CALL ON A DISTANT PACK
fast. Her hands shook wildly, the sheets wrapping around her legs as if holding onto her. She lay there
e world. The room was quiet, still, and silent, with no sound but her rapid breathing and the squ
oks on the table-but tonight, nothing was right. She couldn't think: the
she knew it
elt like she was being watched. Wait. And the wolves... She had never seen one l
took her feet off the bed and placed them on the cold floor. She tried to breathe, to calm down. She walked to the window, gripping t
lear in the moonlight. Usually, it was quiet; you could just watch the trees whisper in the wind.
ds began to become soft and distant, like the howling of a distant wind. Then the noise grew louder and faster. It star
made him j
st the light, worry written all over his face. The same expression he alwa
ng had stopped, still shaky. She couldn't explain. "Yes. Just..." It was a bad dream. She didn't believe
"It wasn't just a dream," he said. Steve raised an e
't like she knew them. The trees were different. Wonderful. Very close. And the wolves... He paused, feeling
red out the window with his eyes closed. Then he asked, "Are you
ring out at the night. "I don't know," he finally said
cream ripped through the air, closer this
he ordered in
sked breathlessly. "Wolves d
Steve replied, h
r, visibly nervous. "But I di
ght again, sharp and urgen
her hand and pulling her toward the door.
turn
ounding. She said nothing. She didn't nee
s echoed around them, coming from all sides. They rushed to
its red eyes glowing like fire in the darkness. Evelyn stopped suddenly. "It's them," she whispered. S
fur, its teeth bared in the moonlight. It made no sound, b
rrior preparing for an attack. "You don't," he complained. The crea
move, or think-it had all happened too fast. She saw Steve crash i
ge noise. Something deep, something she couldn't explain. The wolf