MasukI stopped at the tunnel exit. The artifact glowed hot against my side like it knew trouble waited ahead. A man stepped out from the shadows between the trees. Older now. Face like mine but carved harder by time. Eyes I thought I’d buried years ago in a grave that never existed.
He smiled. Slow. Familiar. “Miss me?” “Brother?" I said in a low voice. I dropped the artifact on the soft ground and closed the distance in three steps. My arms went around him tight. He hugged me back just as hard. We stood there in the woods like that, two grown men holding on like kids again. “Rylan,” I whispered. My voice cracked. “You’re alive.” He patted my back rough. “Yeah, Jax. I’m here.” Tears stung my eyes. I didn’t care. I hadn’t cried in years, but this broke something open. We pulled apart just enough to look at each other. His hair had gray at the temples. Scars marked his arms. Life hadn’t been kind, but he stood solid. “How?” I asked. “I looked for you. For years. I thought the whole pack got wiped out that night.” Rylan kept one hand on my shoulder like he needed to make sure I was real. “It’s a long story. Come on, let’s walk while we talk. We are too close to Shadowfang walls here, we need to leave this place immediately." We started moving through the trees. I picked up the artifact again and tucked it safe. “Been surviving,” Rylan said after a minute. “Moved around a lot at first. Different territories. Worked odd jobs. Security for smaller packs who didn’t ask questions. I learned to keep my head down.” I glanced sideways. “You look strong. Like you’ve been fighting.” He gave a short laugh. “More than I wanted. Lost friends. Made a few. But mostly kept moving so the past wouldn’t catch up. What about you? Lone wolf life treating you okay?” I shrugged. “Rough. Always looking over my shoulder. The curse made it worse. Nightmares. Weakness when the moon got full. Thought it came from losing everyone.” Rylan nodded slowly. We walked deeper into the woods. Sunlight broke through the leaves in patches. It felt peaceful, but my heart still raced from the shock. “You weren’t the only one who made it,” he said finally. I stopped walking. “What?” He turned to face me. “The day they attacked. Chaos everywhere. Fire. Screams. I grabbed our sister. She was tiny then. Just six years old. Found a narrow gap in the back wall. The old drainage pipe was barely big enough for us. I pushed her through first, then squeezed after. We ran until our legs gave out.” Tears welled up again. I didn’t wipe them. “Lila? She’s alive too?” Rylan smiled softly. “Yeah. Lila. She’s grown now. Tough as nails. We have been stucked together all these years. I raised her best I could. Moved towns when questions got too close. She’s back at our current camp. Helps with supplies. You’d be proud.” I pulled him into another hug. Tighter this time. My chest hurt with how full it felt. “All this time I thought I was alone. Carrying their ghosts. And you two were out here.” “We looked for you too,” he said against my shoulder. “Heard rumors of a black wolf causing trouble. Never dared hope it was you.” We stood like that for a long while. When we finally separated I felt lighter. Like part of me came back. Rylan’s eyes dropped to the artifact I carried. “What’s that? Looks important.” I shifted it in my hands. The carvings caught the light. “This is why I went to Shadowfang in the first place. Stole it from their warehouse. It’s supposed to lift a curse. The one that hit me after I thought the whole family and pack died. Weakness. Pain on full moons. Nightmares that felt too real. I figured if I broke it, maybe I could finally live my normal life.” Rylan listened close as we started walking again. I told him the rest. How I planned the heist carefully. Got in clean but alarms caught me on the way out. The chase through the woods. The fight. Getting captured by Eli. “He took me back to their compound,” I said. “Kept me in his quarters. We talked some. I was trying to find a way out.” I almost mentioned the night we shared. The heat. The bond. The way it felt like more than hate. But I held back. That part still felt too raw. Too confusing. Rylan’s face changed when I said the name. “Elias Crowe? Shadowfang?” “Yeah,” I said. “That’s him.” His expression shifted fast. Rage filled his eyes. They glowed bright gold. Wolf close to the surface. He stopped walking and grabbed my arm. “That bastard.” I put my hand over his. “Hey. Easy. What’s the matter? Talk to me.” Rylan took a deep breath. His grip loosened but the anger stayed. “Eli convinced his father to wipe us out. Back then he wasn’t Alpha yet, but he had the old man’s ear. Whispered about threats. Said our pack was getting too strong. Convinced them we’d turn on Shadowfang soon. Pushed for the raid. Made sure it happened fast and dirty. No survivors planned.” I listened. Every word landed like a stone in my gut. He went on. Details about messages intercepted years later. How Eli had been ambitious. Wanted to prove himself. Used fear to climb higher in the pack. How our family got labeled enemies on his word. The forest around us felt colder suddenly. Hearing it, hatred rose from deep in my mind. It started small then flooded everything. Eli. The man who pinned me in the SUV. Who touched me like I mattered. Who I let inside me last night. He was the reason. The one who set the fire that took my parents. The reason I grew up alone thinking I had no one. My hands shook around the artifact. The bond twisted inside me now. Pulling one way. Burning hate the other. I thought of his voice in the dark. His hands. The way he said my name. All lies? Rylan watched me close. “You okay?” I didn’t answer right away. The woods stretched quiet ahead. Freedom waited. But behind me the compound still stood. Eli inside it. My mate. My enemy. Everything I thought I knew cracked wide open. And I didn’t know which way to run.Ryan remained frozen on the floor. The doctor’s words refused to leave his mind.