flop of the carpet as it was thrown over
the trapdoor and the scrape of a
decorative table above them. They were
safe here, but it was dark beneath the
house. Trembling, Maralee reached for
her big brother’s hand, but he was
already climbing the wooden stairs.
“You can stay here like a little mouse
hiding in the crawl space,” Leland said,
“but I’m going to help the Hunters.”
“Leland! Mother told us to stay
here.”
“I’m tired of her babying me. I can
use a sword almost as good as father
can.”
“Cannot,”
Maralee
whispered.
Father trained both of them to use a
sword on a daily basis, but neither was
ready to fight a Wolf. “If you go, I’ll tell
on you.”
Leland huffed. “You’re such a
coward.”
Leland pushed against the trapdoor,
putting his shoulder into the motion, and
the table above crashed to the floor. A
flash of light illuminated the crawl
space. Leland grunted as he dragged his
body through the narrow space beneath
the carpet. The door dropped shut and
Maralee was alone. The darkness moved
closer. The house moved further away.
She shrank. So small. A frightened, timid
mouse.
Maralee sat amongst the cobwebs
against a pillar of support stones and
stared into the blackness towards her
home. A long, low howl pierced the air
and Maralee shuddered. The crash of
breaking glass came from everywhere at
once.
Growling. Snarling.
A woman screamed.
Mother?
Leland’s footsteps thudded across the
floor above as he sought his first real
battle.
Unable to blink, Maralee listened to
the chaos above her. The cries of the
people she loved were silenced as the
Wolves tore every human in the house
apart—all but her, hiding like a coward
in the crawlspace.
Once the sounds stopped, it couldn’t
have been less than ten lifetimes later,
Maralee gathered enough courage to
climb out of the trapdoor. The floor was
scattered with fragments of glass. Cold
air blew through the jagged-edged holes
of the broken windows. Concentrating on
the damage to her lovely home, Maralee
stumbled over her brother’s mauled body
just inside the parlor door. She looked
down and blank, blue eyes stared up at
her. The condition of his body was
horrific—incomprehensible. Pieces of
him were... missing.
Leland...
Maralee closed her eyes and
shook her head. No. No. No! If she
denied it, it wasn’t true. It wasn’t true.
Heart thudding, Maralee covered her
mouth and fled to the front of the house.
Mama and Father would be able to help
him. Fix him. Fix Leland. They never
failed their children.
Maralee found other members of the
Decatur family scattered around the
foyer. Her grandfather, two uncles, an
aunt, several cousins, all of them had
their throats torn out and the same blank
look on their faces. The floor was
decorated with a discordant pattern of
macabre, bloody paw prints. Near the
front door lay her mother. Her radiance
extinguished. Her beautiful blond hair
saturated with blood.
“Mama!” Maralee turned away.
Shapes blurred behind her tears. She was
shrinking again.
I’m so small. I can’t help her. I can’t
help anyone.
Her brother’s voice echoed around
h e r .
Coward. Coward! Coward!
She
covered her ears, but it didn’t drown out
his words.
Too late. It’s too late.
Maralee stumbled out of open the
front door, fleeing the ghosts in the
house, and tripped over another body
lying across the porch. She pitched
forward, tumbled down the steps and
landed in the graveled drive on her
knees. She sucked in a sob of pain and
then froze. An enormous, black Wolf lay
sprawled beside her.
She shrieked, but it didn’t move.
It was dead.
Several others scattered across the
drive and yard—dead.
She struggled to her feet. No place
was safe haven. The horror of death
engulfed her.
A metallic scrape behind her gave
her heart pause. She turned her head
slowly, eyes reluctantly seeking the
source of the sound. The body she’d
tripped over on the porch was her father.
His sword, still clutched in his right
hand, scraped across the marble
doorstep as he attempted to lift it.
“Father!”
She spun on her heel and raced up
the steps to kneel beside him. Her
salvation. Father would protect her. He
would
make
things
better.
Fix
everything. Fix Leland. Fix Mama. Take
the fear. The pain. The terror. Her faith
in Father was as infallible as his sword
wrought in solid silver.
He didn’t speak. He couldn’t. Like
the other members of her family, his
throat had been ripped out. His silvery
eyes locked with hers and he handed her
his bloodied sword. Maralee took the
weapon and cradled it against her
narrow chest. It was heavy. The weight
of her world rested upon its blade. But
her father’s strength radiated from the
sword and gave her hope.
“What should I do, Father?” she
asked, afraid to touch him.
There was so much blood. None of it
in his vessels.
Father never answered her. His face
went lax and he flew with the angels.
From behind, a vicious growl alerted her
to danger.
