal.Repeat.It's drudgery. Work of necessity. But it's also stifling.I haven't been out of the pack territory in four days. I haven't seen another human being. I haven't done something that doesn't trace back to supernatural politics and the curse. I was only thinking about what normal is.And so, after another grueling morning of empathic healing, I make a decision."I'm going into town tonight," I announce as Kael and I walk back into the cabin to get some lunch.He pauses in the doorway, his expression already shu







