LOGINLeela didn't know how long she had been asleep, but when she woke up, the room felt heavy and still. She sat up, rubbing the grit from her eyes, and crept to the window to peek through the curtains again.
He was still there.
The wolf hadn't moved an inch. He was a sentinel, a dark statue guarding her cheap motel door. She couldn't tell if he had even shifted his weight while she slept. Beyond him, the fog was still a wall--so white and heavy she felt like she could slice through it with a knife.
GRR-GURGLE.
Her stomach gave a violent, painful protest.
"What is wrong with me?" she whispered, clutching her midsection.
She had never felt this hungry before. It wasn't just an empty stomach; it was a hollow ache that felt like it was eating her from the inside out. She looked at the cold, greased congealed burger and took it from the nightstand. She took a bite, but the cold fat coated her tongue and she spat it out into the trash can.
She needed real food. And she needed to secure the room again.
She sat on the bed and pulled her wallet out of her hoodie pocket. She opened it up. Five one-dollar bills and some loose change stared back at her.
"Shit," she told the empty room.
She reached for the duffel bag and dug until she found the heavy tube sock. She unrolled it. She knew she had a little over nine hundred dollars in there--her lifeline. She hated breaking into it. Every bill she pulled out felt like she was shortening the time she could be free.
She sighed and pulled out a single hundred-dollar bill, then shoved the sock back deep into the bag.
With the fog this thick, she wasn't going anywhere. She had to pay for another night.
She sat there for a moment, thinking about the house on Maple Drive. It was strange; the parents who had terrorized her for seventeen years didn't feel like a threat anymore. They felt like a bad dream she had finally woken up from.
"They won't come looking," she told herself.
"They're probably glad the spare room is empty."
Ginny Donovan had been her best friend since kindergarten-the only person who knew about the exploding lightbulbs and didn't think Leela was a freak..
I have to tell her I'm okay, Leela thought. But not yet. As soon as she was sure her parents weren't looking for her, she would get a tracfone and text her. She would tell Ginny she was safe. Ginny was a vault; she wouldn't talk.
Leela took a deep breath and opened the door a crack.
The wolf stood up immediately. He stepped away from the door, moving out into the parking lot to give her space, then sat down and watched her.
Leela slipped out, shivering in the damp air and hurried to the diner.
The place was empty. Hank was behind the counter staring into the white oblivion outside. He looked toward her as she entered.
"Morning, hun," Hank said. "Or afternoon, I guess. Fog's got the time all messed up."
Leela walked up to the counter, clutching her hundred-dollar bill. "I need to rent the room again. The fog is too thick to drive in."
Hank looked at her. He looked at the bill in her hand, then at her anxious face. He knew. He had seen enough runaways in his time to spot one a mile away, especially one spinning yarns about sick grandmas.
He pushed the bill back at her.
"Keep it," Hank said gruffly.
"What?" Leela stammered. "No, I have to pay.."
"You paid sixty bucks yesterday," Hank interrupted. "Look, nobody is coming in this weather. The motel is empty. I marked you down for the weekly rate on yesterdays tab. You're good for several days if you need them."
Leela's mouth fell open. "I..umm..thank you. Seriously."
"Don't mention it," he grunted. "And you look hungry."
"I'm starving," she admitted.
"Good, cause I got too much food and no customers." He reached under the counter and pulled out a styrofoam container." We made fried chicken for the lunch rush that never happened. Take it. Got some coleslaw in there too."
Leela tried to hand him the five ones from her wallet for the food. Hank shook his head. "I"d have to throw it out anyway. Go on. Eat."
Leela took the warm container, feeling a lump in her throat that had nothing to do with hunger. "Thank you, sir."
She turned and stepped back into the fog.
There sat the wolf. Staring at her.
It was funny--yesterday, seeing a predator this size would have sent her screaming. Today, she just felt...watched. But not threatened. It was weird, but she didn't feel scared.
"You coming?" she whispered.
She walked back to her room. she heard the rhythmic click-clack of claws on the pavement behind her. He was following.
When she got ot her room, she unlocked the door and went inside. The wolf stopped on the welcome mat, resuming his post.
Leela hesitated. She looked at the warm chicken in her hand, then at the cold burger in the trash can. She fished out the burger.