“You must kill him.”His eyes stayed locked on Jax’s unconscious body on the table. The slow rise and fall of his brother’s chest was the only sign he was still barely alive. Ryan lowered his head. His hands trembled.He had finally found his little brother after believing he was dead for years. Now someone was asking him to take that life away with his own hands.He couldn’t do it. He just simply couldn’t. Mike stood quietly beside him. He didn’t interrupt. He knew this wasn’t a decision anyone else could make.The room stayed silent.Ryan took a deep breath. Then another. He slowly stood to his feet.The doctor watched him carefully. “Have you made your choice?” the man asked.Ryan nodded. “I have.”The doctor waited. Ryan looked at Jax before speaking. “Save him.”The doctor frowned. “Ryan…”“I said save him.”The old man sighed. “You don’t understand what you’re asking.”Ryan’s eyes remained fixed on
The hallway of Beacon Hills High had fallen silent. The loud crashes that had shaken the building minutes ago were gone. Broken lockers hung open like broken jaws. Glass covered the floor in sharp, glittering pieces. Chunks of concrete and splintered desks lay scattered everywhere. Deep claw marks ran across the walls, some reaching almost to the ceiling. The place looked less like a school and more like the aftermath of a war. Jax laid down in the middle of this destruction. His body didn’t move. Blood had soaked through his torn clothes. Fresh claw marks covered his chest, shoulders, and arms. It was deep and making it hard for him to heal. His breathing was weak and uneven, each breath a quiet struggle. A few minutes later, the sound of a Jeep echoed through the empty parking lot. The vehicle came to a sudden stop. Mike jumped out first. Ryan followed right behind him. Both of them stared at the damaged entrance in complete shock. “What… happened here?” Mike whispered, eye
The night held its breath. This was it. The clash that could change everything. Our bodies were about to collide. The fight for survival was starting right now.I didn’t know where the courage came from. Maybe it was fear. Maybe it was anger. Whatever it was, I didn’t back down. Deucalion’s claws crashed against mine in midair. The force exploded through my arms. Pain shot across my shoulders before I even realized what had happened. Then I was flying. My back slammed against the road with enough force to crack the concrete beneath me. A sharp gasp escaped my mouth. Before I could get up, Deucalion was already above me. His massive fist came down. I rolled away just in time. The ground exploded where my head had been. Chunks of concrete scattered across the street like shrapnel. I jumped to my feet, breathing hard. My heart hammered against my ribs. My claws stretched farther. My muscles burned. Everything inside me screamed that I wasn’t ready for this fight. But running wasn’t a
Lila was about to shift when I held her immediately. My hand gripped her arm tight, fingers digging in just enough to stop her. “Calm down,” I told her, my voice low but urgent. “We were being chased, remember? We have no time for this. We can’t stop here. Ryan is back there fighting for us. We have to keep moving or everything he is doing will be for nothing.”Just then hard footsteps started approaching us. They sounded heavy and fast on the ground, like something big was closing in. We could all hear it because of our sharp hearing. The sound made my skin crawl. Each step seemed to shake the pavement a little. I could feel the vibration through my shoes. My heart beat faster in my chest. The air around us felt thicker, like the night itself was holding its breath.Eli quickly asked me, “What’s that? What’s coming Jax!? Tell me what is happening here. I came to find you and now this?”“RUN!! NOW!” I shouted at him, my voice echoing down the street. “Don’t ask questions, just go. We
After Ryan told me to run, I quickly grabbed Lila by the hand and began running through the house. My heart pounded like a drum in my chest. The back window was our only quick way out. I punched through the glass with my fist, I barely even felt any pain. Glass shattered everywhere, falling like rain on the floor. I helped Lila over the broken frame first, holding her steady so she wouldn’t get cut. “Careful,” I said. Then I crossed over myself, landing on the cool grass outside. I felt free on the inside like a heavy weight has been lifted off me. Then we started running as fast as we could.The creature burst into the house through the front door right then. Wood splintered and flew across the living room. The beast was massive, fur dark and eyes glowing red with anger. Ryan turned fast, no time to think. He had to charge through it to protect Jax and his sister who were already on the run. Ryan shifted into a wolf quickly, bones cracking loud. He leaped at the creature with everyth
I knelt fast beside him. “Mike? Wake up.” This was bad. Mike saw too much. And the changes inside me felt stronger now. The bell rang far down the hall. Class was starting. I shook his shoulder again, heart racing. This was bad. Really bad. If anyone walked in now, they would see everything. I had to wake him up fast. I rushed to the sink, turned the cold water on full, and cupped my hands to catch it. The water felt icy against my skin. I splashed it straight on his face. Drops ran down his cheeks and soaked his shirt. He didn’t stir at first. I splashed more, this time shaking his shoulder hard with my other hand. “Come on, Mike,” I whispered urgently. He still didn't wake up, so I shouted His name. “Mike!” Then his eyelids fluttered after what felt like forever. Water dripped from his hair onto the floor. He blinked a few times, confused, then his eyes focused on me. Fear hit him hard. He scrambled back against the wall, pushing himself away from me as fast as he could. His back







