Her fingers, trembling uncontrollably, pressed against the band of wet warmth running down her cheeks. Blood. Her blood. Her vision had gone black hours ago-stolen by the monster who claimed he loved her. The agony had been blinding, searing... but the real torture was knowing he had taken them because she dared to run.
Because Morris believed that if she couldn't see the world, she would have no choice but to see him.
"Samantha..."
His voice drifted through the trees like silk sliding across skin. Soft. Devoted. Deadly.
"You're hurting yourself. Stop running, sweetheart. Come back to me. I can't lose you again."
Again.
The word made bile rise in her throat.
She stumbled over a fallen branch and crashed onto her knees. Pain shot up her legs, but she forced herself up, leaning against a tree trunk slick with moss. Her hands smeared the bark with blood as she groped for balance.
The forest whispered around her. Every sound-every crack, every rustle-felt too close. Too sharp. Too Morris.
She needed to get away. She needed to get anywhere he wasn't.
Something howled in the distance-not Morris. Something darker. Larger. The sound vibrated through her bones. But she didn't stop.
She would never stop again.
"Sam... I know you're scared." Morris's voice dropped lower, drenched in a strange tenderness that made her skin crawl. "But you shouldn't fear me. I did this for us. You'll understand eventually."
Understand?
He had pinned her to the ground while she screamed, begged, thrashed. He had whispered, 'I'm fixing you. Now you'll never look at anyone the way you looked at him.'
And then everything went red. Everything went silent.
Understanding would never come.
"Go to hell," she rasped, her throat raw, her voice shaking.
Leaves crunched behind her.
Too close.
Samantha pushed forward again, the darkness swallowing her whole. Every step felt like stepping off a cliff-because she couldn't see where the ground rose or fell. She crashed into a tree trunk and cried out, then shoved herself away and kept going.
She had no direction-only instinct. Only fear.
Only the burning need to live.
"Stop running." Morris's voice was no longer soft. It sharpened, cracked. "You're mine, Samantha. Mine."
Her heart slammed wildly. Blood roared in her ears.
She ran faster.
The forest thinned. The moonlight-what little she could sense-seemed to brighten the air around her. The wind changed, colder, sharper. She felt open space ahead. No trees to slam into. No ground cover.
Her feet skidded on loose soil, pebbles scattering beneath her. The edge was inches away-she could feel the drop in the air, the nothingness stretching out in front of her.
Behind her, Morris's footsteps slowed.
"You won't jump," he said, breathing hard. "You're frightened, disoriented... bleeding. The fall will kill you. Come back, sweetheart. Let me carry you home."
His home was her prison. His arms were shackles. His devotion was venom.
Samantha lifted her chin, even though she couldn't see him. "I would rather die than belong to you."
There was a pause. A long, chilling pause.
Then Morris's voice cracked with a fury so violent she could feel it in the air.
"You think death will save you from me?"
His power rippled-she could hear the shift in his bones, the stretching of skin, the guttural rumble that only a werewolf could make. Morris wasn't just obsessed.
He was a full-blooded alpha with a temper known to level entire packs.
"You can't outrun me," he growled. "You can't hide. You can't even see. You belong to me, Samantha. And I will tear down the world until you realize it."
She backed up, her heels brushing the cliff's edge.
Maybe he was right.
She couldn't run. She couldn't hide. And she would rather leap into darkness than fall back into his grasp.
She inhaled, shaking.
"Goodbye, Morris."
She stepped back-
-but something crashed through the trees behind Morris, powerful enough to shake the ground.
A snarl ripped through the forest-deeper, older, colder than Morris's rage. Samantha's breath caught as the air itself split with the sound of claws tearing into flesh.
Morris cursed-snarled-shifted fully into wolf form. Bones cracked. A body hit the ground hard. Leaves shredded beneath massive paws.
Two monsters clashed in the moonlight she could not see.
Snarls. Roars. Impact after brutal impact. The earth trembled beneath her bare feet.
Her instincts screamed: Run. Now.
But where? Off the cliff? Back into the forest? Toward the fight?
She froze, trembling violently, hands lifted helplessly in the dark.
The battle stopped as suddenly as it began.
A low, commanding growl rumbled in front of her. Not Morris. This one was stronger. Older. Sharper. The sound hummed through her bones like a pulse made of power.
"Don't move," a deep voice ordered-human, but edged with wildness.
She gasped as strong arms caught her just as her foot slipped. He pulled her away from the cliff with a grip that was firm yet surprisingly gentle.
His chest was warm. Steady. Smelled faintly of pine and smoke.
She flinched, pushing weakly. "Let me go. Please-don't take me back to him."
"I'm not here for him," the stranger said. His voice was rough, dark, but strangely comforting. "I'm here because you're bleeding... and because the moment you crossed into my territory, you became my responsibility."
Her stomach twisted.
"Who... who are you?"
He hesitated. His breath ghosted against her ear.
"I'm Zoro," he said finally. "Alpha of the Midnight Pack."
Her knees buckled. She clutched his shirt to stay upright.
She knew that name.
Everyone in the werewolf world did.
He was the wolf Morris hated most. The rival. The threat. The king in the shadows. The one even monsters feared.
Samantha's voice trembled.
"Why... why would you help me?"
Zoro's hand brushed her cheek, examining the blood. His breath hitched-barely, but enough for her to notice.
"Because whatever he did to you..." His voice darkened with something ancient, something furious. "...no wolf should ever inflict on the woman fate has chosen to protect."
Her heart stopped.
"What are you saying?"
Zoro's thumb rested against her jaw, gentle but unyielding.
"Samantha," he murmured, "you crossed my border under the blood moon. I can feel your scent in my bones."
A pause. A breath.
"A wolf only feels this once in a lifetime."
Her lips parted in confusion, fear, disbelief.
"What does that mean?"
Zoro stepped closer, his presence swallowing the night.
"It means," he whispered, "you're my fated mate."
The forest fell deathly still.
Behind them, Morris's growl rose again-weak, furious, trembling with murderous intent.
And Samantha realized-
This wasn't salvation.
This was war.