LOGINThe tires screeched as Alex pulled the car into a concealed clearing, far from the packed ground. Scarlett jumped out; her head was pounding since her run-in encounter with Lucas. The night air was cool, but the rush of adrenaline kept her warm.
Rachel staggered out of the car, gasping for breath. "That was way too close for comfort, Scarlett," she panted. "We just barely made it out without their noticing."
Scarlett's fists were dug into her body when she tried to will her heart to evict the elephant that seemed to be having a disco in there. She watched the look of shock on Lucas's face, and she couldn't help the bitter satisfaction that filled her. But there lay beneath it all something else, something she did not want to admit—guilt.
"I know," Scarlett muttered, trying to shove the sensation of doom right out of her. "But we did it. We hit them where it hurts."
Alex was busy offloading the purloined supplies. His movements were measured and emotionless. "Lucas won't let this slide," he volunteered calmly, clearly but firmly. "He'll come after us. Hard."
Scarlett nodded, her jaw hardening. "Let him. This is just the beginning. He needs to know what losing everything feels like."
Rachel watched her, and in her eyes, concern flickered. "Are you seriously okay with this, Scarlett? Lucas. he'd been your friend once."
"Friend." Scarlet's heart twisted at the word, but she forced herself to keep on track. "That was a long time ago, Rachel. He made his choice, and now I'm making mine."
Rachel nodded, though doubt stayed there in her eyes. "Just please don't let this consume you, okay? I don't want to lose you to this revenge."
Scarlett didn't say a thing, turning instead to Alex, who was already collecting the supplies. "Get those to the safe house," she instructed, "and make sure to have them secure."
Alex listened when he nodded lightly and started putting the items into a smaller, tucked-away cache. At this, Scarlett found her gaze drawn to the dark, her mind aloof once more to Lucas—how he had seemed when looking into her eyes at that discovery: anger, betrayal, and something else she could not put a finger on, his constant haunting.
Her chest tightened from two emotions that were pulling in different directions. It had been so long that she had been desperate to have the time to get even, and now, all of a sudden, it felt different than the aching in her mind had concocted. It was messy, complicated, and there were things boiling that she had not been prepared to face.
But it was now too late to retrace herself. She had entered upon this, and she was going to see it through to the end.
---
At first light, Scarlett stood on a hill above town. The embellished terrain lay beneath her breast like a map lain over the face of the land since the sun came, wrapping the land in golden blankets—heavy laden Scarlett's heart with what this place used to mean to her.
Home. She had loved this place before everything went sour, before Lucas had betrayed her. The people in it she used to love, but now it was nothing more than a battlefield.
Lucas had spent the night at the safe house, tossing and turning, not able to fall asleep. Each time he closed his eyes, he saw Scarlett's face, the disbelief in her eyes as she had entered.
"Scarlett."
The woman turned toward Rachel approaching. Her face was pale, and it was clear something was wrong. "We've got trouble; Lucas's organization is rolling out against us," she said, through tightened vocal cords.
Scarlett's heart raced, but she had to get out of her own head. "How many?" she asked tensely.
"Enough. They know we took their supplies. They are out for blood."
Scarlett gulped down the lump forming in her throat; for now, her mind raced. This she had thought would come way too soon. This was pacing too fast for her. She had expected him to be cautious and choreograph his move—damn, it seemed she had really underestimated him.
"We have to move. Gather everyone. We can't let them catch us off guard." There was a sharp edge to her voice, the timbre interlaced with qualities of urgency slicing through the shot of fear, quieting her insides.
Rachel nodded and scampered down the hill to where the remainder of their small group had clustered. Scarlett turned back toward the town below, her heart pounding with a mixture of fear and determination. She had wanted to hurt Lucas, to make him suffer, but now that the battle was coming to her, she wasn't sure she was ready for it.
But ready, willing or not, it was on the way. The fight was on, and she could not find a means of escape.
By the time Scarlett and her group had finally clambered up to the edge of the mountain on the fringes of the forest, the sun was high in the sky, on its way down—it was where they'd make their stand. It was a small band, outnumbered and outgunned, but Scarlett wasn't about to let that stop her; she had come too far to back down now.
Rachel stood, tense and alert, close beside her while Alex settled himself on the other side, his face unreadable. She could feel the weight of their expectation bearing down on her like a foregone conclusion, the pressure with which to lead them through this.
Suddenly, from deep within, a rustle sounded, and Scarlett tensed, her heart in her chest almost sprinting into her throat. There was Ethan—only Ethan, one of Lucas's closest friends. He stormed out from deep in the bush; his face looking quite ugly, cold gray eyes running over everybody.
"Ethan," Scarlett said, the tone wary. "What brings you here?"
