My uncle's voice cut through the house like a blade.
"Ethan," he called again, slower this time. "I know you're awake."
Maya's hand closed around my wrist. Her fingers were cold, but the contact sent a jolt through me-sharp, grounding. Her eyes pleaded with me to stay put, to let her handle this.
I gently pulled free.
"No," I whispered. "This is my mess."
I stood, every nerve in my body buzzing. The moment my feet touched the floor, the room seemed to sharpen around me. I could hear my uncle's boots shifting in the hallway. I could smell him-smoke, rain, and something old. Familiar.
That scared me.
I opened the door before he could knock again.
He stood there with his shoulders tense, his jacket still damp from the morning fog. His eyes locked onto mine, and something in his expression broke-relief, fear, and guilt crashing together.
"You changed," he said quietly.
Maya sucked in a breath behind me.
"What are you talking about?" I demanded, even though part of me already knew.
My uncle stepped inside and shut the door, turning the lock with a deliberate click. He looked at Maya then, really looked at her, and his jaw tightened.
"So," he said. "They finally told you."
"Told me enough," Maya replied coolly. "Not everything."
His gaze returned to me, heavy. "Ethan, sit down."
I didn't.
"Tell me why I woke up covered in someone else's blood," I said. "Tell me why I hear things I shouldn't and smell fear on people. Tell me why the moon feels like it owns me."
The silence that followed was unbearable.
My uncle ran a hand through his graying hair. "Because you're a werewolf," he said at last. "And last night, your bloodline woke up."
The word hit me harder than any punch.
Werewolf.
I laughed once, hollow. "That's not funny."
"I'm not joking."
Maya stepped closer to me. I felt her presence like a shield, and that terrified me even more. If this was real-if I was dangerous-she shouldn't be anywhere near me.
"How long have you known?" I asked him.
"Since the day your parents died," he said.
The room tilted.
"You promised me that was an accident," I said, my voice breaking.
"It was," he said quickly. "But not the kind you think."
Images flashed through my mind-sirens, rain, twisted metal, blood on glass. I'd been ten. I'd never asked too many questions.
"You carry your father's blood," my uncle continued. "He was an alpha. Strong. Respected. And hunted."
"Hunted by who?" I asked.
He hesitated.
"By humans," Maya said softly. "And by other packs."
My uncle shot her a sharp look. "You know too much."
"I know enough to save his life," she replied.
My heart pounded. "Save me from what?"
"From losing yourself," my uncle said. "From the first kill."
The word *kill* echoed in my skull.
"I didn't kill anyone," I said. "Did I?"
He met my gaze and didn't answer.
My chest tightened painfully. A memory surfaced-running through the dark, the thrill of the chase, the sound of something crashing through bushes ahead of me.
I staggered back, nausea rising.
Maya caught me before I fell.
"I'm here," she whispered, pressing her forehead against mine. Her breath trembled. "You're still you."
Her closeness nearly broke me. My hands hovered uselessly at my sides, afraid to touch her.
My uncle cleared his throat. "You attacked a hunter," he said. "One of the Moonbound Order."
Maya stiffened.
"They found him alive," my uncle added. "Barely."
Relief and dread tangled inside me.
"They're coming," Maya said quietly. "Aren't they?"
"Yes," my uncle replied. "And they won't stop."
I pulled away from Maya, forcing space between us. The part of me that growled at the thought scared me more than the hunters.
"What happens now?" I asked.
My uncle reached into his jacket and pulled out a worn leather band etched with the same symbols as Maya's pendant.
"Now," he said, "you learn control. Or the moon will choose for you."
A sudden sharp pain tore through my arm.
I cried out, clutching it as black veins flared briefly beneath my skin. My uncle's eyes widened.
"Already?" he muttered.
Maya's voice shook. "What does that mean?"
My uncle grabbed my shoulders, his grip iron-strong. "It means the Black Hollow Pack has marked him."
The name sent a cold wave through me.
"You're not just changing," he said grimly. "You've been claimed."
And outside, far away but closing fast, a howl split the morning air-deep, dominant, and answering something inside my blood.
The moon might have been gone from the sky, but it hadn't let me go.
The howl lingered in the air long after it faded, like a bruise you couldn't stop touching.
I was still gripping my arm, my pulse roaring in my ears. Whatever mark the Black Hollow Pack had left burned beneath my skin-alive, aware. It felt like something had reached inside me and wrapped its fingers around my bones.
My uncle finally let go.
"Pack your things," he said to me. "We're leaving. Now."
"Leaving where?" I asked.
"Somewhere they can't track easily."
Maya laughed softly, but there was no humor in it. "You really think it's that simple?"
My uncle's jaw tightened. "It has to be."
He moved toward the door, already making plans in his head. That left Maya and me standing alone in the small room, the air between us charged and dangerously thin.
She was shaking.
I noticed because I could *feel* it-every tremor, every uneven breath. Her heartbeat was loud to me now, impossible to ignore. Fast. Too fast.
"Maya," I said quietly. "You're scared."
Her eyes snapped up to mine. "Of course I am."
"That's not what I meant."
She swallowed. I smelled salt-fear and something sweeter beneath it. Want. The realization hit me like a punch.
"I can hear your heart," I admitted. "I don't think I'm supposed to be able to do that."
For a split second, something dark and knowing flickered across her face.
"That's because you're changing," she said. "And because you're standing too close."
I took a step back immediately, pressing myself against the wall. The growl that rose in my chest shocked us both.
Maya's breath hitched.
"Don't," she whispered. "Don't shut me out."
"I could hurt you," I said. "You saw what I did."
"You didn't hurt *me*," she replied, stepping closer despite my warning. "And that matters."
