
Bound By Blood And Moonlight
Chapter 2
The fog in Ravenswood never really lifts. It just shifts—one day pressed low against the ground, the next curling between rooftops like smoke from an unseen fire. I’ve always liked it that way. It hides things. It hides me.
By dawn, I’ve hunted, fed, and washed the night’s mistakes from my skin. But the scent of her lingers, faint as the lavender soap she uses. I tell myself it’s because she lives close to the forest. That’s what I’ve always done—reason away the hunger until the lie starts to sound like truth.
When I walk into town, the locals avoid my eyes. They know me by rumor more than name—the reclusive man who lives beyond the ridge, whose family “has been here forever.” I let them think what they want. Humans need their stories. And monsters need them to stay curious enough to look but smart enough not to dig too deep.
At the café, I sit by the window, pretending to read the newspaper I haven’t opened. Then she walks in. Same green jacket, hair damp from the fog, eyes bright like she doesn’t yet understand what this town does to bright things. She orders coffee, thanks the barista with a smile, and turns—straight into me.
“Oh! Sorry,” she says, startled but laughing. The sound cuts straight through the fog, clean and warm. “Careful,” I manage, steadying her with one hand. My fingers brush her wrist; her pulse jumps. So does mine.
She looks up at me, and for the briefest second, recognition flares—like she’s seen me before, maybe in a dream. She probably has. The bond works both ways. “Have we met?” she asks. “Not properly.” My voice comes out lower than I mean it to. “Aiden.” “Elena,” she says, her name soft like rain against stone.
She sits at the table next to mine. I should leave. Instead, I stay. I tell myself it’s curiosity. But when her eyes flick to the window and back to me, it feels like gravity.
“So, Aiden,” she says, stirring her coffee, “you live here?” “For longer than I can remember.” “That sounds… lonely.” I smile, but it doesn’t reach my eyes. “You get used to lonely.”
Outside, the mist thickens until the street fades. She shivers, rubbing her hands together. I want to offer warmth, but that’s not what I am. My warmth burns.
She glances toward the woods. “Do you ever go out there?” “Every day.” “Doesn’t it scare you? The wolves, I mean. People talk.” I tilt my head. “And what do they say?” “That they’re too big. That they come too close to the houses. Some people think… they’re not wolves at all.”
The corner of my mouth lifts. “You believe that?” “I believe people see what they’re afraid of.” She hesitates. “You’re not afraid, are you?” “Constantly,” I say. “Just not of wolves.”
She laughs again, and it hits me how young she is—how untouched by what lies in these woods. She doesn’t yet know what it means to be hunted by fate itself. I envy her for that.
When she leaves, I follow at a distance, half in shadow, half in guilt. She walks along the path that skirts the forest edge, humming softly. The mist curls around her ankles like it wants to pull her in. I whisper to the darkness to stay still. For tonight, she’s safe.
But something moves where it shouldn’t—a ripple in the trees, a scent of blood and fur not my own. Another wolf. One of mine.
I move before thought, silent through the underbrush. I catch sight of him—a young one, reckless, watching her. My growl rips through the fog. He freezes, then lowers his head in submission before slinking back toward the forest. When I turn, Elena is staring into the trees, eyes wide. She can’t see me, not fully, but she knows she’s being watched.
I stay until she reaches her porch, the light from her window painting her in gold. When the door closes, I step out of the mist, breathing hard. The beast inside me snarls, wanting her scent, her touch, her everything. The man fights back, barely.
The pack will know I interfered. They’ll ask questions. They’ll remind me what the curse demands. But tonight, I can’t make myself care. Tonight, all I can think about is the girl in the green jacket, the one who looked into the fog and didn’t run.
If fate is cruel enough to tie my survival to her death, then maybe I was never meant to survive at all.
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