She stood in the open doorway. "Hey."
The wolf looked up.
She tossed the cold burger to him. He caught it in mid-air, He didn't even chew; it was just gone in one gulp.
Leela sat on the edge of the bed, leaving the door wide open. The wolf sat on the threshold, watching her.
"You're a curious one, you know that?" she asked him.
He cocked his head to the side, looking at her quizzically.
"If you promise not to bite me." she said feeling absolutely insane. "I'll let you in."
What in the world am I doing? She thought. This is a wild animal.
But the pullin her chest--the same one that led her to the motel--was humming.
"Come inside," she whispered.
The wolf stood. He padded into the room, his massive frame filling the small space. He walked to the rug at the foot of the bed, circled it three times--round, round, round--and collapsed with a heavy sigh.
Leela closed the door and locked it.
She sat on the bed and opened the styrofoam container. The smell of fried chicken filled the room. She ate ravenously, tearing the meat off the bone, wiping the grease on a napkin.
When she was done, she felt the exhaustion creeping back in. Running away was tiresome work.
She grabbed the remote. Click-News. Click-Old cartoons.
She settled for cartoons--coyotes falling off a cliff.
She slid to the foot of the bed, lying on her stomach. Her hand dangled off the mattress, hovering over the wolf. He didn't growl.
She lowered her hand and scratched his ears.
He leaned into it, letting out a low rumble that vibrated through the floorboards.
Leela watched his fur in the flickering light of the TV, It was mesmerizing. One way she rubbed it, it was dark storm cloud gray. The other way, it shimmered silver. At the tips, it seemed blinding white.
"Your fur is beautiful," she murmured. "I wish I knew what to call you."
The wolf opened one amber eye.
"Smoke?" she guessed.
The wolf closed his eye.
"Shadow?"
The wolf let out a sharp, indignant huff of air, twitching his ears away from her hand.
"Okay," Leela laughed softly. "Shadow is a hard no."
She ate the last bite of her coleslaw and lay back against the pillows. Her eyelids were heavy, the room was warm, the wolf was quiet, and for the first time in her life, she felt safe enough to just...stop.
She closed her eyes, and the darkness took her.
Dr. Chatmory clicked off his handheld dictaphone with a heavy sigh, rubbing the bridge of his nose. He had just started the recording again when the heavy wooden door to his private office didn't just open; it was shoved inward with a quiet, terrifying force.Two men stepped inside, pulling the door shut behind them until the lock clicked. They were dressed in impeccably tailored suits, but they moved with a predatory, silent grace that immediately made the hair on the back of Chatmory's neck stand up."Why was the elemental brought to this hospital?" the lead man asked, skipping any pretense of a greeting. His voice was smooth, but laced with absolute, chilling command.Dr. Chatmory frowned, his professional pride bristling against his ingrained fear. He knew enough about the supernatural world lurking in the shadows of his city to recognize trouble, but he refused to be intimidated in his own office. He sat up straighter, crossing his arms over his white coat."I have absolutely no
Leela let out a ragged sigh, her fingers gently tracing the edge of Iggy's soft blanket as Fennigan cradled him."And I get why she feels so fragile," Leela murmured, her voice thick with old ghosts and fresh guilt. "She had no one on the outside, either. For years, we were the only family the other had. And then... I left her. I know it was only for a few weeks before I finally called and invited her up here for our mating ceremony, but I still left her behind in that world. I will carry that guilt forever. I won't ever do that to her again."She tilted her head, looking up into her mate's glowing golden eyes."Her whole life before this, she was thrown from foster home to foster home," Leela continued, a fierce, protective ache bleeding into her words. "And some of those places, Fenn... they weren't nice. They were cruel. Me? I always had a constant roof over my head. Even if the people under that roof hated me and made me feel like an absolute freak, I had some twisted version of s
