against the wooden door. That man, Nash,
was out there amongst the monsters. And
just who did he think he was? Locking her
in a shed. Who else could be responsible
this madness?
There was no way the man would
survive a battle with a pack that size. With
fangs longer than her fingers, Wolves
inflicted mortal wounds. Maralee wore
gauntlets when she fought them for a
reason. Circulating anecdotes suggested if
bitten by a Wolf, a human would transform
into one of the mad beasts. Maralee knew
better. Multiple scars on her right arm
proved these rumors false.
Another howl. Wolves panted and
sniffed beneath the shed door, but the
scratching stopped. Another howl, a yip,
and the beasts moved away.
What was going on? Had the Wolves
overpowered Nash? Were they invading
the villagers’ homes even now? That
couldn’t be the case. Things were too
quiet. No screams of terror and pain. No
growling, snarling chaos. None of the
sounds of slaughter that had haunted
Maralee’s nightmares for fifteen years.
She had to get out of this shed before it
was too late. She struck the door with her
sword. The blade was too thin and the
metal too soft to do more than scratch the
wood’s surface. Using the hem of her
cape, she wiped the blade clean of blood
and sheathed it before searching blindly
around the pitch-black interior of the shed
for a more effective tool.
Her hands found a rake in the darkness,
followed by a hoe. A shovel. An ax. With
a self-satisfied smile, Maralee took the ax
in both hands and approached the door.
She lifted the ax over her head and struck.
A board splintered, leaving a crack. A
band of moonlight crossed the floor. She
pulled the ax free and hit the same
location. The board broke off, leaving a
space large enough for her arm. She
dropped the ax on the floor, stuck her arm
through the opening and lifted the slab of
wood barring the double doors.
Maralee pushed the doors open and
rushed out into the frigid air. She drew her
sword, searching for signs of the Wolves.
Other than paw prints in the snow, all
traces of them had vanished.
Maralee caught sight of Nash kneeling
over the Wolf she’d slain. Long fingers
stroked the dead animal’s fur and eased
the Wolf’s blank eyes closed. The man
lifted the animal into his arms and stood,
cradling the Wolf’s massive body against
his broad chest. Its head lolled against his
shoulder.
Nash headed for the woods. He glanced
back at Maralee just before disappearing
into the trees and she recognized the
shimmering on his cheeks as the
moonlight’s reflection on the paths of his
tears.
Before the cursed full moon set, Nash
buried his older brother, Cort, beneath the
colossal tree that marked the graves of his
father and grandfather. Their mother, a
pale gray wolf, and his brother’s tawny-
furred widow, leaned against one another
for comforting support. Cort’s two young
sons, both purest white, and his only
daughter, the same gray shade as her
recently deceased father, howled forlornly
as they watched their uncle complete his
unsavory task.
That woman!
Why hadn’t she just
listened to him? Cort would still be alive
if she had simply done what Nash had
asked of her. And what kind of wicked
sword did she possess that could slay a
powerful being so effortlessly? It couldn’t
be the same one used to murder his father
and grandfather. The last of the Wolf
Hunters had died fifteen years ago. How
could another have arisen to prey upon his
pack?
As soon as Nash smoothed the rich soil
over his brother’s grave, his mother
approached and looked up at him, her
large, amber eyes full of questions and
pain. She whimpered and Nash sank to his
knees to wrap his arms around her broad
neck.
“I’m sorry, Mother,” he whispered. His
fingers burrowed into the thick fur at the
back of her head as he tried to comfort
her. “I was able to control the pack, even
in their frenzied state beneath the curse of
the full moon, but that woman…” Nash’s
eyes narrowed as he remembered her
wide, innocent-looking silver eyes, so
contrary to her true monstrous demeanor.
“There was no controlling her at all.”
As the moon sank behind the distant
horizon, his mother’s fur became smooth,
warm skin and her arms moved to circle
her youngest son’s waist. “You know who
did this?” she asked.
“I do not know her name, but I spoke
with her. She couldn’t be dissuaded.”
“But how did she do it? Nothing but
silver can kill one of us.”
“It only makes sense if her blade is
silver. She claimed to be a Wolf Huntress,
but I don’t see how she can be,” Nash
said. “The Hunters are all dead. Our
secret died with them.” None of this made
sense. They’d had fifteen years of peace,
and now, some silver-sword-wielding
Huntress invades their territory. How had
she discovered their weakness? Chance?
Cort’s widow, Rella, wrapped a thick
robe around his mother’s shoulders.
“Here, Stacia, you’ll catch cold.”
Stacia accepted the robe to cover her
nakedness and rose from her crouched
position. She stared down at the grave of
her eldest son for a long moment. “It is
your responsibility to do something about
this, Nash,” she said in a wooden tone. “I
will leave the method up to you. You have
twenty-seven days until the next full
moon.”
Nash nodded. As a Wolf Guardian, it
was Nash’s responsibility to ensure the
safety of his pack. He’d been the first in
over five hundred years to be born into the
pack without the curse of the full moon.
