Silver Changes Everything

1216 Words
Nyxara POV The moment silver pierces Rowan Varkas, time fractures into something fragile and unbearable, because I have lived long enough to know exactly how easily creatures like him are erased. --- The sound of the gunshot arrives after the impact, as if reality itself hesitates before acknowledging what has already happened, and for a single suspended moment the world seems to narrow into the space between Rowan’s body and the silver that has just torn through it. I see the instant it connects. Not because the movement is slow, but because my senses have always existed differently than human perception allows, stretching moments into something wider, something heavier, something impossible to ignore. The silver round slices into his side with violent precision, not grazing, not hesitating, but burying itself deep enough that I feel the shock of it through the air itself, as if the world recognizes the intrusion of something unnatural into flesh that was never meant to be easily broken. Rowan’s body reacts involuntarily, his breath leaving him in a sharp, controlled exhale that he clearly refuses to allow to become weakness, even as his muscles tense beneath the sudden invasion of pain that silver always brings. He doesn’t cry out. He doesn’t fall. He doesn’t give the hunters what they expect. But I see the truth in the tightening of his jaw, in the subtle shift of his shoulders as his body absorbs the damage and immediately begins compensating for it, redistributing strength, adjusting balance, refusing surrender with the kind of instinct that only creatures forged through extinction truly possess. Blood spreads slowly across his side, darkening the fabric of his clothing in uneven lines, and the scent reaches me seconds later—wolf blood touched by silver, corrupted in a way that reminds me of memories I have spent centuries burying beneath deliberate silence. My fingers twitch at my sides before I can stop them, instinct reacting to violence in ways I no longer permit myself to acknowledge, because reacting means caring, and caring means vulnerability, and vulnerability has never been anything but a death sentence for creatures like us. The pendant at my throat burns hotter, iron reacting violently to the surge of magic that rises beneath my skin, power pressing upward in furious defiance of the restraint I have forced upon it, demanding release, demanding retaliation, demanding that I stop pretending to be something small and fragile and human. I force it down. Force control. Force invisibility. Hunters cannot see me. Hunters must never see me. Rowan moves forward despite the wound, despite the silver still embedded in his flesh, despite the poison already spreading through his bloodstream in ways humans designed specifically to cripple creatures stronger than themselves. He doesn’t hesitate. He doesn’t retreat. He advances. The movement is controlled, deliberate, terrifying in its quiet certainty, and the air itself seems to shift around him as his presence expands, filling the narrow alley with something heavier than physical space should allow. Dominance. The nearest hunter reacts too slowly, his training unable to compensate for the reality of facing something that refuses to behave like prey, and Rowan closes the distance instantly, his hand snapping forward with brutal efficiency as claws extend partially from human flesh, not fully transformed but enough to reveal what exists beneath illusion. Metal screams as Rowan grabs the rifle barrel and twists it violently out of alignment, the weapon discharging harmlessly into empty air as the hunter’s composure fractures beneath the sudden loss of control. Rowan’s elbow follows immediately, slamming into the hunter’s throat with devastating force that collapses cartilage and sends him crumpling to the ground in choking panic. Rowan doesn’t watch him fall. He moves again, faster now, driven by instinct sharpened through years of survival in a world that was never meant to allow him to exist. The second hunter attempts to recover, raising his weapon, adjusting stance, adapting—but Rowan doesn’t give him time to complete the action, slamming into him with enough force to crack the wall behind him, concrete fracturing beneath impact. Bone snaps beneath Rowan’s grip as he twists the hunter’s arm beyond structural limits, and the scream that follows echoes sharply through the alley, human vulnerability exposed in ways they have spent decades pretending no longer exist. The hunter collapses seconds later. Silenced. Broken. Gone. Only the lead hunter remains now. He doesn’t panic. He adapts. Humans always adapt. His weapon rises slowly, deliberately, his posture steady despite the bodies at his feet, and I see the exact moment his attention shifts—not toward Rowan, but toward me. My body stills completely. Magic surges upward in violent response, furious and ancient and desperate to remind the world that I am not prey, that I am not fragile, that I am not something humans have the right to erase. Iron burns against my skin, suppressing, restraining, imprisoning everything that would otherwise destroy them where they stand. Rowan moves instantly. He steps between us. Protection. Territory. Possession. The hunter fires again. Silver strikes Rowan’s body with devastating accuracy. His breath catches sharply, involuntary, unavoidable, and for the first time since this began I see the true cost of survival reflected in the way his muscles tense against damage his body cannot immediately heal. He remains standing. Impossible. Defiant. Alive. The hunter reaches for his comm unit, voice already forming the words that will summon reinforcements capable of finishing what he started. Rowan moves faster. Violence interrupts communication. The hunter collapses. Silence follows. But silence is temporary. I hear the engines seconds later. Low. Mechanical. Growing closer. Reinforcements. Extinction arriving. Rowan hears it too. He reaches into his pocket and activates a signal jammer, the low vibration spreading through the air like a fragile shield against inevitable discovery. His eyes find mine. Sharp. Suspicious. Alive with questions he cannot yet ask. “You need to leave,” he says quietly. Not command. Truth. I meet his gaze evenly, refusing to acknowledge the strange tension tightening in my chest at the sight of silver still embedded in his flesh, refusing to acknowledge the reality that he chose to stand between me and death without hesitation. “I survived before you,” I reply. He doesn’t argue. He doesn’t need to. The engines grow louder. Closer. Hunters spreading through the city like infection beneath skin. Rowan turns toward the theater entrance, his movements slower now, controlled despite the poison weakening him from within. He stops. Looks back at me. Waiting. Choice. I hate that he gives it. I hate that I take it. I step into the darkness behind him. The door closes. Hunters flood the alley outside. Searching. Adapting. Hunting. Rowan leans briefly against the wall, his breathing controlled but strained, silver poisoning working through his bloodstream in ways his body cannot immediately overcome. His eyes lift to mine again. “You stayed,” he says. Not accusation. Not expectation. Observation. “For now,” I reply. Temporary survival. Nothing more. Above us, hunters enter the theater. Boots echo across abandoned floors. Closer. Closer. Rowan straightens despite the wound. “They won’t stop,” he says. He’s right. They never stop. His hand closes around my wrist. Warm. Firm. Possessive. And this time— I don’t pull away.
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