POV: ELARA
Dawn came to the Ashveil Forest the way it always did in early autumn: sideways and reluctant, thin gold light shouldering through the canopy in slanted columns that lit the mist from within without actually warming anything. Elara had been awake for two hours already. She had learned, in five years of sleeping with one eye open, that the last hour before sunrise was the most dangerous. Predators were finishing their night hunts. Feral shifters, the ones who had lost too much of their human mind to the wild, were most unpredictable at the edge of darkness. And pack scouts, if any were operating in the territory, tended to switch their patrol rotations at dawn. Transition periods were dangerous. She did not sleep through dangerous.
She moved through the forest the way water moves; finding the path of least resistance, always, without apology. Bare feet on moss and soil. Her boots were strapped to her back because boots left prints and moss preserved them for hours. She wore grey-green leggings and a long-sleeved shirt the color of tree bark, both articles treated with a compound she mixed herself from white ash, crushed pine needles, and the gland secretions of the small grey rabbits that were abundant in this part of the forest. It was not a glamorous existence. It was, however, an effective one. She had not been properly scented by another shifter in four months.
Her first trap was at the eastern edge of her territory, strung between two birches at a height calibrated precisely for the shoulder height of the feral wolves who had been pushing north from the lowland marshes. She checked it by feel in the low light; a braided wire snare, set and unsprung, the ground around it undisturbed except for a single set of deer prints from yesterday evening. She reset the tension mechanism and moved on.
The second trap was more elaborate. It was a weighted net system suspended in a shallow ravine, triggered by a pressure board concealed under a layer of pine duff. She had spent three days building it last spring. It had paid for itself twice since then, once with a genuine feral, once with a particularly large and aggressive rogue male who had been encroaching on her water source. She had not killed either of them. She had restrained them, taken what supplies they carried that were useful, and released them with a dislocated shoulder each as a reminder about boundaries. She was not a killer by preference. She was a killer by capability, which was different, and she maintained that distinction carefully.
The second trap was intact.
She climbed toward the ridge for her third check of the morning, the one that told her the most about the broader state of her territory. From the ridge she could see the western tree line, the open meadow to the north where the deer grazed in the early morning, and the dark line of the Fen River cutting through the lowland to the east. She crouched among the rocks at the crest and did what she did every morning: she listened.
The Ashveil spoke its own language. She had been learning it for five years. The alarm call of the blue jays in the eastern sector meant a ground predator was moving north. The quality of silence from the western tree line, the specific, held-breath quality it had now, meant something large was stationary in there, waiting. The deer in the meadow were grazing without tension, heads down, which meant there was nothing in the immediate open ground that frightened them. She read all of this in approximately forty-five seconds and filed it against her mental map of the territory.
Then she found the boot prints.
They were on the southern slope of the ridge, partially obscured by the same pine duff she used on her own paths, which meant someone with at least basic tracking awareness had made them. Two sets. Standard military-weight tread, the kind issued to pack enforcers. She crouched beside the cleaner of the two prints and pressed two fingers against the compressed soil at its edge. Twelve hours old, maybe fourteen. They had come through last night, between midnight and two in the morning, which was when she was furthest from this part of the territory on her own patrol circuit. Whoever made them had timed their approach carefully.
Or they had gotten very lucky. She was not in the habit of assuming luck.
She straightened and stood very still for a long moment, eyes moving through the tree line below the ridge. Nothing moved that should not have been moving. The jays had gone quiet again, which meant the ground predator to the east had changed direction or stopped. She noted this without changing her expression. Her face had learned, over five years, to simply not do very much. Expressions were information, and information given freely was a resource spent without return.