She Let Him Think He Was the Predator Novel Cover

She Let Him Think He Was the Predator

8.7 / 10.0
Sloane Alder has spent three hundred years pretending to be ordinary — a quiet coroner's assistant in Savannah, Georgia, with no power, no past, and no desire to be noticed. The seal she carved into her own soul keeps the devastating truth locked away: she is one of the oldest, most destructive beings in existence, and she erased herself on purpose. Sterling Voss is the city's supernatural enforcer — a shadow-wielder who answers to no one and destroys anyone who crosses his territory. When he drags Sloane into a blood debt she can't refuse, he assumes she's just another fragile human caught in his web. But every secret has an expiration date. The more Sterling pulls Sloane into his world, the more the seal fractures. And the thing waking up inside her doesn't care about patience, or plans, or the dangerous, electric pull between them. Sterling thinks he's in control. Sloane is letting him believe that. The question isn't whether the truth will destroy them — it's whether anything will be left standing when it does.

She Let Him Think He Was the Predator Chapter 1

Two in the morning, and the Chatham County morgue hummed with the kind of silence that made you question your life choices. I'd been here since midnight, sorting through cold case files that had been gathering dust longer than some of the bodies in our freezers. The fluorescent lights buzzed overhead like angry wasps, casting everything in that particular shade of institutional green that made even the living look dead.

Podcast, my one-eyed tabby, had claimed the corner of my desk, purring against the stack of autopsy reports I'd been reviewing for my Substack. 'Dead Letters' wasn't exactly pulling in subscriber numbers that would let me quit my day job, but writing about unsolved cases kept me sane during the graveyard shift. Tonight's soundtrack was Ethel Cain bleeding through my AirPods—'American Teenager' on repeat, because apparently I was feeling nostalgic for a youth I'd never actually had.

The first sign something was wrong wasn't the sound of splintering wood or the crash of the morgue's security door being torn off its hinges. It was the smell.

Sulfur. Sharp and acrid, like someone had struck a thousand matches at once.

I pulled out one earbud, every instinct I'd spent three centuries suppressing suddenly screaming to life. The scent was wrong—not the clean chemical wrongness of embalming fluid or the organic wrongness of decay, but something older. Something that made the sealed parts of my memory twitch like a nerve being prodded.

Then Sterling Voss dragged a corpse through my door.

He moved like liquid shadow, all sharp angles and controlled violence wrapped in an expensive black coat that probably cost more than my monthly rent. The body he hauled behind him left a dark smear across the linoleum—not blood, but something that seemed to absorb light rather than reflect it.

Sterling's shadow writhed against the wall, independent of his movements, reaching toward me with fingers that weren't quite fingers. When he looked up, his eyes held the kind of cold calculation that suggested he'd already decided whether I was worth keeping alive.

"Dr. Sloane Ashford," he said, my name rolling off his tongue like he'd been practicing. "We need to talk."

I should have been terrified. Any normal person would have been screaming, running, calling for help. Instead, I felt a bone-deep weariness settle over me like a familiar coat. Three hundred years of hiding, and it all came down to this—a stranger in my morgue at 2 AM with a supernatural corpse and knowledge of my real name.

"Let me guess," I said, not bothering to remove my other earbud. "You need this to disappear, and you think the local medical examiner is your best bet for a cover-up."

Sterling's smile was all teeth and no warmth. "Smart girl. Though I prefer to think of it as a mutually beneficial arrangement."

He stepped closer, and his shadow stretched across the floor toward me. Where it touched my shoe, I felt something deep in my chest flutter—not fear, but recognition. The sealed parts of myself stirred like a sleeping predator sensing prey.

"Here's how this works," Sterling continued, his voice dropping to a whisper that somehow filled the entire room. "You make this body disappear—clean autopsy, natural causes, whatever story sells. Or I add yours next to it."

There it was. The threat I'd been expecting since the moment he walked in. I looked down at the corpse, really looked at it for the first time, and felt my carefully constructed human facade crack just a little.

The body was male, maybe thirty, with the kind of pale complexion that suggested he hadn't seen sunlight in months. But it wasn't his appearance that made my breath catch—it was the symbol burned into his neck. A complex pattern of interlocking circles and angular lines, still smoking faintly in the morgue's cool air.

I knew that mark.

The Silence Pact. The same binding ritual that had been used to seal me three centuries ago, when I'd been foolish enough to trust the wrong people with the truth about what I was. The same ancient contract magic that had locked away the parts of myself that could level buildings and boil blood in veins.

"Interesting artwork," I said, pulling on latex gloves with practiced efficiency. "Very old school."

Sterling's eyes narrowed. "You recognize it."

It wasn't a question, but I treated it like one anyway. "I watch a lot of supernatural documentaries. You'd be surprised what passes for entertainment these days."

I moved to the examination table, Sterling's shadow following my every step like a curious pet. When I began the external examination, my hands moved with the kind of professional detachment that came from years of practice. But inside, my mind was racing.

