The howl that had split the night still echoed in the sudden silence, resonating off the ice spires like the voice of the mountain itself. The pack hunters who moments before had been circling for the kill now pressed low against the snow, their golden eyes wide with an ancient fear bred into their very bones.
Garrett, the lead hunter, backed away from Reign with his hackles raised, no longer interested in his prey. His lips pulled back in a snarl, but it was directed at something behind her—something that made even a trained killer's courage falter.
Through the swirling blizzard, it emerged.
White as the heart of winter, massive beyond anything that should exist in the natural world. The creature stepped through the storm as if the wind and snow parted before it, each paw print melting through the frozen ground with impossible depth. Its coat seemed to shimmer with its own inner light, catching the aurora overhead and reflecting it back in patterns that hurt to look at directly.
A direwolf. The stuff of legends whispered around winter fires, tales told to frighten children into obedience. Spirits of the first wolves, blessed by the Moon Goddess herself and charged with protecting the sacred bloodlines. Most wolves lived their entire lives believing such creatures were nothing more than stories.
But there was nothing mythical about the intelligence burning in those silver eyes—ancient, primal, and utterly focused.
Reign's breath caught in her throat as she pressed harder against the ice spire, her body trembling with more than just cold. Every instinct screamed at her to run, to hide, to make herself as small as possible before this apex predator.
The first hunter—young, foolish, still drunk on pack hierarchy and the promise of easy prey—broke formation. He lunged at the direwolf with a snarl that should have been intimidating, claws extended and fangs bared.
The massive creature met him mid-leap without seeming to hurry. Jaws that could crush bone closed around the hunter's throat with surgical precision. The crack of vertebrae echoed across the wasteland, sharp and final as breaking ice.
Blood sprayed in a crimson arc across the pristine snow, steaming in the frigid air. The hunter's body went limp instantly, his golden eyes dulling as his spirit fled to whatever realm awaited the dead.
A second hunter attacked from the side, hoping to catch the beast while it was occupied. The direwolf dropped the first corpse and spun with fluid grace, one massive paw catching the attacker across the skull. Claws longer than daggers opened the wolf from jaw to ear, and he crumpled without even a death cry.
The remaining three hunters—hardened killers who had survived dozens of battles—suddenly found themselves facing something that made their pack training seem like children's games. They spread out in a loose semicircle, trying to use coordinated tactics against an opponent that moved like liquid lightning.
Garrett barked a command in the old pack language, and the three charged as one.
The direwolf seemed to flow between them like water through stones. Its jaws found the throat of the leftmost attacker while its claws raked across the belly of another. The third managed to land a blow that should have drawn blood, but his fangs skittered harmlessly off the creature's hide as if it were made of living stone.
In less than thirty seconds, it was over.
Five of Kieran's elite hunters lay broken in the snow, their blood already beginning to freeze in dark pools that reflected the aurora light. The direwolf stood among the carnage, breathing hard but uninjured, steam rising from its massive frame like smoke from some primordial forge.
And then those silver eyes turned to Reign.
Every muscle in her body locked solid. The creature was even larger up close—easily twice the size of any wolf she had ever seen, with shoulders that came up to her chest. Its teeth were stained with fresh blood, and intelligence burned in its gaze like captured starlight.
She should run. Every rational thought told her to flee before this monster decided she looked like dessert. But her feet might as well have been rooted to the frozen ground.
The direwolf stepped toward her with deliberate care, each movement calculated to avoid startling her into flight. Snow crunched softly under paws the size of dinner plates. Its breath misted in the cold, and she could smell the wild scent that clung to its fur—pine forests and mountain peaks, ancient ice and something indefinably other.
When it was close enough to touch, the massive creature stopped.
And lowered its head.
Not in threat or preparation for attack. In something that looked impossibly like recognition. Like acknowledgment.
The burned scar on Reign's wrist suddenly flared with heat that had nothing to do with pain. A sensation swept through her chest—not quite physical, not quite emotional—like an invisible cord stretching tight between her heart and the creature before her. Her severed connection to her wolf spirit, numbed and muted since the bloodmark's destruction, suddenly sparked with an echo of something vast and primal.
For a moment that stretched like eternity, girl and direwolf regarded each other in perfect silence. The blizzard continued to rage around them, but it felt distant and unimportant. The only things that mattered were two sets of eyes—one human, one decidedly not—sharing a moment of impossible understanding.
Then the moment shattered as reality crashed back in. The cold bit deep into her bones, reminding her that she was still bleeding, still hypothermic, still moments away from death even if the immediate threat had passed.
The direwolf seemed to sense her condition. It stepped closer—close enough that she could feel the warmth radiating from its massive frame—and made a sound low in its throat. Not quite a growl, not quite a whine. Almost like a question.
Reign found her voice, though it came out as barely more than a whisper. "I don't understand. What do you want from me?"
The creature tilted its head, studying her with those ancient silver eyes. Then it did something that should have been impossible for any wolf, dire or otherwise.
It looked directly at the burned scar on her wrist, raising its massive paw to touch the freshly burned skin there. And somehow, without words or pack-speech or any form of communication she understood, it conveyed a single, crystal-clear message:
I've been waiting for you.