My eyes open unwieldily, and for a single second I can pretend
that none of this has happened. I feel my heart release its tightclench inside my chest because in that space of time, I am home.In just a moment, I will break through the forestry and bewelcomed by my father, laugh with Sage as I tell him about themost absurd dream. The nightmare in which I became a panther.An enemy. Hunted.But then I see that scars of all those memories surrounding me.Imprints of history, actions, life. The rotten smell of death smacksme in the chest; a pungent, foul odour that has bile rising in mythroat. Bloody remnants of small animals surround my bare, nakedbody. Light shines through the cracks between overhangingbranches, and I know morning has risen.There's a terrible sensation crawling along my spine. That instinctwithin that tells me there are eyes watching me with a scrutinisingheaviness I cannot shake. One step, one crunch of dead leaves,and a body reveals itself. Others begin to follow like a pattern hastriggered, and I'm surrounded by two men and a single woman. Ifreeze where I lie, and I do not cover my body. Cowering awayfrom their gaze will only suggest fear and weakness.I must be strong, for the sake of my survival.A man with auburn hair catches my attention first as he loomstoward me, dagger held in his hand and suspicion etched acrosshis face. Though his stature menaces above me, the thing thattruly has me staring is the scar on his throat. Three clear, deepslashes on the left side – this man will definitely not be eager tohave the daughter of the Lupina leader on his territory."Who are you?"I don't look at the others though I feel them all around me, eachawaiting my answer. Who am I? Even I do not know anymore. I'veheard identity crisis is quite a common thing with teenage girls,but this was ridiculous. A shuffle behind me – I dodge a blow Iknow is coming, rolling backwards and latching onto the arm thatdared try to hit me. An automatic instinct of defence, an incrediblyidiotic one at that.A pair of hands grab my arms then, yanking them behind my back.Pain spirals throughout the socket of my shoulder but I restrainthe groan. It's the woman that has me now, I can see her vibrantred hair hanging down above me. Suddenly, the cool touch of metalbites at the skin of my neck."Let's just kill her, Godric," the woman hisses. The man with thescar leans in and meticulously scans my face. I hold my breath andgrit my teeth together as I weed the fear out of my body, eventhough I am millimetres from certain death. A younger man stepsinfront of me then. The breath I have been holding catches in mythroat in that moment, and I almost suffocate.With raven-hair so dark and opaque eyes that imprint itself onto mymind, it's clear this man does not belong in the grasps of morninglight. He is a creature of the night, with danger burning like a redhaze in the depths of those pupils."Fiesty thing, isn't she?" Godric questions the other man, whodoesn't seem amused by the comment. Fire flashes in my eyes, aloathe I cannot fight or weed out. It may be my detriment, the onething that leads me to my own demise. I can't forget the eighteenyears of my life that I've spent learning to hate the Pantera, thehistory of all their monstrous acts against my clan.But it is not my clan any longer.
"He asked you a question, wolf," the woman spits mockingly. Ican't take my eyes off the man before me, the one who I do notknow yet somehow feel chilled by his presence. He shakes hishead slowly."She is no wolf," he says with a voice that falls as liquid honey androlls like thunder. Godric leans back, and I can almost touch theatmosphere as it grows so thick from those spoken words. Theraven-haired man won't cease staring at me, and the only thoughtthat erupts in my mind is that he will kill me."Human?" Godric asks.Dubiety fills the Raven, that slight shake of the head puzzling theminds of the others. He inhales my scent, shutting his eyes as itallows to travel throughout his body. It is my moment to speak andalready I can feel the words corrupting the world."My name is Kadence Riley."A sharp intake of air sounds from the woman pressing a blade tomy throat, meanwhile Godric simply hangs his jaw open inastonishment. There is confusion in the Raven's eyes, but anundeniable curiosity which he hides well behind those black orbs.His gaze finally leaves mine as he quickly flicks it up towards thered-headed woman. He nods once, and it is then I feel a heavysmack to my temple.I'm drowning, drowning, drowning...Until the sea of unconsciousness consumes me whole.* * *Voices bounce and blur together. A haze of sound, rising vowel byvowel as they fly freely through my mind. It's chaos inside, until anelastic band snaps and draws me back to reality. And so, for thesecond time today, I wake. This time I do not wake to light butdarkness and a throbbing ache throughout my skull. My eyesflicker open lethargically to stone walls, distorted faces and a cold,dampness to the air."She's waking up," a familiar voice says above me. Image becomescrisp until I see Godric, the woman, and the raven-haired manaccompanied by an older, stocky brute with a gold pendanthanging from his neck. I recognise it at once; the Leader's prize.From what I've learned about the Pantera, they do not chooseleaders based on blood ties. The clan's loyalty to their master isborn from fear, though at any moment one could challenge him forthe position.That pendant is a marking of challenges that have been won, andeach battle ended a single