Moon's Shadow
f old coffee and carpet cleaner. Kai sat in the back row, his ranger uniform marking him as one of the few official represe
gavel. A woman in her fifties with steel-gray hair and no-nonsense demeanor, she'd
ced, consulting her clipboard. "The He
e of town, dangerously close to pack territory. Any development ther
nherited the forty-acre parcel from my uncle last spring. I'm proposing to develop it into a small
een slowly declining for years as young people moved to larger cities. New ho
ffling through his papers. "Trees will be preserved wherever possible,
ore, nodded enthusiastically. She'd been complaining for months about declining sales. Tom Bradley,
hem. They saw empty land and economic opportunity, not the c
concerns?" Mayor
t? That area is a major deer corridor, and we've docu
ddressed that. We're only developing the southern po
ly. "Development will disrupt their feeding pattern
the pack's hunting trails that crisscrossed the Henderson property. Eight families meant childre
"Kai raises a good point. We're not equipped to handle wildlif
isted. "Motion-sensor lights, the works. Peop
ildlife," Kai thoug
, producing charts and studies that addressed every concern. The economics were compelli
the decision with a sinking feeling in his stomach. Phase one of the development would b
lf observing the assembled residents with new eyes. Mrs. Cho, the elderly woman who ran the town's small restaurant, worried abo
lives in a beautiful but economically challenging place. They deserv
control. He'd seen the aftermath, held the victims, carried the guilt. The p
eeded volunteers. The library's book sale was this weekend. The volunteer fir
orld away from pack politic
ing's decisions, Kai lingered. Mayor Hendri
he Henderson development," she said. "Is
tivity in that area. Mountain lions, bears, even a few wolf sightings. De
s rose. "I thought they were
s in the remote areas. They generally avoid humans, but co
ough they kept well clear of werewolf territory. But the mayor didn't
nt in his development plan," she promised. "Maybe we
repare for the kind of wildlife Silverbrook might
re settling in for the night. Television lights flickered behind curtains.
h the mountain air. It was a peaceful scene, the kind of small-t
ent was just the beginning. As housing prices in larger cities continued to rise, mor
g the forest, more people venturing into areas that should rema
re up there, his pack was going about their evening routines. Tom would be grading papers for his substitut
meeting, accepting his request for more time without argument. That wasn't like
ys to manage human encroachment-subtle discouragement, carefully placed warnin
Sera might be right. Maybe the pack did need a leader who could make hard decisions witho
er night sounds joined it-the rustle of small animals in the underbrush, th
aged in their ancient dance. Just like the delicate balance betwe
erbrook, whether he wanted it or not. The question was whether he cou
until the pack expected his answer about choosing a mate. Six months until the Henderso
the mountain air itself-thin, cold, and unforgiving.
hey stood between worlds, protect