The Bite of Fate
The night air was thick with the scent of damp earth and pine. The moon hung high, casting silver beams through the canopy of trees, illuminating the figures moving silently through the underbrush.
Elara tightened her grip on the silver dagger at her hip. She could hear the hushed breaths of her fellow hunters around her, waiting for her signal. They had tracked this group of werewolves for days, waiting for the perfect moment to strike. Now, as the creatures laughed and spoke among themselves in the clearing ahead, their guards down, Elara knew it was time.
She raised two fingers, signaling the attack.
Like shadows slipping through the trees, the hunters moved forward. Elara didn’t wait for hesitation, she never did. She launched herself into the fight, her blade flashing in the moonlight as she lunged at the largest of the wolves, their leader.
He turned just in time, his golden eyes locking onto hers in shock before she slammed into him, sending them both crashing to the forest floor. The others had no time to react before the rest of her hunters engaged them, the sounds of clashing weapons and snarling beasts filling the air.
Elara straddled the wolf leader’s chest, raising her dagger to strike, but he rolled at the last second, throwing her off balance. She twisted, landing on her feet and spinning back toward him. He was already up, crouched low in a defensive stance.
“You’ve made a mistake,” he growled, his voice smooth yet edged with warning.
Elara sneered. “The only mistake was letting your guard down.”
She lunged again, this time feinting left before twisting right, her blade slicing through the air. He dodged, but not fast enough, her dagger grazed his arm, leaving a thin, bloody trail. He snarled and retaliated, his speed nearly inhuman.
Elara barely ducked in time as his claws slashed the air above her head. She rolled, springing up behind him and kicking his legs out from under him. He hit the ground hard, and before he could recover, she was on him again, pressing her blade to his throat.
She leaned in, breathing hard. “You lose.”
But before she could make the final strike, his body moved instinctively, his head jerking up, his mouth snapping shut around her wrist.
Pain.
Searing, burning, white-hot pain exploded through her arm as his fangs punctured her skin. It felt as if the fire itself was sinking into her veins, spreading like a venomous wildfire through her entire body.
Elara screamed.
But she wasn’t the only one.
The werewolf beneath her stiffened. A strangled cry tore from his throat, his golden eyes going wide with shock and pain. His entire body trembled violently beneath her, his face twisting as if something unseen had taken hold of him.
Then, just as suddenly as the pain came, he collapsed.
Elara barely had time to process what had happened. One moment he was writhing, his voice mixing with hers in agony, and the next, he was completely still.
Her breath came in short gasps, her body weak from the lingering burn of his bite. She clutched her arm, staring down at the unconscious werewolf beneath her. The world around her blurred, the sounds of battle fading into the background.
Something wasn’t right.
She had fought werewolves before. She had killed them before. But never had one reacted like this. Never had a bite done… whatever this was.
And then, she saw it.
A mark.
There, just above his shoulder, hidden beneath the torn remains of his shirt, was a dark symbol carved into his skin. A crest she had only ever heard whispered in legends.
The mark of royalty.
Elara’s blood ran cold.
This wasn’t just any werewolf.
She had just captured a royal wolf.
The Weight of the Moment
Her body screamed for her to move, to get away, but she couldn’t tear her gaze from him. He looked so… normal like this. His dark hair fell over his forehead, his breathing was steady, and his features surprisingly calm despite the chaos around them.
A prince.
A prince had bitten her.
A sickening realization washed over her.
She had been bitten.
She pressed a shaking hand to the wound on her wrist, her skin still burning where his teeth had sunk in. The stories flashed through her mind, the warnings, the fear, the certainty.
A bite from a werewolf meant only one thing.
She was turning.
Panic rose in her throat, but she swallowed it down, forcing herself to think. She could fix this. There had to be a cure. If anyone could stop this before it was too late, it was the hunters.
She had to get back to them.
Now.
Gritting her teeth against the growing pain, she forced herself to her feet, yanking a length of rope from her belt. If this werewolf was truly a prince, then he was more valuable alive than dead.
And if he had done this to her…
He was going to fix it.
No matter what it took.