Chapter 1: The Forest Whispers.
🐺 Chapter 1: The Forest Whispers
The forest wasn’t supposed to whisper her name.
But it did.
Lena Hayes slowed at the edge of Silver Ridge, suitcase dragging along the gravel, heart hammering in her chest. The town seemed almost asleep beneath the pale moonlight, streets empty, the air crisp and heavy with the scent of pine and wet earth. Yet something about it felt… wrong. Shadows stretched like long fingers, brushing her ankles as she walked, and the wind carried a low, almost mournful hum.
Her instincts screamed that this was no ordinary town.
“I’m just imagining things,” she muttered, gripping the handle of her suitcase tighter. New life. New town. A fresh start. That was the plan. No curses, no ghosts from her past. Just her.
Yet the forest had other ideas.
A howl pierced the still night, slicing through the quiet like a knife. Lena froze. Her stomach twisted in both fear and fascination. It was deep, mournful, and almost… intelligent.
She scanned the trees. Nothing. And then, from the shadows, two silver eyes glinted. Her pulse skipped.
A wolf. Bigger than any she’d ever seen, its black fur blending seamlessly with the night. Its gaze locked onto her, unwavering. The hair along her arms prickled. Every warning she’d ever ignored in books, movies, and dreams seemed suddenly alive.
And yet… there was something in those eyes. Something that made her legs root to the spot. Recognition. Familiarity.
The wolf’s growl deepened, low and rumbling, resonating through her chest. Then came a voice — impossibly deep, a growl that sounded almost human.
“She’s here.”
The sound made her jump. Her blood turned cold. That wasn’t the wolf speaking… was it?
A figure stepped from behind the trees, tall and impossibly broad-shouldered, shadowed by the moonlight. The man’s eyes gleamed like molten silver, wolf-like and piercing. Every instinct told her to run, yet her feet refused. Her pulse thrummed in unison with something primal, something awakening inside her chest.
“Who… who are you?” she whispered, voice trembling.
The man didn’t answer. He only watched, measuring, calculating. The air around him seemed to vibrate with power, like the forest itself held its breath.
Another howl split the silence, longer this time, urgent. And then she noticed it — his hand twitched, almost unconsciously, fingers curling as if claws might spring forth.
Her stomach turned, but she didn’t look away. A pull, magnetic and irresistible, anchored her in place.
“You shouldn’t be here,” he finally said, voice low, commanding, and full of something she couldn’t name. “This town… it’s not safe for you.”
“I can take care of myself,” Lena said, though her words sounded hollow even to her.
He tilted his head, watching her closely. “You’re not like the others,” he said. Then, softer, almost a whisper, “You’re the one.”
Her breath caught. “The… one?”
He didn’t answer. Instead, his eyes flicked to the shadows behind her, and a growl rumbled deep in his chest. The wolf’s presence seemed to merge with his own, a primal energy that made her skin tingle.
Lena stumbled back a step. “I… I should go.”
He moved a fraction closer, slow, deliberate, each step measured. The tension between them crackled. Fear tangled with something far more dangerous: curiosity. Desire. And something ancient, buried deep in the marrow of her bones, whispered that she had no choice but to stay.
“She’s here,” he repeated, louder this time, almost to himself. And then the eyes — the wolf eyes — blinked, just once, and a shiver ran down Lena’s spine.
The forest seemed to close in. The wind howled. And somewhere in the shadows, destiny