She reached for my arm-the one that still burned-and I flinched. Her fingers brushed my skin anyway, light and careful, like she was touching something fragile instead of dangerous.
The pain eased instantly.
I stared at her. "What did you just do?"
"I..." She hesitated. "I don't know. It just felt like you needed someone to hold you there. To keep you grounded."
Her hand was still on my arm. My entire body leaned toward her without my permission. The world narrowed until there was only her warmth, her scent, her pulse.
This was bad. So bad.
"Maya," I said hoarsely. "If I lose control-"
"You won't," she said firmly. "Not with me."
The certainty in her voice terrified me more than doubt ever could.
Before I could respond, the windows rattled violently.
We both jumped as a heavy thud shook the house, followed by another howl-closer this time. Too close.
My uncle burst back into the room. "They've found us."
"How?" I demanded.
His eyes flicked to Maya, then away. "The mark makes him a beacon. And fear doesn't help."
Maya's hand dropped from my arm, guilt flashing across her face.
"I'm sorry," she whispered.
I didn't understand then-but I would.
"Ethan," my uncle said sharply. "Listen to me. You cannot transform here. Not with humans nearby."
As if summoned by his words, another wave of pain surged through me. My vision blurred, gold bleeding into the edges. My teeth ached. My spine tightened.
Maya grabbed my face, forcing me to look at her.
"Stay with me," she said urgently. "Look at me. Breathe when I breathe."
Her forehead pressed against mine again. I felt her breath, counted it, clung to it like a lifeline.
In.
Out.
In.
My pulse slowed. The growl faded.
Outside, something slammed against the house.
The front door shattered.
My uncle swore. "They're inside."
"Take him," Maya said suddenly. "I'll distract them."
"No," I snapped. "You're not staying here."
Her eyes softened in a way that hurt. "This is what I was trained for."
"Trained for *what*?" I demanded.
She didn't answer.
Instead, she leaned up and kissed me.
It wasn't gentle. It wasn't careful. It was desperate and electric, like she was trying to pour courage into me through her lips. My entire body lit up, power roaring awake-and for one terrifying second, the wolf surged forward, claiming her as *mine*.
She pulled back just in time.
"Remember this," she whispered. "Remember that you're loved. That's how you fight it."
Then she turned and ran toward the noise.
"Maya!" I shouted, lunging after her-but my uncle caught me.
"Not yet," he said fiercely. "If you go now, you'll kill everyone in this house."
I watched helplessly as shadows moved down the hall, as voices shouted, as Maya disappeared into the chaos.
My hands curled into fists, claws threatening to break free.
I swore then-under my breath, under my skin, under the mark burning into my soul-
No pack.
No hunter.
No moon.
Was going to take her from me.
And somewhere in the house, something screamed.
The house was burning.
Not with fire-
with sound, movement, fear.
I strained against my uncle's grip as another crash echoed from the hallway. Wood splintered. Someone shouted. The scent of blood flooded the air, hot and sharp, sending the wolf inside me slamming against my ribs.
"Maya's still in there!" I roared.
"I know," my uncle snapped. "And if you go feral now, she dies with everyone else."
That stopped me.
Barely.
My arm burned again-worse this time. I cried out as pain ripped through my skin like something was being carved from the inside. My uncle swore under his breath and yanked up my sleeve.
The mark was there now.
Black and silver lines twisted beneath my skin, forming a symbol that pulsed with a heartbeat that wasn't mine. It looked ancient. Possessive.
Claimed.
"That's their seal," he said grimly. "Black Hollow doesn't mark lightly."
"What does it mean?" I demanded.
"It means they think you belong to them," he replied. "And wolves don't give up what they claim."
A scream cut through the noise.
Maya's scream.
The wolf surged.
My vision fractured into gold and shadow as I ripped free of my uncle's grip. Pain exploded through my spine-but this time, I welcomed it. I ran toward the sound, faster than thought, faster than fear.
I skidded into the living room.
Two men stood there dressed in dark armor, silver weapons raised. One lay bleeding on the floor. And between them-
Maya.
She was pressed against the wall, chest heaving, blood smeared across her knuckles. Her eyes locked onto mine, widening in relief and terror all at once.
"Ethan-don't-"
Too late.
The wolf broke loose.
Bones snapped. Muscles tore and rebuilt. The world sharpened into brutal clarity. I felt *huge*, powerful, unstoppable.
One hunter turned just in time to see me.
He didn't even get to scream.
I slammed into him, sending him flying through the window in a storm of glass and blood. The second raised his weapon-but Maya moved faster.
She threw her pendant.
Silver light exploded in the air, slamming into the hunter and pinning him to the wall like an insect. He screamed as the light burned into his skin.
I stood there, half-shifted, chest heaving, claws dripping red.
Maya stared at me.
Not with fear.
With heartbreak.
"Look at your hands," she whispered.
I did.
Blood soaked my claws. The wolf inside me purred.
I hated it.
I turned away from her instantly, shaking, trying to force the shift back. The mark burned like fire, resisting me.
"Ethan," she said softly, stepping closer. "You came back. That means you're still you."
I wanted to believe her.
She reached out-hesitated-then placed her palm over my heart. The contact sent a shock through me, grounding and unbearable all at once. My form collapsed back into human skin, leaving me gasping on my knees.
She knelt with me.
"You scare me," she admitted, voice breaking. "But losing you scares me more."
I looked up at her, eyes burning. "If I stay near you, I'll destroy you."
"No," she said firmly. "If you leave, you'll become exactly what they want."
Sirens wailed in the distance.
My uncle appeared in the doorway, eyes dark. "We have to disappear. Tonight."
Maya squeezed my hand. "This isn't over."
I looked down at the mark on my arm, still glowing faintly.
No.
This was just the beginning.