He towered over her, his expression granite-like. "Lucas knows you're here, Scarlett. He told me to come talk: maybe try and make this all right before it goes past the point of no return."
Scarlett narrowed her eyes at him. "Make it right? Did you come to negotiate this for us?"
Ethan shook his head. "No, Scarlett. He told me to give you the last chance to leave. He won't harm you if you let him go. It's what you force him to do."
Scarlett's chest tightened with anger. "He has already hurt me, Ethan. He took away everything from me, and now he wants to play nice?"
His eyes softened, but only just. "You don't understand, Scarlett. Lucas. He's been through a lot. He didn't have a choice."
"There's always a choice," Scarlett lashed back, her voice quivering with emotion. "And he made his. Now I'm making mine."
Ethan drew out a long, tired breath. "Well, then that's that. But keep in mind, Scarlett. Lucas never did want this."
He wheeled and strode back into the treeline as Scarlett stood there with her heart pounding, the centripetal anger, fear, and something desperately close to regret.
Rachel touched her arm. "Are you okay?"
Scarlett nodded, her throat tight. "Yeah. Let's just get ready."
---
The moment his pack could be seen, tension aroused on the field. Her heart raced on seeing them approaching almost noiselessly, moving in rhythm. In the lead was Lucas, the sharp eyes on her blue fire.
Time seemed to hold its breath for just a moment. Scarlett could feel how he stared at her, how tangible the fight was in his eyes. Not that she could let that matter; she still had work to do.
She breathed deeply, rising to signal her group members to get ready on their toes. Lucas stopped feet away from her, expressionless. They stood there for a second—one facing the other, with the words left un-liturgy between the spaces.
Then without any alert, Lucas dashed forward—battle on.
There was something in his blows he could not describe; it just felt that Scarlett met his attacks without reluctance, coming into collision with his strokes totally, with the bodies of them finding coordination in a manner that tremored the ground. She felt the energy in his moves, the pure force that was him.
But Scarlett wasn't the same girl she used to be. She had been made, forged even, and she was not going to let Lucas take her down. She fought back with everything she had in her. Her claws flashing in the sunlight, going for him.
Lucas didn't let up, being persistent with his attacks, which were ferocious and measured. Scarlett could feel the pressure in her muscles, exhaustion creeping up from behind, but she wouldn't quit now. This was what she had trained for, what she had been dreaming of for years.
But as it dragged on and on, something changed. It wasn't until the attacks began to falter in Lucas's gaze, the hesitation of his movement, that Scarlett could quantify what he was doing. He didn't try to beat her with all his will, and the stubborn part of her decided she should probably be angry about it.
"Fight me, Lucas!" she screamed. Her voice had gone raspy from emotion. "Fight me like you mean it!"
It was almost as though discomfort was flashing within his eyes, but Lucas said nothing, continuing to twist away, his breath uneven, gaze still locked to hers.
"Scarlett, please," he rasped. "This is not what I want."
The words hit Scarlett like a blow to the stomach, and for one moment she staggered. But the memories flooded her, all the betrayal, loss, and pain of her past, and she hardened up her resolve.
"It is what I want," she spat, flying at him with renewed rage.
But before she reached him, Lucas was too quick with his manning technique for her eyes to catch it. She stumbled as she plowed forward: her own weight threw her to the ground, but before she could get to her feet, he had her smashed to the ground, his body weight over hers.
Scarlett struggled, her heart racing with a mixture of fear and frustration. She felt his breath against her neck, heard the racing beat of his heart, but no matter how hard.
For several seconds, no one moved.Scarlett kept staring at the engraved stone resting in her palm, her thumb tracing the rough edges while her mind struggled to make sense of the message carved beneath it.Don't trust the guide.The words were uneven, as though they had been scratched into the stone in haste. Tiny flakes of dust still clung to the grooves, and one corner was stained with Kael's blood.He had not written those words to frighten anyone.He had written them because he believed he might never have another chance.Lucas stepped beside Scarlett."Let me see."She handed him the stone carefully.He examined it for several moments before passing it to Ethan."The writing is definitely Kael's."The Black Fang Alpha remained kneeling beside the abandoned cloak.He hadn't spoken since recognizing it.Scarlett watched him quietly.Leadership often demanded impossible choices, but there was another burden few people talked about.Watching good people disappear under your command.
