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Beth Chadwick pressed deeper into her jacket, her boots crunching softly over the gravel of the darkened path. The isolated town of Silverpine hadn't changed much since she'd left it behind six years ago. Same crooked street lamps, same sagging porches, same eerie stillness that made the hairs on the back of her neck stand on edge.
But Beth had changed.
She wasn't the naive girl who had run from this place with blood on her hands and a broken heart in her chest. She was stronger now-or so she told herself as she clutched the crumpled letter tighter in her fist.
Come home, Beth.
You're not safe among them.
We need you.
-A Friend
No signature. No return address. Just that single, damning call back to the life she'd sworn never to touch again.
Beth stopped at the crossroads just outside the main square. The moon hung low and swollen in the sky, casting everything in shades of silver and blue. Her wolf stirred uneasily beneath her skin, sensing the pull of home, of territory. She gritted her teeth and pushed it down. There was no home here for her anymore. Only memories-and ghosts.
A twig snapped behind her.
Beth stiffened. Her fingers curled instinctively, claws threatening to burst through her human skin. She whirled around, expecting trouble.
Instead, she found herself staring into a pair of deep green eyes that were all too familiar.
Austin Bradley.
The name burned in her mind like a brand. He hadn't changed either-if anything, he'd grown more dangerous, more ruggedly beautiful. His dark hair was longer, brushing the collar of his leather jacket. His frame was broader, muscles straining against his clothes as if even fabric couldn't contain the power coiled inside him.
Alpha power.
Beth's wolf whimpered and pressed against her ribcage, recognizing him instantly.
Fated.
Beth took a step back. "What are you doing here?" she demanded, her voice sharper than she intended.
Austin's eyes darkened. "You're the one standing on my land, sweetheart."
She flinched at the old nickname, memories flashing across her mind-hands entwined, whispered promises beneath the stars, a future stolen before it could even begin.
"I'm not here to stay," Beth said stiffly. "I just... needed to see it again. Then I'll be gone."
Austin stepped closer, his presence suffocating and magnetic all at once. She could feel the heat radiating off him, the steady thrum of his heartbeat syncing too easily with her own.
"You got my letter," he said, his voice low, rough like gravel.
Beth froze. "That was you?"
Austin's jaw clenched. "It had to be me. If anyone else found you first, you'd already be dead."
The words hit her like a punch to the gut. "What are you talking about?"
Austin raked a hand through his hair, frustration evident. "You've been marked, Beth. There's a bounty on your head. The rogues want you-and they're not the only ones. You're not just some runaway wolf anymore. You're the last bloodline of the Crescent Moon Pack."
Beth's breath caught painfully in her throat.
"No," she whispered. "That's not possible. My family... they're gone. I'm nothing. I'm nobody."
Austin's gaze softened for a moment, and he reached out-but Beth jerked away before he could touch her.
"You're not nobody, Beth. You're the rightful heir to a legacy that was slaughtered to the bone. And now that the other packs know you're alive, they'll either want to control you-or kill you."
Beth shook her head, panic rising. "I don't want this. I didn't ask for any of this!"
Austin stepped closer, voice gentling. "I know. But running won't save you anymore."
For a heartbeat, they simply stared at each other, the weight of six years and a thousand unsaid words hanging between them.
Beth swallowed hard. "Why should I trust you?" she rasped.
Austin's mouth twisted, a shadow crossing his features. "Because I never stopped looking for you. Because I never stopped loving you."
Beth's chest ached, and she hated herself for the way her heart leapt at the words.
Before she could reply, the sharp crack of a branch snapped the moment apart. Austin stiffened, his head jerking toward the treeline.
"They found you," he growled.
Beth barely had time to process the warning before figures erupted from the shadows-three men, wolves cloaking their human forms, teeth bared and eyes gleaming with feral hunger.
Beth pivoted instinctively into a fighting stance, her blood roaring with adrenaline.
Austin was faster.
In one fluid motion, he shifted-bones snapping, body elongating into a massive black wolf, fur gleaming like polished obsidian under the moonlight. His roar shook the night, a sound that sent terror racing through the attacking rogues.
Beth didn't wait for an invitation.
She let her wolf rise, let the wildness overtake her senses, skin splitting and reshaping until she stood on four paws, her silver-gray fur bristling.
The fight was brutal, vicious.
Beth lunged at the nearest rogue, her jaws clamping onto his shoulder. He howled, thrashing, but she twisted sharply, throwing him into a nearby tree with a sickening crack.
Austin tore through the second rogue like a force of nature, a blur of black fury and flashing teeth.
The third rogue hesitated, seeing the tide turning-but Beth was already on him. Together, she and Austin cornered him, forcing him to shift back to his human form.
The man snarled, blood dripping from a cut across his temple. "You can't hide her forever, Alpha," he spat at Austin. "The Redfangs are coming. And when they do, not even your pack will save her."
Austin lunged forward, and Beth turned away at the wet, final snap of bone.
Silence fell over the clearing, broken only by the ragged sound of her breathing.
Beth shifted back, clutching her arms around herself as tremors wracked her body. She wasn't used to fighting anymore. She wasn't used to feeling this much.
Austin padded toward her, his black wolf form massive and imposing-and yet, when he nuzzled her side gently, she felt nothing but safety.
He shifted back, not caring about the blood staining his chest or the torn state of his jeans.
"We have to go," Austin said, his voice urgent. "This was just the first wave."
Beth blinked up at him. "Where?"
He held out his hand. "Home."
Beth hesitated, her heart slamming painfully against her ribs.
Home.
It was a word that had once meant warmth, laughter, a mother's hug, a father's pride.
Now, it meant danger.
But it also meant Austin.
She slipped her hand into his, and he squeezed it tightly, as if afraid she might vanish again.
Maybe she would. Maybe she should.
But for now, she let him lead her into the darkness-toward a future she wasn't sure she could survive, but one she could no longer run from. The past had found her... And this time, it wasn't letting go.
They didn't speak as they moved through the forest. Beth kept pace with Austin easily, despite the deepening ache in her muscles. The old instincts hadn't dulled as much as she'd feared. Every snapped twig, every distant howl set her nerves on fire, her senses flaring out for threats.
It felt too natural to run beside him. Too familiar.
As if all the years apart had been a dream, and this-this deadly, uncertain sprint through the woods-was their reality.
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