He had all the benefits of his species. He
could shift from Wolf to human form
effortlessly. He was essentially immortal.
Powerful. Long-lived. However, the curse
placed upon his people did not affect him.
He was the only Wolf who did not go mad
under the glow of the full moon. For this
reason, tremendous responsibilities fell on
his shoulders.
“I’ll take care of it,” he promised.
“Wolf Hunter or not, she won’t slay
another of our pack.”
His mother turned her back to him then,
walking slowly towards the village
hidden within the dense forest. He knew
she was dying inside, but as leader of the
pack, she was forced to remain strong. He
wished she would yell at him, hit him, hurt
him. Anything would be better than her
quiet acceptance and feeble demands.
“Uncle Nash.” His niece, Carsha,
tugged on the sleeve of his leather trench
coat. She was in her human form now that
the moon had set and she could control her
shifting. He squatted down in front of her,
stroking her dark gray hair from her cheek.
“Why did you put Daddy in the ground?”
she asked, amber eyes wide with inquiry.
“He’ll be all dirty when he wakes up.”
Death was such a rare thing in their
pack. Elder Wolves, those nearing three
hundred years in age, disappeared when
they felt they’d become too frail to offer
any value to the pack. The elders never
returned
because
they
poisoned
themselves with silver. His kind was
immortal, but they did age, albeit slowly.
Three hundred years was long enough to
grow weary of living and ritual suicide
was considered an honorable death by his
pack. Nash had no words to comfort the
young girl or to explain a senseless death.
He had only confronted its heartrending
burden himself once before, when the
Hunters had slain both his father and
grandfather fifteen years ago in a battle
meant to ensure the slaughter of his people
would end.
“Carsha,” he said, his voice hollow,
“your daddy won’t wake up.”
She looked confused. “But Uncle Nash
—”
“Come, Carsha,” her mother said
gently. She held her hand out to her small
daughter. “Let’s go home. It’s late.” Rella
refused to look at Nash or acknowledge
his presence.
“ I wanna see my daddy,” the little girl
murmured, her eyes filling with tears.
“Carsha!” her mother snapped.
Carsha trotted over to her mother and
took her hand, silent tears spilling down
her cheeks as the pair of them headed for
the village. Cort’s nine-year-old twin
sons, Lark and Lord, shifted from their
human forms back into white wolves and
followed behind—tails limp, heads low.
“I want to see your daddy, too,” Nash
whispered to Carsha’s small, retreating
form.
The scent of freshly turned dirt hung
heavy in the air. Nash looked down at
Cort’s grave. The black earth blurred out
of focus. Staring despondently, he was
unaware of the passing time until a new
day streaked the sky with orange and pink.
He stepped forward and used his
pocketknife to carve the name
Cort
into
the tree beside his father and grandfather’s
names. When he had finished, he traced
the letters with his fingers.
Brother.
He couldn’t really be dead. It wasn’t
possible. Cort had always been the
likable, outgoing one. Easy to smile. Easy
to laugh. Friend to everyone. Unguarded
with his love. An attentive husband. A
doting father. He had only been a hundred
and thirty, not even half way through his
probable lifespan. Nash had always felt
so washed-out beside his gregarious
brother, but he would gladly forfeit his
own life to have him back. He’d had a
wife. Children. Nash had no one. And
now that his brother was gone, he had less
than no one.
Unable to express the depth of his grief
in his human form, Nash removed his coat
and dropped it on the ground. The rest of
his clothes followed and once naked, he
took his other form. Fur blacker than the
night, with a white patch across his left
eye in the shape of a crescent moon, the
Wolf sat at the foot of the mounded dirt,
lifted his snout to the sky and howled his
anguish to the trees of the forest.
Maralee thrashed in her sleep, unable
to pull herself from the nightmare.
“Stay here, children. Don’t come out
no matter what happens. Do you
understand?”
“Yes, Mama,” Maralee promised.
“Leland?” her mother prompted
Maralee’s older brother.
“Why can’t I fight too?” Leland
asked, a sour look on his young face.
Smiling gently, his mother stroked his
blond hair. Leland twisted away from his
mother’s pampering. Mother and son
looked alike—blond hair, blue eyes.
Maralee resembled her father—raven
hair, gray eyes. She wished she looked
more like her fair mother. Mother was
like an angel. Radiant.
“You are still too young,” Mama said
with a gentle but firm tone. “Another few
years and you’ll be ready.”
Maralee gasped when a series of
howls carried into the house. The Wolves
were close. It seemed odd they had come
here, as if asking for death. The moon
was not yet full. The Wolves had never
made an appearance on any other night
of the lunar cycle before. Mother
glanced over her shoulder towards the
parlor door, and then looked down at her
children again. “Stay here. I’ll be back
for you soon.”
“I’m not a baby, Mother,” Leland
shouted. “I’m ten years old.”
She smiled at him again before
closing the trapdoor. Maralee heard the