Chapter 1: The Echo of a Dying Heart
The snow burned my skin.
Not with heat, but with cold so sharp it cut through my clothes, through my bones, through whatever was left of me. The battlefield stretched in every direction, a frozen sea of crimson and white. The iron smell made me gag. Blood, sweat, and cold smoke mingled, heavy and metallic, biting at my throat. Somewhere in the distance, a horn sounded—but it wasn’t a horn. It was a scream. A howl. The roar of death itself tearing the world apart.
I tried to move. My arms felt like lead. My fingers wouldn’t respond. My vision swam in red and white flashes. And then I felt him.
The wolf. Massive. Silver fur matted with blood and snow, the kind of creature that should not exist outside myths. His chest heaved, slow, deliberate. My hand was tangled in that fur. Tangled as if the wolf and I were one. I pressed closer, my face against him, and felt it—his heartbeat. Heavy. Steady. Slowing. I knew, somehow, that if it stopped, I would stop too.
A rattle cut through the air. Not a word, not a voice, but a metallic chain clinking faintly. My chest tightened. I swallowed, tasting copper. My lips barely moved, but the promise slipped out. I don’t know if it was aloud or just a thought: I won’t leave you this time.
The snow burned. My lungs screamed. My vision tunneled into red. And then… nothing.
I jolted upright.
The apartment was dark. 3:00 AM. My sheets tangled around me like dead hands. My chest ached, sharp, hot—right where the spear had struck me in the dream. I pressed my palm to it, trembling. My fingers were cold, my pulse racing. Not from the nightmare. Not entirely. Something lingered.
A metallic rattle, faint but undeniable, vibrated in my bones. Chain.
I froze. The sound didn’t belong. It shouldn’t exist. And yet… it did.
I sat on the edge of the bed, the carpet scratching my ankles, and tried to breathe. In, out. In, out. My heart felt wrong. Too slow, too fast, too… something else. And then it came: another heartbeat. Not mine. A heavy, rhythmic thump that pressed against my ribcage like a drum buried in snow. Slow. Powerful. Immovable. Familiar.
Impossible.
I swung my legs to the floor, barefoot on the cold wood. My reflection caught me in the mirror across the room. For a second, too brief to analyze fully, my eyes weren’t mine. Not color, not shape. Just… glow. A soft, silver flare under my skin. It vanished before I could blink.
I cursed under my breath, rubbing my eyes. I was awake. I was safe. I was human. And yet…
I wasn’t.
The memory lingered like frostbite. Sharp and persistent. And the chain. The chain rattled somewhere deep inside me. My teeth clenched, but I could still hear it. Like it was calling me. Pulling me. Warning me.
I stood, hands on my knees, rocking slightly. I’m imagining things. That’s what I told myself. A dream. A stupid, violent dream. You’re fine. You’re alive.
But the pain in my chest didn’t lie.
I pressed both hands against it, inhaling. The room smelled faintly of cold air and detergent. Clean, sterile. Nothing like the battlefield. Nothing like him. And yet, every breath reminded me of snow, of iron, of fur.
I moved to the kitchen, flicking on the kettle. The sudden noise made me jump. My body shook as if I’d just run a mile in freezing rain. The chain rattled again, soft, like it was trapped inside my ribcage. I touched my throat instinctively. It felt like a cord coiled around my sternum, tight and unyielding.
I leaned against the counter, gripping the edge. My mind raced.
Seven lives. The phrase flashed somewhere in the edges of my memory. Not my memory. Not mine. But it was mine. And yet it wasn’t.
I shook my head. Ridiculous. Superstitious. Old wives’ tales. My grandmother used to tell me stories about debts paid in blood and souls trapped in contracts. Fairy tales. Bedtime nonsense.
And yet, here I was. Alone. Frozen. My own heartbeat drowning beneath another.
The chain.
I snapped toward the hallway mirror again, and this time I saw it. Faint. A mark on my collarbone, glowing silver under the harsh lamplight. It pulsed faintly, like it had a rhythm. Like a heartbeat. I reached out. My fingers hovered over it. The instant I touched it… it vanished.
Cold, clinical rationality screamed at me. It’s a trick of the light. Stress. Panic attack. Nothing else.
But my gut, the part of me that had survived worse than any logical mind could process, screamed back. No. This isn’t nothing.
I stumbled back to the bedroom, throwing myself onto the bed. The blankets were thin, barely warming me. But I didn’t care. My hands pressed over my chest, feeling that alien heartbeat. Slow, deliberate. Pulling at me. A tether I could not explain.
I forced myself to breathe, counting. One. Two. Three. Four. The phantom pulse aligned. My eyes squeezed shut. The snow. The blood. The wolf. His fur brushing my cheek. That promise. I won’t leave you this time.
And then the thought hit, unbidden and terrifying: I’ve been here before.
Not like a deja vu, not like a memory from yesterday. But… six times before. A sequence of deaths, all familiar, all brutal, all beside him. The wolf. Silas.
I swallowed hard. The name came unbidden to my lips. Silas.
My heart stuttered. That shouldn’t be possible. I didn’t know anyone named Silas. Not here. Not now. Not in my carefully compartmentalized, survival-first, trust-no-one life.
And yet… I felt him. Like a shadow brushing my soul. Like ice and fire all at once.
A gust of wind rattled the window. I shivered. The chain rattled again, inside me, metallic, cruel, inexorable. It wasn’t a sound. It was a threat. A reminder. A countdown.
I tried to push it away. Tried to tell myself I was insane. Tried to tell myself I’d dream it all again tomorrow.
But my chest ached. Sharp. Real. Insistent. The phantom spear wound was no longer just in a dream. The battlefield had bled into my body. Into my present.
I didn’t sleep again that night. I sat on the edge of the bed, knees drawn up, fingers tracing the air where the mark had been. Every so often, I swore I could feel fur brushing my palm, silver, thick, warm. And then it was gone.
The sun would rise soon. The city below me oblivious. Cars honking, the hum of electricity. And yet, I knew, with a certainty that terrified me: I wasn’t just haunted by a dream. I was being hunted by a memory.
A debt. A promise. A chain.
And it wasn’t over.