The fire in the great hall of Wolvington Manor crackled and hissed, throwing shadows on stone walls that had endured for centuries as mute witnesses to whispered bargains and unspoken sins.
“Your silence condemns you, William,” Rowan Hale said at last, his voice low, contained, but with the weight of inevitability.
Across from him, William Wolvington sat rigidly in the high-backed chair that had belonged to his father, and his father’s father, before him. He was every inch a son of a great dynasty and looked as such. With broad shoulders and dark hair, William had the arrogant bearing of a man born to command, but his facial expression looked like what was carved from ice.
“I am not condemned,” William replied. His voice was under control, but a flicker of something unrestrained passed over his face. “I am reluctant. There is a difference.”
Rowan leaned forward, his elbows resting on the oak table between them. His eyes, sharp and wolf-like even in the glow of firelight, held no patience for denial. “Reluctance has cost this family enough. The bloodline thins, the curse tightens, and the moors are restless. You’ve heard them at night. You’ve heard the wolves.” The word hung between them. Wolves. But they both knew it meant something more.
William’s jaw tightened. “I hear them,” he admitted, his gaze drifting to the tall windows where frost had drawn itself in patterns. “How could I not? They never stop. But to wed some girl for the manor’s sake? That is not salvation, Rowan. It is another chain.”
Rowan’s lips twisted, but it was not a smile. “A chain can hold off a beast. Or have you forgotten what happens when it breaks free?”
William scowled at him. “You dare remind me?”
“I must,” Rowan said flatly. “It is my duty as your steward. As your friend and your protector. As the one who scrubs the blood from the stones after you ----”.
“Enough!” The word whipped from William like a whip, echoing off the empty hall. There was quiet, but for the fire, for a while. Then William sighed, his face easing into exhaustion. “I will not be pushed into this.”
Rowan examined him. “You think I haven’t seen the transformation in you? Each blood moon stamps us. You are not immune, William. None of us is. Yet the Wolvingtons survive because they bind the curse through the old ways; through marriage, through the bloodlines. Without it, we lose everything. The manor. The lands. The people who depend on us.” He lowered his voice. “We lose ourselves also.”
William rose abruptly, walking to the fireplace. His shadow loomed on the walls, stretched and twisted in the leaping fire. “And what if I do not wish to tie myself to another?”
“Then the beast will bind you.” Rowan’s words fell like stones.
There was silence. The kind of silence that rang with truth no one wanted to say.
At last, William turned around, his eyes blazing. “And if I do marry, then what? I saddle myself with a stranger. I condemn her to this house. To me. To ----” His voice choked off, his throat shutting down.
“To a prison of secrets,” Rowan finished for him. “Yes. But it is better than condemning her to your hunger.”
William’s fists tightened. He looked younger then, more vulnerable, a man shattered beneath the yoke of destiny. “You speak as if you know what that hunger is.”
Rowan’s eyes fluttered, not to the side, but inward. His composure fractured for the first time that night. “I know enough.” Their eyes locked, unspoken secrets stretched between them like barbed wire.
Finally, Rowan stood tall and unyielding. “The Ashfords still cling to their name, though their estate is now in shambles. They are of the old bloodline. Elaine Ashford is the eldest daughter, still unwed. She will do.”
William’s laugh was harsh, without humor. “You make it sound like buying a horse at the market.”
“It is not a decision. It is survival,” Rowan replied, his tone inflexible. “You may not wish for this marriage, William, but it will happen. It must happen. I will see it through.”
William’s face twisted, half in anger, half in despair. “You speak as if you are the master here.”
“No.” Rowan stepped forward, his voice dropping to an almost reverent whisper. “I am the hound who keeps the wolf at bay. And I can sense when the leash is slipping.”
The fire popped as if in agreement. William turned to go, his shoulders tense, his silence more ominous than words.
Rowan let the silence stretch and then delivered the final blow. “The blood moon falls in less than a fortnight. You will be wedded before that time. If not ---” His eyes glinted in the firelight. “---then we will all be listening to the wolves within these walls.”
A howl, distant, echoed in at the window, a whisper only, but a chilling one, carried across the misty moors. It did not sound like an animal. It sounded like sorrow, like rage, like hunger that could never be sated. William’s face paled, his lips parting, but no sound was made. He placed a hand on the table as if to brace himself against something unseen.
Rowan’s gaze did not leave his face. “You know it is true.”
The howl came again, closer now, vibrating through the glass windows, resonating in their chests like a warning bell. Rowan stepped back into the shadow, his voice low and commanding. “Choose a bride, William. Or the curse will choose for you.”
The fire sputtered, casting the hall into a deeper shadow. William stared into the darkness, his heart racing in his ears, the howl merging with something low, something inside him. Like something trying to get out. William was already feeling the curse stir inside him, the howls both outside and within, foreshadowing the danger to come. Remembering Rowan’s set ultimatum, to marry Elaine, or let the beast claim him.
And at that moment, for the first time, he was afraid Rowan’s warning had come too late.