Maralee sat up abruptly, instantly
awake. She took a deep, shuddering,
breath and collapsed back on the lumpy,
inn pillow. Every night for the past fifteen
years, the same dream of her past
interrupted her sleep. At times, she was
grateful for it. It never let her forget why
she hunted Wolves. Why they must all die.
She would not rest until every one of them
was extinguished.
She had failed so utterly in her duty the
night before. She’d only slain a solitary
Wolf. Only one. That ignorant man, Nash,
had shut her in a shed. How dare he
interfere with her destiny? Then he
seemed to mourn that horrible Wolf.
Strange fellow. Definitely strange. She
hoped she saw him again, just so she
could tell what she thought of him and his
damned meddling. Now she’d have to
wait an entire month before she could
destroy the rest of that pack of soulless
monsters.
The sun had barely risen, but Maralee
knew she would be unable to go back to
sleep. She tossed the covers aside and
rose from bed. She rummaged through her
knapsack and gathered clothes and
toiletries for a bath, then journeyed to the
end of the hall and filled the tub with cold
water from the hand pump. Several
steaming kettles sat upon the radiator. She
added the hot water to her bath before
refilling the kettles and returning them to
the heater.
Her bath was cool, but it was better
than washing up in a partially frozen
stream as she had while traveling by hired
sleigh. She thought she’d never arrive at
this secluded village. She really needed to
get herself another horse. Wolves had
killed her last mount two months ago and
she just couldn’t bring herself to get
another yet. It seemed disloyal to replace
Sully so soon after she had failed to
protect him.
Maralee washed with soap and
fragrant shampoo, and then added more
hot water to the tub from the kettles. It
wasn’t like her to lounge in a tub of warm
water, but she found it soothing. She had
almost drifted to sleep when someone
rattled the doorknob.
She sat up hastily with an awkward
splash. “Someone’s in here!”
“Apologies, miss,” the gravelly voice
of the innkeeper called through the door.
“I was wanting to tell you that breakfast is
being served down in the dining hall.”
“Thank you, sir,” Maralee called. “I
shall be down directly.”
Footsteps faded away from the door
and Maralee rose from the tub. It took her
a while to figure out how to drain the tub
with the siphoning hose, which ran
outside. It was nearly a half an hour
before she was dressed in black woolen
breeches and white blouse, and on her
way
downstairs
for
breakfast
in
stockinged feet.
She found the dining hall was more
like a dining closet. Two square tables
were squeezed into the tiny room with
eight, unoccupied chairs. The dark wood
paneling on the walls and lack of
windows made the room even more
confining. Maralee glanced around. She
could
smell
food—bacon
and
griddlecakes if she wasn’t mistaken—but
didn’t see any signs of it.
“Ah, there you be, miss,” the
innkeeper said. “I was about to come after
you again.”
“I’m sorry I’m so late. I couldn’t
figure out how to drain the bathtub.”
“Don’t worry about that none. The
maid will tend to it. Have a seat, the wife
will bring your breakfast.”
Maralee smiled and sat down in one of
the worn, wooden chairs. “Thank you.”
True to the innkeeper’s word, his wife
bustled out of a swinging door at the far
end of the dining closet, carrying a pitcher
of milk and plates overflowing with food.
She was a woman of ample hips and
ample cheer. She squeezed between the
pair of tables and set the food down
before Maralee. The woman brushed stray
strands of graying hair from her flushed
cheeks and gazed down at Maralee with a
warm and inviting smile.
“It’s nice to have a guest for a
change,” she said, blue eyes twinkling.
“Ever since those rumors about the
Wolves spread, we haven’t had many
travelers through these parts. Doesn’t
seem to matter to folks that we’ve never
had a death from a Wolf attack in these
parts.”
“And I’m here to make sure that’s
always the case,” Maralee said, her
stomach growling now that food was
within reach.
“We are happy you agreed to come,”
she said. “There be a Wolf out there
howling right now. Been carrying on all
morning.”
“Wolves howling during the day?” In
her experience, the Wolves disappeared
between full moons. Perhaps the howling
wolf was a common variety, but those did
not typically howl in the morning hours
either.
“I’ve never heard anything like it.”
“Thank you for the fine breakfast,”
Maralee said, hoping to dissuade the
woman from further conversation. Maybe
if the howling Wolf turned out to be one
she ceaselessly hunted, she could increase
her death tally to two, instead of wasting
four weeks waiting for the pack to return.
“If you be needing second helpin’s,
give a holler.” The innkeeper’s wife
bustled back into the kitchen.
Like a starving beggar, Maralee
polished off a plate of griddlecakes and