The strip of black cloth rested in Lucas's hand like a silent warning.No one spoke.The embroidered crest of the Black Fang Pack was unmistakable, but it wasn't the symbol that unsettled Scarlett. It was the dark stain soaking into the fabric.The blood hadn't dried completely.Whoever had worn it hadn't been gone for long.The forest around them suddenly felt different. A few moments earlier it had been nothing more than another stretch of woodland separating them from Moonwater Lake. Now every tree seemed capable of hiding danger, every shadow appeared deeper than before, and every gust of wind sounded like footsteps just beyond their reach.The Black Fang Alpha accepted the torn cloth from Lucas.His fingers closed around it carefully, almost respectfully.Scarlett noticed the subtle change in his expression. Until this moment, he had carried himself like a leader focused on a mission. Now something far more personal had entered his eyes.Concern.Not for the map.Not for the cons
The sound of approaching horses rolled across the valley in slow, steady rhythms, carried by the morning breeze. Every member of the group instinctively fell silent, listening as the hoofbeats grew clearer with each passing moment.Scarlett carefully folded Elena's letter and slipped it inside her jacket before closing the wooden box. Whatever happened next, she refused to leave behind anything her mother had protected with her life.Lucas noticed the movement and gave a slight nod."Good."His voice remained barely above a whisper."If they've followed us this far, we assume they know this place."Scarlett agreed.The hidden compartment beneath the stones was still open. Anyone arriving now would immediately know someone had discovered Elena's first secret.The advantage of surprise was already gone.The Black Fang Alpha looked toward Ethan."How many?"Ethan had climbed halfway up a rocky slope to gain a better view of the valley. Remaining low, he watched the ridge through the bran
No one reached for the wooden box immediately.The sound of the ancient mechanism settling back into silence still echoed faintly across the valley, and every wolf understood that a single careless decision could destroy something Elena had hidden for more than twenty years.Scarlett stepped closer, unable to take her eyes off the weathered box resting inside the stone compartment.Its surface was worn smooth by time, yet remarkably intact. There were no elaborate carvings or jeweled decorations, only a small crescent engraved into the center of the lid. The symbol matched the one hidden inside her necklace and the markings carved throughout the forest.Her mother had left her signature. Not for the world, for her.Lucas knelt beside the opening without touching the box."What do you think?"Scarlett exhaled slowly."I think she expected me to find it."A faint smile crossed Lucas's face."Then she probably expected you to know how to open it."The statement lingered in Scarlett's tho
The forest seemed to hold its breath.Scarlett stared at the carved words etched into the ancient tree, her pulse quickening as the meaning settled over the group.You are late.The message wasn't old.That much was obvious.The cuts in the bark were fresh. Small fragments of wood still clung to the edges of the carving, and the scent of newly exposed timber lingered in the cool morning air.Someone had been here recently.Very recently.Lucas stepped closer to examine the symbol above the message.The moonlight filtering through the canopy caught the grooves in the bark, making the markings appear almost alive."It hasn't been here long."Ethan nodded in agreement."Hours."The answer immediately darkened everyone's expressions.If the estimate was correct, whoever left the message was ahead of them by only a small margin.Not days.Not weeks.Hours.Scarlett's fingers tightened around the metallic strip hidden inside her pocket. The same symbols, the same pattern, the same language
The stranger's warning lingered in the clearing long after he finished speaking."Someone else has already found the second piece."Scarlett immediately disliked how confident he sounded.Not because she trusted him.Because throughout every confrontation, he had rarely spoken without purpose. Every statement seemed carefully chosen, designed to influence the people around him. Sometimes he lied. Sometimes he manipulated. Yet the most dangerous moments were when he simply revealed enough truth to create doubt.The possibility that another piece of the map had already been discovered changed everything.What had begun as a search was becoming a race.A dangerous one.Lucas stepped closer to Scarlett."We need to move."His voice remained calm, but urgency lingered beneath it.Scarlett nodded.For once, there was little room for debate. Every hour mattered now.The silver-haired woman turned toward Aldric."How long would it take to reach Moonwater Lake if we leave immediately?"The old
The forest had never felt this silent before.Not the peaceful kind of silence that settled over the trees after snowfall or the quiet calm that followed a hunt. This silence pressed inward, heavy and watchful, carrying a strange feeling beneath it that sat against my skin and refused to leave.Mor
The laughter disappeared as quickly as it had come.Not a single sound followed it afterward. No movement. No shifting branches. No footsteps retreating deeper into the woods. The forest simply returned to silence as though nothing had happened at all, but silence somehow felt worse.Around me, eve
The scout's words stayed lodged inside my chest long after the commotion spread through the pack house.They were asking for you.Around us, wolves moved quickly across the clearing while patrol groups gathered near the front entrance. Voices overlapped one another in low conversation as weapons we
Sleep did not return after that voice reached me from the trees.I stayed standing near the porch long after Emily had gone inside, my eyes fixed on the darkness ahead. The forest stood still beneath the moonlight, yet something about it felt wrong. The wind had died. The leaves barely moved. Even