man's life. Though judging by the manypale scars etched across his body and the darkness to his eyes,this leader has killed many. My mother might be included in thatnumber, the thought churns my stomach as loathe seeps in onceagain.Fight it.I try to lean forward but realise that I am seated on a chair with myhands bound by rope. A prisoner, I huff. My eyes scan the roomand I wonder where it is that I am. Underground? There's a chill tothe air, I can taste the icy bitterness falling on my tongue."And you're sure this is the daughter of Aaron Riley? This twig?"the Leader snorted with a patronizing smile etched across his face.My own lips curved mockingly"If I'm so harmless, then why am I tied up?" I reply. Godric laughs,but not before the brute flashes him a deathly glare."Raegan." He nods his head at the Raven, and it is then I finally canplace a name to this cold stranger. Last time I saw a nod like that Iended up smacked across my temple and diving intounconsciousness. Raegan stalked towards me then, peering intomy eyes with distaste and bitterness. I don't shy away from hisgaze, won't give into the temptation to cower away in fear.Because in truth, I am afraid. I do not want to die, I do not want myfinal memories to be that of cold, callous eyes, or the turningbacks of my Clan as they disregard me into a life of being hunted."Keep your mouth shut," Raegan whispers harshly as he throws a
fist against my face. Red clouds my vision with a searing hate thatpulsates along my spine. My entire body is thrown by the force,and the crack of bone against bone. I can taste blood in my mouthat once, which I quickly spit out, glaring into the eyes of Raeganvenomously."Get other people to do your dirty work, is that it?"Shut up, shut up, shut up Kadence. I can't stop the words fromspilling from my lips, it's a habit of defiance that will not break. Inthe end, it may kill me."The bitch has a mouth, Alarik. Gotta give her that much," Godricmutters. Alarik fumbled his pendant then, considering Godric'swords."Can we just kill her already?" the red-head woman whines."Shut up, Orla," Godric snaps.My eyes fall on Raegan then, who almost blends into the darknessas others bicker around him. He doesn't look at anyone, but I cansee a thousand emotions spreading across the angles of his face,buried in the shadow casting over it. His mind is a tickingclockwork, a stream of mechanics turning and turning. And Icannot place a single one."What should we do with you, wolf?" Alarik stands before me,kneeling down as he reached eye-level. He wipes a hand over hisshaven head, scratching his palm against his stubble as heponders the question. Under a low-hanging light, I can see that oneof his eyes differ from the other. A jagged scar travels from hiseyelid down to his cheekbone, another battle mark no doubt. Whilethe Lupina clan certainly has scars, they paled in comparison toGodric and Alarik."I am not a wolf."Godric nods then, "Yes, Raegan told me that bit. You see, though itfills me with joy knowing the Rileys are probably turning in theirgraves right now at the thought that one of their own is in fact apanther, you're leaving me in quite a predicament.""If my people knew of your existence, then they would be begin toquestion exactly how it is you are the way you are. Pantera andLupina... mating? " He reaches out to brush a strand of hair frommy face, and I recoil from the touch as I would to poison."It's disgusting." His hand falls and that gaze turns ice-cold. Asinister smile creeps up on Orla's lips before she releases acackle. My jaw and fists clench in rage."I bet she has a lot of information we could use," Godric offers.Panic fills me at once, though I knew it would eventually comedown to this. Turning in my clan's secrets, my family's, in order tolive a little longer? Sage's words echo in my mind. You must dowhat you can to survive, at all costs. No matter what it takes, youhave to promise me you will try to live.My Clan might've turned their back on me, but Sage never did. Mysister was innocent in all of this, can I simply throw away all oursecrets and risk her safety?"She won't tell us anything willingly. Look at her, she hates ourkind, and she's still loyal to the wolves," Alarik replies."Exactly, so why are we wasting our time with the bitch? She hasno use to us, let's just kill her already," Orla takes a dagger out andlicks her lips as if I am nothing but prey to her. Raegan leansagainst the stone wall and rolls his eyes."I'd like to see you say that when I'm not tied up," I mutter,daggers and fire flashing in my eyes towards Orla. To my surpriseand Orla's annoyance, Alarik laughs. It distorts his face intosomething entirely different, something still holding the very samelight of humanity."You're tough, I like that. Question is, can you fight?"A thousand thoughts roam through my mind; this is myopportunity. This is the moment where I will have to fight for aplace in the epicentre of my own hatred. I will not give up or facewhatever gruesome death awaits me easily. Instead, I will lookDeath directly in the eye as I run from it. A hazardous chase thatmy survival relies on. Alarik clasps his hands together."I will make a deal with you, Kadence Riley. You will fight Orla,should you lose I will let her toy with you, kill you, but if you win...I'll just allow you to go. Who knows, maybe you'll be able to keepthe wolves chasing after you long enough until they give up."I consider his offer as all eyes rest on mine, including Raeganwhose curiosity instantly