The moment Sarah stepped fully into the room, Toby’s sharp, hardwired instincts flared to life. Even deep in slumber, his Lycan senses were perfectly attuned to his mate's unique scent and presence.His eyes fluttered open, blinking against the bright, warm sunlight streaming through the glass. It took him a split second to realize he was pinned to the floor by two sleeping royal toddlers. He looked up, catching Sarah's amused gaze, and immediately cleared his throat, keeping his deep, raspy voice down to a harsh whisper so he wouldn't wake the twins."I wasn't sleeping, I swear," Toby defended quickly, completely failing to look like a lethal, highly trained guardsman. "I was just... resting my eyes. Tactically."Sarah’s smile widened, the last heavy, lingering shadows of the stressful hospital visit completely melting away at the sight of her fiercely deadly mate acting as a makeshift mattress.Ignoring his terrible lie, Sarah stepped quietly across the sun-warmed hardwood. Mindful
The heavy Blackwood SUV ate up the miles as they navigated the winding mountain roads back toward the packhouse. The atmosphere inside the plush cabin was vastly different from the ride down; the immediate, suffocating panic had passed, but in its wake was a heavy, lingering exhaustion.In the back seat, the steady, rhythmic hum of the tires on the asphalt had already lulled Iggy into a deep, peaceful sleep.Leela turned her head away from the window, her elemental eyes shifting to the woman sitting on the other side of the baby carrier. Ginny was staring blankly at the passing tree line, her pale face completely drained of color. A single, silent tear slipped down her cheek, catching the afternoon light."You're quiet," Leela observed gently, her voice barely rising above the low hum of the engine.Ginny blinked, startled, and quickly reached up to wipe the tear away with the back of her hand. She forced a small, unconvincing smile.Up in the driver’s seat, Jax’s broad shoulders imme
Ginny looked down at the sleeping infant in her arms, the terrifying reality of his grandfather's twisted experiments casting a dark, heavy shadow over his tiny face. The thought of unknown synthetic residuals lingering in his little body was enough to send her mortal mind spiraling right back into panic.Sensing her best friend's rising terror, Leela immediately stepped away from the wall. She closed the distance between them and placed a warm, grounding hand over Ginny's, her elemental eyes bright with a fierce, unwavering optimism that actively pushed back against the darkness in the room.Ginny let out a long, exhausted breath, finally allowing the last of the terror to bleed out of her system. She turned toward the padded examination table, carefully lowering the sleeping newborn back into his heavy car seat. Jax stepped up right beside her, his massive, heavily scarred hands moving with surprising, practiced gentleness as he carefully adjusted the straps and snapped the tiny buc
The Twisted LogicLeela slipped her phone back into her pocket, giving Sarah one last, fiercely reassuring nod before quietly opening the heavy wooden door. She stepped back into the tense, suffocating atmosphere of the doctor's office, immediately returning to Ginny’s side.The wait for Iggy’s accelerated blood work felt like an absolute eternity. Jax paced the short length of the room, his massive frame practically vibrating with restless, protective energy, while Ginny sat rigid, clutching the sleeping newborn to her chest.When Dr. Chatmory finally walked back into the room holding a fresh printout, his expression was tight and unreadable. The entire room seemed to hold its breath.The doctor looked immediately at Ginny, offering a comforting but visibly strained smile. "Physically, right at this exact moment, his vitals are strong. But... I cannot give you a completely clean bill of health."Ginny let out a choked, watery gasp, burying her face against the top of Iggy's blanket a
The door to the guest suite was already half-open. They found Ginny propped up against an absolutely ridiculous mountain of pillows, looking utterly, wonderfully miserable in her confinement. Beside the mattress, Jax was seated firmly in a heavy wooden chair, his massive frame hunched over slightly
True to his word, Fennigan reappeared just a few minutes later, carrying a massive, steaming plate that instantly made Leela’s mouth water. It was piled high with thick, tender slices of slow-cooked roast, hearty chunks of potatoes swimming in rich brown gravy, and a generous, golden square of butt
Watching them, a fierce, burning warmth bloomed in Leela's chest, momentarily chasing away the lingering ache of her exhaustion. They were so vibrant, so perfectly happy and healthy. The dark memories of the battle hardened into a pure, unbreakable resolve. She would die—she would tear the world ap
The afternoon sun threw long, warm shadows across the bedroom floor as Leela finally stirred, fighting her way up through the thick, heavy layers of exhausted sleep. She rolled over, instinctively bracing herself for the familiar, chaotic chatter of her twins. But the room was draped in a strange,







