
She Let Him Think He Was the Predator
Chapter 2
The GPS on my phone kept insisting I'd arrived at my destination, but all I could see were Spanish moss curtains and weathered headstones emerging from the pre-dawn fog. Bonaventure Cemetery at five AM looked like something out of a Gothic novel—which, considering my current circumstances, felt uncomfortably appropriate.
I'd driven here on three hours of sleep and pure adrenaline, that anonymous text message burning in my memory. The location trace had been precise: Section K, Row 15. Now I stood among monuments that had been watching over Savannah's dead since before the Revolutionary War, my phone's flashlight cutting weak paths through the gloom.
Then I found it.
The tombstone was older than most, its marble surface worn smooth by centuries of Georgia humidity and salt air. But someone had recently cleaned it. The moss had been scraped away, the carved letters traced with fresh chalk to make them readable.
'Solenne Aldric, 1692-1724. Beloved daughter, taken too soon.'
My real name. The one I'd buried along with everything else three hundred years ago.
I dropped to my knees beside the grave, my hands shaking as I traced the familiar letters. Solenne Aldric had died in a fire that consumed half of old Savannah's French Quarter—or so the records claimed. In reality, she'd simply ceased to exist the moment the Silence Pact was completed, her true nature locked away behind magical barriers that had held for three centuries.
Until now.
I ran my fingers along the base of the tombstone, feeling for anything unusual. The marble was cold against my palm, but there—a slight irregularity in the stone. I pressed harder, and a small section shifted inward with a soft click.
A hidden compartment, carved into the monument itself.
Inside, wrapped in oiled cloth, was another bone fragment. Identical to the one I'd found on last night's corpse, covered in the same intricate binding symbols. But this piece was larger, more complete. When I lifted it from its hiding place, the carved surface grew warm against my skin.
The sealed parts of myself stirred, recognizing the artifact that had once held them captive.
"Interesting reading material."
Sterling's voice cut through the cemetery silence like a blade. I spun around, clutching the bone fragment against my chest, to find him emerging from the shadow of a massive live oak. His expensive coat was pristine despite the damp morning air, and his shadow writhed independently across the moss-covered ground.
"You're up early," I said, forcing my voice to remain steady.
He moved closer, his footsteps silent on the soft earth. "Funny thing—I received a text message too. Anonymous sender, same location coordinates." His eyes narrowed. "I don't believe in coincidences."
I tucked the bone fragment into my jacket pocket, hoping he hadn't seen it clearly in the dim light. "Someone's playing games with both of us."
"Perhaps." Sterling stopped just outside arm's reach, but his shadow stretched toward me like a curious pet. "What I find more interesting is why a medical examiner would come alone to a cemetery at five AM. Most people would have called the police."
I'd prepared for this question during the drive over. "The message threatened to expose what happened last night. Report me for tampering with evidence, claim I was paid to cover up a murder." I let genuine fear creep into my voice. "I needed to know who was trying to blackmail me."
Sterling studied my face with the intensity of a predator evaluating prey. "And what did you discover?"
"Just this." I gestured toward the tombstone. "Someone's idea of a sick joke, probably. Clean up an old grave, send some cryptic messages, see who shows up."
But Sterling wasn't looking at the tombstone anymore. He was looking at me, his head tilted slightly as if listening to something I couldn't hear. His shadow had gone completely still.
"Your heart rate," he said quietly. "It's remarkably steady for someone who's supposedly terrified."
Ice water flooded my veins. "What?"
"I can sense biological rhythms through shadow contact." He gestured toward where his shadow touched my shoe. "Most humans in your situation would be experiencing significant cardiovascular stress. But your pulse..." He paused, his eyes narrowing. "It's slow. Controlled. Like something in hibernation."
I forced a laugh, praying it sounded natural. "I practice meditation. Breathing exercises. Helps with the stress of my job."
Sterling didn't smile. "How very zen of you."
We stared at each other across the grave of my former identity, tension crackling between us like static electricity. Then Sterling's phone buzzed, breaking the moment.
He glanced at the screen, and his expression shifted. "It seems we're not the only ones who received mysterious invitations this morning."
He showed me the message: 'Section L, Row 3. Section M, Row 8. Section N, Row 12. The sleepers are waking.'
My blood went cold. Those were coordinates for other graves—other supernatural beings who had vanished from Savannah's records in the early 18th century. If someone was systematically uncovering the burial sites of bound entities...
"We need to check those locations," I said, trying to sound like a concerned citizen rather than someone whose entire existence depended on keeping certain secrets buried.
Sterling pocketed his phone. "Agreed. But first, we're going to discuss your living arrangements."
"My what?"
"You're moving in with me. Tonight." His tone brooked no argument. "The Gray Council has invested considerable resources in our partnership. I need to protect that investment."
Panic flared in my chest. Twenty-four hour surveillance would make it impossible to investigate the remaining fragments, impossible to maintain the careful balance I'd spent centuries perfecting.
"That's not necessary—"
"It's not a request." Sterling's shadow coiled around my ankle like a living shackle. "You'll have your own wing, complete privacy when you're not working. Think of it as a very exclusive bed and breakfast."
"And if I refuse?"
His smile was all teeth. "Then I'll assume you're not as invested in our partnership as you claimed. And investments that don't perform..." He shrugged eloquently.
I looked down at Solenne Aldric's tombstone, at the name I'd thought was safely buried in the past. Sterling was offering me something I desperately needed—access to Gray Council intelligence, proximity to their artifact collection. But he was also putting me directly under his watchful eye.
The bone fragment in my pocket pulsed with warmth, reminding me of what was at stake.
"Fine," I said, letting defeat color my voice. "But I need to go home first, pack some things."
"Of course. I'll have a car pick you up at eight PM sharp." Sterling stepped back, his shadow releasing its hold on my ankle. "Oh, and Dr. Ashford? Bring your cat. I have a feeling you'll be staying for quite some time."
He turned and walked away, disappearing into the morning mist like something out of a fever dream. I waited until I was certain he was gone before pulling out my phone and opening the group chat labeled 'War Room'—my three closest friends from med school who'd somehow become my chosen family despite knowing absolutely nothing about my real nature.
Margot had already started the daily chaos: 'Emergency meeting required. Sloane's been radio silent since yesterday and I'm spiraling.'
I typed quickly: 'Still alive, just dealing with work drama. Moving in with a... colleague... for a few weeks. Long story.'
The response was immediate.
Margot: 'COLLEAGUE???? 👀'
Jess: 'Is this colleague single? Hot? Emotionally unavailable?'
Rachel: 'More importantly, is he paying rent?'
Margot: 'Wait wait wait. You're MOVING IN with a man? Sloane Ashford, queen of emotional unavailability and commitment phobia?'
I could practically see her pacing around her BookTok setup, probably already planning a 'morally grey men fashion analysis' video based on whatever details I'd eventually share.
'It's complicated,' I typed back. 'And temporary. I'll call you later.'
But as I walked back to my car, the bone fragment burning against my ribs like a brand, I wondered if anything in my carefully constructed life would ever be temporary again.
The tombstone of Solenne Aldric watched me leave, its freshly cleaned surface gleaming in the growing daylight like an accusation.
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