piques. Thing is, I don't want to be let go.I don't want to spend my life running, striving for survival everysingle millisecond I exist. One day, I hope to see Sage and mysister again. That is what I will fight for, even if it means seeingthem on the other side of the battlefield."No," I reply. Raegan steps from the darkness to join the others. Isettle my gaze upom him as an idea erupts from my mind."No?" Alarik asks, but my eyes won't leave Raegan. I quicklyremember the piercing ache pulsating from my jaw and the imprintof his fist. He is a true fighter, Alarik's right hand man."I will fight him. Only when I win, I don't want to be let go. You willaccept me into your clan, as one of you. "The room is silent from the shock of my words, the atmospherethickening from my declaration. Raegan's body turns rigid.A low rumble of laughter escapes Alarik's lips, "Very well, KadenceRiley. You're a mad woman, but I will agree to your terms."Raegan leaves the room at once, slamming the door shut behindhim.The body can prepare itself for many battles during its lifetime. It isa fighter's malleable tool which endures the fractures of bone, theblood of cuts and the blackened skin. It heals, and your bodyforgets. But the mind holds onto those scars, it does not let go andin truth, perhaps it can never be prepared for the ordeal of war.It is easy for your body to become strong, but the mind must breaktime and time again before it can truly know the strength it takesto fight for its life.As I'm dragged by my bare feet in nothing but damp, sulliedclothing, a throbbing head and a swollen jaw, I begin to questionmyself. My life is no longer one that can be lived precariously, andI may have dug my own grave by challenging Raegan, but Sagewas right. The Pantera may be savage brutes with little to nomorals, but they are opportunists. If I can prove that I am moreuse to them alive than dead, I could be spared.
Even though it's a story that's been told to me a thousand times, Icannot deny the swell in my throat when I think of my mother. It'san unquenchable inferno of pain, and agony, and memories, that Iblock off with a fractured wall. No weakness. Strength, only."Fight me," I say aloud, eager for a reprieve from this torturouswait. Sage furrows his eyebrows in hesitance."Go on, fight me," I repeat when Sage doesn't move. My fingerslatch onto his jacket as I tug him from the ground forcefully. Sincehis own Change two months ago, Sage has been wary to spar withme. It takes time after the Change to know your own strength, andI see his fear in injuring me."We've been through this. I'm not a pane of fragile glass, ready toshatter when I do fall. Besides, now fighting you is finallysomewhat of a challenge," I tease. His lips curve into a reluctantsmile as I guide him to a larger patch of grass."Fine. As y
I see who I am.I'm looking in a reflection, staring back at a turbulent, obstinateheart. I know who it is that faces me, but that is not what matters.It is paramount in the minds of my world exactly what you are,because what ties the bond between blood and water is not loyaltynor the falsity of words, but the beast within our heart.Everything will change tonight; for the good, the bad, or the worst.I cup a pool of water in my palms, throwing whatever droplets thatdon't slip through my fingers against my face. I'm washing awaythe final remnants of present Kadence, because no matter theoutcome of tonight's endeavours, I will be leaving behind afragment of myself. When the full moon rises, it will rot andblacken until it is no longer mine.There's a knock at the bathroom door, and I grunt in annoyance.Can I have just one minute to myself? Sage and Alan have beenshadowing me the entire day, trailing
Chaos.Bones crack and sizzle all around me, those instincts to killunravelling at the scent of their enemy. Ravenous and overcomewith bloodlust, the wolves snap their jaws together with an ache intheir gums I now know only too well.My heart is an allegro rhythm that palpitates deep in the furrow ofmy chest. There's no time to wrap my head around this horrificnightmare, or exert myself in spending a single second immersedin the confusion. I can't think, I can't think, I can't think. If I do, Iwill die.I may die anyway.The world is filled with noise, a cacophony of growls and voicesmerged into one single buzz inside my mind. My father's eyes areilluminated with panic and a thousand questions I cannot answer,like how I have become an eight-foot long panther. It's unheard of,incomprehensible. It is impossible. I'm staring at my family, thepeople I've grown to love my entire life, but all I wa
The body can prepare itself for many battles during its lifetime. It isa fighter's malleable tool which endures the fractures of bone, theblood of cuts and the blackened skin. It heals, and your bodyforgets. But the mind holds onto those scars, it does not let go andin truth, perhaps it can never be prepared for the ordeal of war.It is easy for your body to become strong, but the mind must breaktime and time again before it can truly know the strength it takesto fight for its life.As I'm dragged by my bare feet in nothing but damp, sulliedclothing, a throbbing head and a swollen jaw, I begin to questionmyself. My life is no longer one that can be lived precariously, andI may have dug my own grave by challenging Raegan, but Sagewas right. The Pantera may be savage brutes with little to nomorals, but they are opportunists. If I can prove that I am moreuse to them alive than dead, I could be spared.
