The bus rattled along the winding mountain road, its headlights carving thin lines through the mist. Elara pressed her forehead to the cold glass, watching pine trees blur past like shadows fleeing from the night. The town of Silverpine lay ahead, tucked deep in the wilderness where the moon seemed to hang lower, closer, almost watchful.
She had come here to escape. Escape the noise of the city, the empty faces, the endless weight of feeling like she didn't belong anywhere. Here, in the silence of the mountains, she thought maybe she could breathe again—maybe she could finally paint what her soul had been whispering for years.
Her sketchbook lay open on her lap. Across the pages, she had drawn the same image over and over again: a wolf with silver eyes, staring straight at her, as if it knew her heart better than she did.
The driver called out, "End of the line!" and the bus hissed to a stop at the edge of the sleepy town. Elara stepped off, her boots crunching on gravel. The air here was sharper, scented with pine, damp earth… and something else. Something wild.
That night, after unpacking in the small cabin she had rented, Elara found herself wandering outside. The forest loomed like a dark cathedral, branches swaying against the silver wash of moonlight. She hugged her sweater tighter around her, telling herself it was just curiosity pulling her closer to the treeline.
Then she heard it.
A howl—low, haunting, and powerful enough to make the earth tremble beneath her feet. It wasn't the cry of an ordinary wolf. It was deeper, commanding, like it was calling her name without words.
Her heart raced. She should have gone back inside. But instead, she stepped further into the trees.
The world fell silent except for the sound of her breathing. Then, from the shadows, something moved. A wolf emerged—larger than any she had ever imagined, its coat black as midnight, eyes glowing silver.
Elara froze, every instinct screaming at her to run. But she couldn't. Because those eyes… they were the same as the ones she had been painting all her life.
The wolf lowered its head, watching her with an intensity that made her chest tighten. For a moment, she thought it might lunge—but instead, it simply stood there, as if studying her, as if waiting.
And then, before her eyes, the wolf's form shifted. Bones cracked, fur receded, and in its place stood a man.
Tall. Broad-shouldered. A scar cutting across his jaw. His silver eyes blazed under the moonlight, fierce and impossible.
Elara's lips parted in shock, a whisper escaping her throat.
"You…"
The man took a slow step toward her, his voice rough and deep like thunder rolling through the forest.
"You shouldn't be here," he said. "Not in my woods.