The bond did not ask for my permission.
It did not knock. It did not wait. It did not care.
I stepped beyond the border stones of our pack land, expecting only the quiet hum of the forest and the rustle of leaves. Instead, I felt it first—a tug beneath my ribs, subtle at first, then sharp, undeniable.
My wolf growled low inside me, claws pressing against my ribs, as though she had known this moment was coming all along. She was relentless, impatient, and insistent.
Easy, I whispered, more to myself than to her.
Control.
The forest smelled different tonight. Not just the moss, the damp bark, the scent of distant prey. Something else lingered on the wind—something familiar, yet impossible. My heartbeat stuttered as I caught the first hint: a scent of power, of dominance, of gold-edged danger.
I froze.
My wolf growled louder. Her teeth scraped along my ribs, the movement invisible but painfully real.
There. That one.
I wanted to turn back. I should have turned back. I could feel my pulse spike and my lungs tighten, a warning that I ignored at my own peril.
A snap of a branch made me spin.
And then I saw him.
He emerged from the shadows, tall, broad, lethal without trying. The forest seemed to bend around him, every step deliberate, measured, as though he owned the night itself.
Gold eyes, sharp as a blade, pinned me where I stood.
The world narrowed to him.
Recognition slammed into me with a weight I could not breathe around. My wolf pressed harder against my ribs, straining, clawing.
Mine, she breathed inside me, raw and unrelenting.
I shook my head, trying to deny it. Denial had always been my weapon. It had kept my wolf in check, had kept me safe.
“No,” I whispered aloud. “This… this can’t happen.”
He raised an eyebrow, chest rising with a measured inhale. The bond pulsed faintly, almost visible, stretching between us, tightening with every heartbeat.
“I don’t take what doesn’t choose me,” he said, voice low, rough, carrying the weight of someone who has spent too long restrained.
My chest ached as the words hit me, the truth burning through my ribs.
The wolf inside me snarled and shivered.
“You’re too late,” my wolf whispered, venomous and thrilled at the same time. “It’s already here. Already claimed.”
I swallowed hard. My throat dry. My hands trembled. This wasn’t desire, not yet. It was survival instinct, feral and pure. The pull of the bond was a tide I couldn’t fight.
He stepped closer. Not threatening. Not gentle. Calculated. A predator aware of its prey—and aware that the prey was also a predator.
“You feel it,” he said, voice barely above the wind, “because I feel it too.”
“Yes,” I admitted, because lying now would be pointless. “And I don’t want it.”
His lips curved, faint, almost cruel. “Too late,” he whispered.
The air around us thickened. Mist rolled along the forest floor. Moonlight poured between the branches, highlighting the tension so thick I could taste it. Every muscle in my body wanted to turn, to flee, but the bond pulsed like fire beneath my skin.
Run, my wolf hissed.
Stay, my heart said.
I took a cautious step back. He mirrored it.
The bond surged. Heat flared low, tight, insistent. My wolf whimpered. My body betrayed me. My mind screamed control, but every instinct inside me bent toward him.
“I won’t—” I began, then faltered.
“You already are,” he said softly, voice carrying through the trees, through the night, into the marrow of my bones.
The silence that followed was unbearable. It stretched and folded around us, thick and suffocating. My pulse thrummed in time with his presence, and the ache inside me grew, sharp and humiliating.
I wanted to hate him. I wanted to run.
I could do neither.
“Names have power,” I said finally, lifting my chin despite the heat pressing at my chest. “We should at least—”
“Not yet,” he interrupted quietly.
The wind whispered through the pines. Somewhere, a lone owl called.
The moon climbed higher, silver light slicing through the mist. My body ached. My wolf growled. The bond pulsed, impatient, impossible, alive.
I turned to leave.
He did not follow.
But I knew the moment I stepped beyond the trees, beyond the edge of the clearing, the mark would not fade. The pull would not loosen. My wolf would howl and ache. And I would feel it for the rest of my life.
Some bonds do not ask.
Some marks do not fade.
And this was only the beginning.