The Gray Council. That's what Sterling called them when he started talking—an underground organization that had recently become active again in Savannah, collecting supernatural artifacts from the old days. Treasure hunters with more ambition than sense, digging up things that should have stayed buried.

"This one got too close to something he shouldn't have," Sterling explained, leaning against the wall with the casual air of someone discussing the weather. "Asked too many questions about items that don't officially exist."

I nodded, making notes on my tablet about 'cardiac arrest' and 'no signs of foul play,' while my fingers worked to hide the real cause of death. But when I turned the body to examine the back, I found something that made my carefully maintained composure slip.

Sewn into the lining of the victim's shirt, so thin it was almost transparent, was a piece of bone. Ancient bone, carved with symbols I'd hoped never to see again.

A fragment of the seal key.

Three hundred years ago, I'd thought I'd destroyed every piece of the artifact that had been used to bind me. I'd spent decades tracking down every fragment, every splinter, every carved remnant of the ritual that had locked away my true nature. Apparently, I'd missed one.

I palmed the bone fragment with the kind of sleight of hand that came from centuries of hiding things, slipping it into the space between my glove and palm. Sterling's shadow brushed across my hand at that exact moment, and the contact sent electricity shooting up my arm.

The sealed parts of myself roared to life.

For just an instant, I felt it—the power I'd been cut off from for three centuries. The ability to reshape reality with a thought, to bend the laws of physics like they were suggestions rather than absolutes. The bone fragment grew warm against my palm, responding to the awakening magic in my blood.

Then the moment passed, and I was just Dr. Sloane Ashford again, medical examiner and part-time true crime blogger, definitely not an ancient entity bound by magical contracts.

Sterling straightened, and I realized he'd felt something too. His shadow had gone completely still, no longer writhing independently but frozen in place like it was listening.

"You're more interesting than I thought," he said finally.

I kept my voice steady, professional. "I get that a lot. Comes with the job—dead bodies make for fascinating conversation."

But Sterling wasn't buying my act anymore. He moved closer, close enough that I could smell expensive cologne mixed with something darker—ozone and burnt metal and the lingering scent of power recently used.

"I've decided you're useful," he said, his breath warm against my ear. "Congratulations, Dr. Ashford. You just became my new business partner."

"I don't recall applying for the position."

"You didn't have to." His shadow wrapped around my wrist like a living handcuff. "You owe me now. Blood debt. Until I say otherwise, you work for me."

I let fear creep into my voice, made it shake just enough to sound authentic. "What if I refuse?"

Sterling's smile was all predator. "Then you join our friend here on the table. Your choice."

I nodded, letting my shoulders slump in defeat. "Okay. Okay, I'll do whatever you need."

Sterling studied my face for a long moment, then stepped back. "Smart girl. I'll be in touch."

He turned to leave, his shadow flowing behind him like liquid darkness. At the door, he paused.

"Oh, and Dr. Ashford? Clean this up properly. I'd hate for anyone to ask uncomfortable questions."

Then he was gone, leaving only the lingering scent of sulfur and the weight of the bone fragment burning against my palm.

I waited until his footsteps faded completely before allowing myself to smile.

Three hundred years of hiding, and finally, someone had given me exactly what I needed—a reason to stay close to the Gray Council and their collection of ancient artifacts. Sterling Voss thought he'd found himself a useful tool. What he'd actually done was invite a fox into his henhouse.

I looked down at Podcast, who had watched the entire exchange with typical feline indifference.

"Don't look at me like that," I told him. "I'm not getting greedy. I just need to find the rest of the fragments, then I disappear. Simple plan."

Podcast yawned, clearly unimpressed with my rationalizations.

Back in my apartment an hour later, I stood in front of my bathroom mirror, the bone fragment now safely locked in my bedroom safe. My reflection looked exactly as it always did—tired, pale, thoroughly human. But when I leaned closer, examining my eyes in the harsh LED light, I caught a glimpse of something that made my breath stop.

Gold. Just a flicker in the depths of my pupils, there and gone so quickly I might have imagined it.

I blinked hard, and when I looked again, my eyes were their usual unremarkable brown.

"Don't get ahead of yourself," I whispered to my reflection. "One fragment isn't enough. You need them all."

My phone buzzed on the counter. Unknown number, message notification.

Five words that made my blood run cold:

'I know who you are.'

I checked the number, ran it through every reverse lookup service I could access. The location trace came back to Bonaventure Cemetery—Savannah's oldest graveyard, where Spanish moss hung like funeral shrouds and the dead had been whispering secrets for over a century.

I stared at the message until the screen went dark, then looked back at my reflection.

The gold flicker was back, stronger this time.

And it was smiling.

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She Let Him Think He Was the Predator of Contents

Ch. 1 Ch. 2 Ch. 3
Ch. 4
Ch. 5
Ch. 6
Ch. 7
Ch. 8
Ch. 9
Ch. 10
Ch. 11
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