Kendra stumbled through the dark woods as she followed the path forged by Siell. Behind her the sun spread its final rays before sunset. A deep, rumbling growl told her she was getting closer.
Kendra burst from the trees and into the clearing. The combatants faced off as they did in the mirror, but Siell was hunched on the ground. His back heaved up and down. The scent of alpha permeated off him in strong waves. She clutched her chest as the familiar lustful heat was lit inside her.
Siell whipped his head to her. She gasped. His face was flat and his snout longer than before. Hair covered his entire body, and she noticed his knees faced backward like those of a wolf. He turned to face her on all fours. His hunched back was covered in a mane of gray fur.
Siell lunged at her and grabbed her shoulders. The mirror dropped onto a pile of needles as he slammed her onto the ground. He leaned down and sniffed her cheek. His razor-sharp teeth brushed against her skin.
Kendra swallowed. “M-Mr. Bascon. It’s me. Don’t you remember me?” The wolf curled back its lips and growled at her. It eyes were devoid of light as it opened its wide jaws. Kendra's eyes widened and she shook her head. “No. Please no.” The wolf raised its head for a finishing blow.
Kendra struggled in his grasp, but his grip was too strong. “Siell!”
The wolf paused. Its yellow eyes blinked. The cold emptiness of the beast vanished and was replaced by the bright light of Siell's human self.
The figure on the opposite side of the short clearing chuckled. Siell leapt in front of her and spun around to face the trespasser. Its pale lips curled back in a long snarl.
The figure shook its head. “No need for a worthless show, wolf. You can’t harm me, but what a stroke of luck.” He paced halfway around the clearing and stopped twenty feet short of them. “Two wolves for the price of one. My client will be most pleased.” The stranger removed their hood and revealed their face.
The person was a man of forty with gray eyes and a weathered face. His thin brown hair was combed back over his thin skull and shimmered with grease. His skin was pale and his thin lips slipped up into a sly grin.
Over his dark eyes and centered on his forehead lay a single red eye. The eye was large and partially lidded. It blinked against the rhythm of the other two, and its attention lay solely on Kendra. She shrank from that staring abnormality.
“It’s always nice to have my job made simpler,” the man commented. He lifted his hand and held his palm out toward them. A bright red light sprang from his palm and formed itself into a ball. The hair on the back of Kendra's neck stood on end and there was a crackling of energy as the ball grew larger and larger until it was the size of a basketball.
The man drew his arm back. “Time for some separation.” He threw the ball at the pair.
Siell lunged at the ball. A shot rang out. There was a flash of light as the red ball exploded into a thousand small, shimmering dust particles. Siell dropped onto his four feet short of the explosion and averted his eyes from the bright blast.
The force knocked Kendra off her feet. She shook her head and glanced down at the ground. The parts of the ball floated to the ground like feathers and vanished in a flash of black light as they hit the earth.
Alberto stepped from the woods with his smoking gun in hand and his eyes on the stranger. He shoved a large silver bullet into the single chamber and c****d the gun. “I would rather you not try that again, sir. These bullets are rather expensive.”
The man sneered. “How dare you interfere, human.”
“I dare because my master dares. What I am doesn’t matter,” Alberto countered.
The stranger drew back his hand. Another ball formed in his palm. “Then you can die with the others, and I will bury your soul in a tree.”
Siell leapt forward. The man raised his glowing hand and the ball formed into a round, curved shield. Siell's head knocked into the shield and bounced off. He dropped back and shook his head.
The stranger chuckled. “Though my magic is weak against silver, a mere werewolf can’t break this shield. It is made with the strongest of spells created and recited in the deepest forges of the dwarves.”
Siell curled his lips back into a sly grin and a deep, echoing chuckle reverberated from his long mouth. When he spoke his voice was deep and gravely. “I thought merely to knock the spell from your hand, but now I’ll severe your hand from your body.”
Siell lunged at the stranger. The man raised the shield. Rather than head-ramming, Siell lifted his own clawed hand and took a swipe at the defense. Claw met red light and the red light shattered, but Siell's claws didn’t stop there. His long fingers sliced through the man’s wrist and cut off his hand.
The stranger’s mouth opened in a wide, pain-filled scream. He dropped to his knees and clutched his bleeding stump. His wailing echoed in Kendra's ears. She clapped her hands over her ears and looked away.
The hand, and Siell, dropped behind him.
Siell turned to Alberto. “Don’t let the stupid animal suffer any longer.”
“But sir, shouldn’t we-”
“Take what he sought from me, then, and let’s be done with him,” Siell snapped.
Alberto closed his eyes and bowed. He stowed the gun back in his coat and pulled out a small, transparent glass vial. Alberto popped the cork and lifted the bottle above his head. A blue mist floated out of the mouth and over to the wounded man.
He looked up just as the mist wrapped around him. His eyes widened and he stumbled back, but the mist kept him in its circle. The man shook his head and raised his stumpy arm in front of him. “No! No, you can’t! Don’t-” The mist pressed into him, hiding him from view and cutting off his words. The column twisted and writhed for a few moments before it stretched and floated into the air.
The man’s upraised body came back into view. His open eyes stared straight ahead, but there was no life in them. A small breeze swept over him and the eye in his forehead blew away like dust. He fell face-first into the ground and didn’t move.
The blue mist was sucked back into the bottle. Alberto reinserted the cork and tucked the bottle into his coat.
Siell stood on two legs and partially transformed back into his human self. His body was still covered in hair, but his face was mostly human. Siell turned to Kendra who cowered at the edge of the clearing.
Siell walked over and knelt in front of her. He offered her his hand. “There’s nothing to fear now.”
Kendra recoiled from his clawed fingers. “W-what happened? Who was that? What was that light?”
He sighed and shook his head. “You don’t even believe in magic after you’ve seen it?”
She blinked at him. “That. . .that was magic?”
He nodded. “Yes, and a very potent kind.” He glanced over at his manservant who stood a few feet away and smiled. “I’m fortunate Alberto came to my aid.”
Alberto closed his eyes and bowed. “It was my duty, Master.”
Aiell chuckled. “Duty is very dangerous for you. But you-” he returned his attention to Kendra, “-you had a different form of duty, didn’t you?”
She blinked at him. “What are you talking about?”
He chuckled. “Haven’t you wondered why you rushed out here and came to my aid?”
Kendra opened her mouth, but the explanation died in her throat. She looked away from him and shook her head. “I-I don’t know.”
Siell cupped her chin between his fingers and returned her gaze to his sly smile. “It’s because you’re mine.”
Kendra frowned and wrenched her chin from his hold. She jumped to her feet and stumbled back. The final rays of the sun set behind her as she glared at the werewolf. “I’m not yours! I’ll never be yours!”
Kendra stood and shook his head. “You can deny it all you want, but you still came here to rescue me.” His smile widened. “And might I add you did a fabulous job.”
His praise brought a pleasant heat to her chest. Kendra closed her eyes and shook her head. “This can’t be happening! This just can’t be happening!’
Siell stooped and picked up the mirror she’d dropped. He set a hand on her shoulder and held the glass out to her. She looked up into his soothing yellow eyes and her thoughts were calmed. His voice was soft and quiet. “You’ve been through a lot. You should go.”
Kendra shook her head. “I won’t go until I get the truth. The whole truth.”
Siell tilted his head to one side and grinned. “Then you shall have it, but at the house.”