Daughter of the Moon blood
th the scent of pine, moss, and something metallic that didn't belong. Fog clung to the ground like a whisper of ghosts, twisting through the roots of
gainst the chilly morning air. The sun had not yet risen, and only a dull grey light filtered through the trees. She shouldn't have been o
the woods
he trees, crouching to touch the cold water. It should have brought her peace.
oo
mal. No. This was sharp, iron-r
sense suddenly alert. The birds were gone. The usu
prawled at the base of a cedar
d before her mind could stop them. Her boots crunched softly against the frost-co
belonged
ad been ripped open. Blood soaked the ground around him, glistening dark
d a hand ov
t-the snap of a
hammering. Nothing. J
dy again. Her mind raced. Should she call the police? Her phone
ack. Close
the mist, a s
, she thought it might be a bear, but then it stepped forward-
wo
didn't gr
ough, and it rippled with muscle beneath the thick coat. It stared
The wolf wasn't snarling. It di
h
owly. As if ac
vanishing into the tre
didn't know how long she stayed there before her fingers found
y," she said.
rned a
-
of the wolf. They questioned Aria, asked why she was out so early. She gave th
spers began
o its history like ivy on crumbling stone. People didn't spe
nings about the woods.
er skin as if she could wash away the image of the blood, the wo
ng at the ceiling, her mind racing, the f
ream, the wo
the forest, eyes glowing
rds, but
who you th
, heart racing, swea
avy in the sky, and somewhere
eam. A b
a Mmesoma Perpetual.