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Curse of the Gévaudan

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The fog that clung to Gévaudan's hills was thicker than milk, swallowing sound and light alike. Étienne Durand pulled his cloak tighter as he trudged along the muddy path, his boots squelching in the damp earth. Dawn had barely broken, but he was already late.Pierre would be waiting in the meadow. He always was—grinning, teasing, and whistling that same cheerful tune while his sheep grazed. But as Étienne neared the field, the silence struck him first. No whistle. No sheep. Only the hush of the fog, too heavy, too still.Then came the smell.Coppery. Sharp. The stench of blood.His stomach tightened. Quickening his pace, Étienne broke through the last veil of mist—and stopped dead.The meadow was a slaughterhouse. Sheep lay torn open, their wool soaked scarlet. Some bodies were scattered in halves, others ripped apart by claws too deep, too vicious to belong to any natural beast. And at the heart of it all lay Pierre.Étienne's chest heaved. He staggered forward, fell to his knees beside his friend, and reached out with trembling fingers. Pierre's body was twisted grotesquely, his chest ripped wide, his eyes glassy and fixed on nothing. Cold. Empty.Étienne's throat burned as he forced himself to look away—only to notice the tracks pressed into the earth.Pawprints.But far too large. Far too heavy. Each claw had dug deep gouges into the mud, as if the ground itself recoiled from their touch. In some prints, the soil was blackened, charred, as though kissed by fire.Étienne's breath quickened. Tales whispered in taverns returned to him—wolves the size of horses, shadows that devoured the living, eyes glowing with hell's light.A growl split the silence.His heart stopped. Slowly, he turned.Amber eyes pierced the fog. Massive, glowing, unblinking. A hulking form emerged—fur bristling, shoulders broad, its muzzle wet with blood. With each step, the ground seemed to quake.The Beast of Gévaudan.Étienne couldn't move. His body screamed to flee, but his legs betrayed him. The Beast drew closer, its steaming breath curling in the air, its gaze locked on his with something more than hunger.This was no animal.No wolf.It was a curse given flesh.And it had chosen him.

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Chapter 2 – Ashes and Whispers
The bells of Saint-Pierre tolled low and heavy, their mournful song rolling across the valley. All of Gévaudan had gathered in the churchyard, the smell of incense fighting against the iron tang of death that still clung to the air. Pierre's body, sewn hastily into a shroud, lay atop the wooden bier. His mother wept silently, clutching at her rosary until her knuckles whitened. The priest's Latin prayers droned on, but no holy words could mask the terror written on every villager's face. Étienne stood apart, his eyes fixed not on the coffin but on the people. Their whispers hissed like serpents among the crowd. "Wolves…" one muttered. "No wolf leaves burns in the earth," another hissed. "It's punishment," an old woman spat. "God's wrath upon our sins." Étienne clenched his fists. He wanted to scream that it wasn't God, nor wolf, but something else. He had seen it. He had felt its gaze pierce him to his bones. But as he opened his mouth, he caught sight of his mother in the crowd, pale and trembling. Her eyes begged him to stay silent. He swallowed the truth like poison. When the coffin was lowered into the earth, a cold wind swept through the churchyard, scattering leaves and extinguishing half the candles. The priest's voice faltered, and for one brief moment, silence hung heavy—broken only by the distant howl that rose from the woods. Every head turned. The sound was no ordinary wolf's cry. It was deeper, longer, threaded with something unholy that made even the strongest men cross themselves. The priest stammered through the final blessing, rushing to end the rite. Villagers scattered, herding their children into their homes, bolting doors, shuttering windows. Étienne lingered, his eyes on the black line of trees at the valley's edge. The Beast was still there. Watching. Waiting. And though fear gnawed at him, one thought burned hotter than the rest: If no one else would face it, he must.

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