My eyes open unwieldily, and for a single second I can pretendthat none of this has happened. I feel my heart release its tightclench inside my chest because in that space of time, I am home.In just a moment, I will break through the forestry and bewelcomed by my father, laugh with Sage as I tell him about themost absurd dream. The nightmare in which I became a panther.An enemy. Hunted.But then I see that scars of all those memories surrounding me.Imprints of history, actions, life. The rotten smell of death smacksme in the chest; a pungent, foul odour that has bile rising in mythroat. Bloody remnants of small animals surround my bare, nakedbody. Light shines through the cracks between overhangingbranches, and I know morning has risen.There's a terrible sensation crawling along my spine. That instinctwithin that tells me there are eyes watching me with a scrutinisingheaviness I cannot shake. One step, one crunch of dead lea
Chaos.Bones crack and sizzle all around me, those instincts to killunravelling at the scent of their enemy. Ravenous and overcomewith bloodlust, the wolves snap their jaws together with an ache intheir gums I now know only too well.My heart is an allegro rhythm that palpitates deep in the furrow ofmy chest. There's no time to wrap my head around this horrificnightmare, or exert myself in spending a single second immersedin the confusion. I can't think, I can't think, I can't think. If I do, Iwill die.I may die anyway.The world is filled with noise, a cacophony of growls and voicesmerged into one single buzz inside my mind. My father's eyes areilluminated with panic and a thousand questions I cannot answer,like how I have become an eight-foot long panther. It's unheard of,incomprehensible. It is impossible. I'm staring at my family, thepeople I've grown to love my entire life, but all I wa
I see who I am.I'm looking in a reflection, staring back at a turbulent, obstinateheart. I know who it is that faces me, but that is not what matters.It is paramount in the minds of my world exactly what you are,because what ties the bond between blood and water is not loyaltynor the falsity of words, but the beast within our heart.Everything will change tonight; for the good, the bad, or the worst.I cup a pool of water in my palms, throwing whatever droplets thatdon't slip through my fingers against my face. I'm washing awaythe final remnants of present Kadence, because no matter theoutcome of tonight's endeavours, I will be leaving behind afragment of myself. When the full moon rises, it will rot andblacken until it is no longer mine.There's a knock at the bathroom door, and I grunt in annoyance.Can I have just one minute to myself? Sage and Alan have beenshadowing me the entire day, trailing
Even though it's a story that's been told to me a thousand times, Icannot deny the swell in my throat when I think of my mother. It'san unquenchable inferno of pain, and agony, and memories, that Iblock off with a fractured wall. No weakness. Strength, only."Fight me," I say aloud, eager for a reprieve from this torturouswait. Sage furrows his eyebrows in hesitance."Go on, fight me," I repeat when Sage doesn't move. My fingerslatch onto his jacket as I tug him from the ground forcefully. Sincehis own Change two months ago, Sage has been wary to spar withme. It takes time after the Change to know your own strength, andI see his fear in injuring me."We've been through this. I'm not a pane of fragile glass, ready toshatter when I do fall. Besides, now fighting you is finallysomewhat of a challenge," I tease. His lips curve into a reluctantsmile as I guide him to a larger patch of grass."Fine. As y