Vanessa powered her rental car, still reeling over what she had read. The text further vaporized into past she knew from a distance, an estranged traveler looking for traffic signals in thick fog, breathing mist for air and never finding what they were looking for. It was hard to concentrate at the road ahead in morning traffic. It was also always good to travel during busy hour of the day. Nobody notices anyone unless they create a ruckus. And she was farther from hysterics today. No, she felt right at home. Disappearing and running away were where she belonged. Never had she thought she'd find purpose in it again but here she was.Seating her silver-grey sedan behind a towtruck, she opened the book again. 'Since wolves were now infected with same disease, their leader, Desmond Sr. had proposed a solution much like that for changelings. To open a an academy where wolves since their birth would learn to control their blood lust, their transition into civilisation would begin at early
"Did you hear the news?" "What news?" "It's all over the TV. How come you miss it? You are in there, cleaning rooms half the time." Their hushed whispers completely stopped once Nora Desmond walked in. Something like a hollow imprint of a smile made them look even more suspicious but she had no idea what they were talking about. In return, she smiled the only way she knew how to, bright and beautiful. It'd put the manic-pixie-dream girl complex to shame. Her wolf did wonder what they were talking about. She kept herself away, religiously so, from the news. Her father's gloating face appeared in her life often, seeing it on a screen would ruin what little entertainment it provided her at times. The other screen, she was fond of. Her phone rang precisely the minute she left the house maids to gossip. Or work. Never could tell what they got paid for. But unlike her father, she respected them in ways nobody else understood. Well, except one person. The same who had been put on her det
Noah tore down the sixth tree, standing tall and proud in his path. In span of two weeks, he had lost almost everything. No one does that to anyone unless they want something in return. He was sad, affixed to anger that was turning into despair and his despair affected everyone else. Mikhail. Rhys. All the other elite soldiers, academy trained to be under his command. They had built an army foraging the most vicious group of them all. Suffice to say, it was a gnawing hurt, the one that ate from inside. To believe he was so blinded by his plan, by his ministrations that he couldn't see what lay right in front of him. And now, he didn't have that. Mikhail and Rhys still followed his orders. Sam led the trackers on a goose chase to keep them from knowing more details, the more people knew, more the chances of them turning on him. But at the bottom of things lay a heap-his dirty laundry. His lack of trust on rogues. His lack of understanding anything when it came to Vanessa Flynn. She wa
Dust seeped in his white vans, sticking in gap in the toes courtesy of sweat. What was more prissy? That his vans now were hue yellow or that he was walking with a block of dust inside them? No. Curse the sweat. His tie-dye t-shirt hung on his shoulder, he had twisted, wind dried the thing but it was not ready to part with his sweat. It had been six hours since the incident. If the night could be so hot, he dreaded the day to come. Evan's back slumbered against the tree. This expanse of forest land was so different from home. He never thought he'd think it, much less so soon, but he prefered thick trees, canopies and tall ravenous mountains to desert. Never would he beg for operations so far away from home. In grand scheme of things, his parents would be happy he was calling Half Moon territory his home again, right? So they'd have to listen to him. He got up after few minutes' rest. There was a highway, of course there was, that led to nowhere. He had asked a passerby for some help
Her fingers twitched and she tried to fold them under her lap but it felt childish. Skittish. In a way she didn't like. But the loud raucous man next to her was slithering closer with every bout of laughter he shared with his friends on the other end of the phone. Jodie had a bad first hand experience of ornery drunks and their fists as a child. She was never going to be completely comfortable in a bar surrounded by strangers and peevish men whom only one woman in this universe could like- their mothers. And this one specifically needed a lesson in personal space. A lesson involving fists and elbows. "What are you looking at?" The guy was wearing a tank top. Or a spaghetti. Lord knew. And his chubby greasy finger, from all the chicken fries he had gulped down had stained his upper wear, right on the pot belly. When she didn't reply, he asked again. "Hey you. What are you looking at? Dont you be looking at me. Not like that." She realised why he said it. Her expression must be betwee
If he was here, he'd follow her. At least she hoped he would. It was a bet. A wild bet. All her instincts flared in warning to run and duck the other way, be the old school monk who got things done the old school way. With a team, a strategy, a plan. She had never been so reckless. Did she even know how he fought? Or if he'd injure her first and then strip her or her sneaky pocket knives? Why did the prospect unfurl excitement in place of clinical curiosity? Evan trailed her with perfect distance, fifteen meters away, distance he could cover in mere fifteen seconds if he sprinted the way humans did. She floated in and out of his direct view like she was testing him. Maybe she knew. He wanted her to know. The anticipation was always the better part of catching a prey. Literally and figuratively. He finally zeroed in on the moment he could come face to face with her once again, and this dance of light and shadow could begin it's climax. She turned to an allley whose entrance was cover
The next ten minutes, the lone street filled with panting grunts, a deadly blur of one 6'2 man, careful and defensive and a 5'8 woman never tired of attacking him, deciding each other's fate with every swish of their blades. Subtle was not her forte, he knew she'd go for his shin first. It had the reverberating factor. The shin, the bridge of his nose. What he hadn't prepared himself was the jarring weight of her heel. She flew at him and he re-positioned himself, face protected, body angled, giving her enough space to carry out her attack but also to defend himself. He rotated back and forth on the balls of his foot. When she realized he merely suffered a few cuts, she went for the wall, like cats always do. He owed Rhys a drink. Rhys had turned him to husk because they were fighting in closed space and no one knew walls better than cats. It happened rather quickly. She used the concrete stack to thrust her full weight at him. First kick caught him in the shoulder. He didn't budge,
Anger didn't begin to cover it. He was livid beyond belief. He ahd withdraw into his wolf there for a bief moment. She obviously hadn’t caught on or she’d shape shifted too and all hell would’ve broken lose. There was a reason nobody, not even Noah or the hired hand Simon sparred with him without precaution. His entire world spun on a singular axis when he fought His humanness bid adieu, without the physical tether his spirit soared as a wolf, his central nerves staved off the rational human mind to the furthest edge possible so there remained only animal savagery. He knew what triggered that reaction. It was her fault. She would be lying in the ditch back in that ally like a dried raisin. Her incense scent had leveled with him before he did something drastic. Which is why anger didn’t begin to cover what he was feeling. He noticed a slight limp in her left foot. It would swell and bruise the size of postal stamps, teetering everywhere. He had dragged her like a rag doll when she len