Predators Recognize Each Other

1224 Words
Rowan POV The woman standing in front of me does not smell like prey. She smells like something that survived extinction. --- I notice her before she notices me. That alone tells me she isn’t human. Humans are loud in ways they don’t understand. Their heartbeats race without reason. Their breathing shifts with emotion. Their bodies betray every instinct. They exist like fragile prey pretending they aren’t prey at all. She doesn’t. She moves through the street with controlled precision, her pace steady, her breathing even. Her scent— I inhale slowly from the shadows, trying to identify it. Nothing. Not human. Not wolf. Not anything. It’s like trying to smell absence. My wolf stirs immediately, restless beneath my skin. Alert. Interested. That alone puts me on edge. Interest gets wolves killed. Interest gets packs destroyed. I step into the alley after her anyway. Because survival also requires knowledge. And she is something I need to understand. The alley swallows sound, shadow folding around us like a living thing. Humans built their cities to suppress darkness, but darkness always finds a way to survive. Just like wolves did. Just like I did. She pauses near the center of the alley, and I let my footsteps fall heavy enough for her to hear. I don’t hide. Alphas don’t hide. She stills instantly. Every muscle in her body locks into readiness so subtle most creatures wouldn’t notice. But I notice. She’s trained. Or she’s ancient. Or she’s both. She turns slowly, and when her eyes meet mine— My wolf surges forward. Recognition. Impossible recognition. I’ve never seen her before. And yet something inside me reacts like I have. “You’re not from here,” I say. It isn’t a question. It’s fact. She says nothing. Her silence doesn’t feel like fear. It feels like control. That unsettles me more than anything else tonight. I study her carefully. Her posture remains relaxed, but not vulnerable. Her hands rest at her sides, loose and ready. Her shoulders remain squared, balanced, prepared to move if necessary. Prepared to fight. Prepared to run. Prepared to survive. She smells like nothing. That shouldn’t be possible. Every creature has a scent. Even humans. Especially humans. “I can smell it,” I tell her. Her fingers twitch almost imperceptibly. Reaction. Confirmation. She knows what I am. She knows what wolves can do. That realization sharpens my focus further. Humans know wolves exist, but most have never seen one. They hunt from distance. They kill from safety. They don’t stand in alleys and look into our eyes. She does. Without fear. Without hesitation. Without submission. She steps slightly into deeper shadow, and I feel it instantly. The darkness responds to her. Not physically. Instinctively. Like it belongs to her. My wolf presses forward harder, restless, curious. Dangerous curiosity. I suppress him. Curiosity is weakness. Curiosity destroyed the old packs. Curiosity allowed humans to learn. To adapt. To eradicate. The Purge nearly wiped us out completely. I remember it clearly. Fire falling from the sky. Silver tearing through flesh. The sound of wolves screaming as human weapons ripped through bodies that once feared nothing. I remember watching my father fall. My Alpha. My blood. Humans didn’t hesitate. Humans never hesitate. That’s why wolves learned to stop hesitating too. That’s why wolves learned to become monsters humans feared again. And yet here I stand, hesitating. Because of her. “What are you doing here?” I ask. Her voice remains calm when she answers. “Walking.” Lie. Or partial truth. Everything about her feels incomplete. Unfinished. Hidden. Human voices echo faintly beyond the alley. Patrol units. I recognize their patterns instantly. They sweep sectors in rotating grids now. They coordinate movements with surveillance drones. They adapted quickly after learning how wolves operate. Humans always adapt. That’s what makes them dangerous. She hears them too. Her body stills further. Not fear. Assessment. Calculation. She’s determining escape routes. She’s determining threat levels. She’s determining whether I am a greater danger than they are. I shift slightly, positioning myself between her and the alley entrance. Control. Protection. Territory. She notices immediately. Her eyes narrow slightly. “You don’t trust me,” she says. No. I don’t. Trust is death. Trust is extinction. “I don’t trust anything I don’t understand,” I reply. Truth. Absolute truth. Her gaze doesn’t waver. She doesn’t try to convince me otherwise. She doesn’t plead. She doesn’t explain. She accepts my distrust like she expected it. That makes her more dangerous. Not less. Most creatures try to survive through cooperation. She survives through independence. That kind of survival requires strength. Or power. Or both. The patrol passes the alley entrance slowly. Flashlights sweep across concrete and brick. Silver weapons remain visible at their sides. Silver. Always silver. My wolf snarls beneath my skin. Silver burns worse than fire. Silver weakens. Silver kills. I watch her carefully. Waiting to see if she runs. Waiting to see if she betrays weakness. She doesn’t move. She stands beside me like she belongs in danger. Like danger belongs to her. The patrol moves on. The alley grows quiet again. But nothing feels safe. Nothing ever is. “Why are you here?” I ask again. This time she hesitates. Only briefly. “Surviving,” she says. The word lands heavier than expected. Survival isn’t living. Survival is enduring. Survival is loss. Survival is watching everything you love burn while you continue breathing anyway. My wolf quiets slightly. Recognition again. Understanding again. Impossible understanding. I should kill her. Unknown creatures threaten packs. Unknown creatures attract hunters. Unknown creatures destabilize territory. Everything I’ve built depends on control. She is chaos. And yet— I don’t move. I don’t attack. I don’t eliminate the threat. Because something inside me refuses. Something inside me recognizes her as something other than prey. Something equal. That realization unsettles me deeply. “I should kill you,” I say quietly. Not threat. Fact. She meets my gaze without fear. “You could try.” Confidence. Absolute confidence. She believes that. She genuinely believes she could survive me. My wolf reacts instantly. Not with anger. With interest. With challenge. With something far more dangerous. She turns slightly, preparing to leave. And instinct reacts faster than thought. “Wait.” The word leaves my mouth before I can stop it. She freezes. Slowly turns back. Her eyes study me now. Assessing. Understanding. She knows what that word means. She knows I don’t want her to leave. She knows she has power now. Predators recognize leverage. Predators exploit leverage. And she is absolutely a predator. “Why?” she asks. One word. One question. One answer I don’t have. Because I don’t know why. I don’t know why my wolf refuses to let her disappear. I don’t know why her presence feels like something lost returning. I don’t know why she feels like something inevitable. I don’t know why she feels like something mine. Mine. The thought hits hard enough to make my jaw tighten. No. She is not mine. She is unknown. She is threat. She is danger. And yet— My wolf disagrees. Violently. Because as she stands there watching me— My wolf makes a decision I didn’t give him permission to make. He chooses her. And I have no idea why.
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