Death was standing in front of me. I had no doubt that this was the night I was going to die; in an empty park with freezing rain just starting to fall. My nothing-special life was going to end in a way I would never in a million years have seen coming. A nothing-special death sounded so much better right then.
Staying late that night to help close up the diner was always going to be a mistake, not least because I didn't get paid overtime. Stupid choice #1. Mr Kalamides wasn't a bad boss, but he was a stingy one. He didn't believe in paying his staff any more than absolutely necessary and took the approach that if he didn't acknowledge the overtime then it didn't exist. Yet there I was, thirty minutes after my shift had ended. Call me a soft touch. Or someone who needed to work on saying 'no' more often.
The night air was cold against my face, and I kicked myself for forgetting my scarf as I rushed out the door this morning. Checking that everything was secure one final time I started the short walk home. Frigid wind whistled through the leafless trees, casting dancing shadows onto the damp sidewalk. This is where I made stupid choice #2: I cut through the park. At that moment in time the quickest walk home to warmth seemed the best idea, and the park offered that.
If you've never walked through a deserted park at night then you can't imagine just how eerie it can be. A place that, during the day seems bright and non-threatening can, at night, become haunted by monsters lurking behind every boney-limbed tree. Little did I realise how right my fanciful thoughts were.
A lone jogger came puffing past me, his breath misting into little clouds. I remember thinking that he was a crazy person for voluntarily being out in this weather. And for jogging. Hugging my coat more closely around me I hurried on feeling a mounting pressure to get home and safely behind a locked door.
Always trust your instincts.
The gateway out of the park was just feet away when I heard the first, low, rumbling growl. The vibrations rippled through my body. We're always told that in terrifying situations that a fight-or-flight reaction will kick in, but apparently there is a third option: I froze. Not a single muscle moved, as if by staying very still whatever was out there would pass me by. A primal survival instinct held me captive.
To my left I could hear the rustle of branches, but my traitorous body wouldn't let me turn to look. My brain willed me to run but my body was locked in place. A brush of fur against my upper thigh finally snapped me out of whatever trance I was in and, looking down, I was confronted with the stuff of nightmares.
Prowling in front of me was the biggest wolf I had ever seen, its head nearly reaching the middle of my chest. Dark fur covered a densely muscled body that tensed with every step taken by paws the size of a lion’s. Amber eyes glowed in the dark; they fixed on me with inexplicable malice. But for all that my gaze got caught on the snarling muzzle filled with razor-sharp teeth.
I took a small, slow step back, desperate not to provoke it. Stupid choice #3. Running like hell would have been the way to go, but don't they say you shouldn't make sudden movements around dangerous animals?
The beast in front of me lunged forward and latched onto my arm. A scream lodged in my throat, fighting for an escape that didn't come. As the blood rushed to my head and darkness began to edge my vision, the wolf sat back on its haunches and simply watched me.
I felt myself sink to the frozen ground, my body completely out of my control. Still the wolf sat and watched, not making any move towards me, it’s eyes unblinking. Just as darkness was about to take me I heard a yell in the distance. The crazy jogger was on his way back through the park. My saviour in lycra. Dragging my heavy head back in the direction of my attacker, all I saw was a dark tail disappearing into the undergrowth. Finally I gave in to the need to close my eyes and rest.
Until that moment I thought I had life all figured out. I had a job, just about managed to cover the rent on my own apartment and I had some pretty good friends. I had a life. Nothing special, but it was mine. A life I made and I chose. Doesn't sound like a big deal, right? Maybe it wasn't in the grand scheme of things, but looking back now it seems like a pretty damn big deal.
5 years laterLocking up the diner was still a less than favourite job, not least because of the bad memory associations
"So Maggs, got any plans for tonight? Are you finally going to let me take you out on the town?" Cameron, one of the diner cooks, placed my order at the window and offered me a hopeful look.
"Hey a guy just asked to be seated in your section. I put him in the booth since it's quiet.""Thanks
"Guess who?" Large hands covered my eyes. My heart racing, I instinctively spun and hit my attacker square in the chest with all my strength. I was rewarded with a grunt of surprise as the person holding me flew backwards.
Tension was thick in the air. Breathing was proving to be a challenge and the urge to run and hide in the darkest corner of the house was strong. My white-knuckled hands gripped the arm-rests to try and stop me fleeing in fear.
Maggie: It was a disaster. Painful. Like stick a fork in my eye painful.Josie: Surely it can't have been so very bad?
It was the morning rush at the diner and all my body was begging me to do was to curl up and sleep for the next 24 hours. Running the night before had been fantastic but the day after always left me with a bone deep exhaustion.
"What's up Maggie-May?" Nate's voice was cheerful as he answered my call."I need your help. It's urg
6 months later Life with Max was...interesting. Good interesting, but never predictable. And I loved every second of it. Who knew that one of the missing pieces in my life was an arrogant, cocky, hot as sin werewolf? Letting down my guard and letting Max, and everything that came with him, in was a decision that I had never regretted. "I still can't believe Jonas has a guest house and I never knew about it." Huffing, I dropped the heavy box to the floor, glad it was one of te last. Unpacking was going to be a nightmare. "Not sure he thought you'd be interested, babe." Max waltzed in, a box under each muscled arm, not an ounce of strain on his face. "It works out well for us though." He was right. After month of long conversations and beggin on Max's part, altough he'd deny it, I'd agreed to move in together. I'd actually been ready a
Zachary was dead and I truthfully had no idea how I felt about that. In accordance with Pack law he had been executed for his crimes, with Max as his executioner. As a victim of his, and man I hated that word, I'd had the right to watch him die. I'd declined. I had no desire to see a man killed, and I really didn't want to see my boyfriend in the role of killer.
Tension was thick in the air, so heavy I was sure that even the unwitting humans could sense it. We were all in a state if high alert; watching, waiting. Zachary still hovered in the reception area, enjoying the results of his handiwork. Meanwhile I remained out of sight in the waiting room, praying that the others didn't lose track of him.
Chaos. That was the only word that got even close to describing the scene at the hospital. How many people had the psycho attacked? Worried relatives crowded the waiting room as my guards and I pushed our way through. The weight of panic pressed down on me.
The sun was sinking beneath the horizon casting a beautiful warm light across the clearing. It was an idyllic scene, one that would inspire poets and painters alike, there was no sign of the violence that was to come. This place of seeming peace and calm had been selected as the location for the fight, soon the serenity would be lost.
He would be fine. He would be absolutely fine.
I was back in the woods, a place I'd been hoping to take a break from after my last trip through them. This time though I wasn't running for my life, and I was with a Pack of wolves I'd trust with my life.
Another rock bit into the sole of my foot, causing me to stumble, but I refused to slow down. Running through the woods in wolf form would have been so much easier, but I wasn't able to shift back again so quickly, it took too much energy. Instead I had to rely on my less than brilliant human senses to help guide me through the wall of trees.
Escape. The single word that ran through my head every hour since Zachary had announced his 'distraction' plan. All I could now think of was that I needed to get out of here and tell the Pack about it, so that they could prevent the impending disaster.