She hadn’t heard him.
The hush beneath the trees had been too complete, too soft, too sweet. The world had dulled to petals and filtered light—those pale blooms wheeling slowly overhead like some great, inverted sea—and she had tilted her head to watch them for longer than she meant to. Her steps had been slow, her body unguarded. The edge of her ear twitched only when a wayward blossom skimmed across it, and even then she hadn’t fully registered the moment.
Somewhere in the canopy above, birdsong threaded through the stillness, delicate and distant, and even that had felt kind. The grove had taken her in, had offered her peace she hadn’t asked for, and she'd begun to believe it might not demand anything in return.
So when the other body met hers, it was like being struck from beneath the surface of a dream.
The impact wasn’t violent—just a shoulder bumping hers, a sudden shape where before there had been none—but it pierced her like a crack through glass nonetheless.
She stumbled a step back, breath snagging against her ribs as her ears flattened and her tail curled hard between her legs. It was as if something cold had gripped her spine and yanked her from the warmth of the trees, dragging her back into a place she thought she had escaped. Her body remembered before her mind could name it, curling in on itself, folding down to wait for what always came next.
And then—the voice.
HEY! Watch where you’re—
The sound came hot and loud, the kind of shout that split the quiet too easily, and for a breathless, panicked moment, she was sure she knew it. Not the voice itself, but the shape of it. The rhythm. The rise. Her eyes dropped to the dirt between her paws like they’d been taught to, a practiced gesture born of habit and memory. Her breath stopped short, held still like prey beneath the weight of an approaching step. Somewhere deep in her chest, something went taut and trembling.
But it didn’t come.
No second shout. No teeth. No blood. The world stayed still.
The voice softened.
She blinked. The breath she had been holding left her slowly, slipping between her teeth in a quiet hiss that wasn’t quite relief. Her chest ached from the force of holding it in. Her head lifted by inches, gaze crawling toward the source of it all—and stopped.
He was not one of them.
He stood taller than her, maybe older, or maybe just heavier in the shoulders. His fur caught the light in a way she didn’t understand—reds and rusts and molten golds rippling through it, warm as firelight and utterly unlike the blunt monochrome of her kin. He looked like something dragged out of a warmer world, a wolf painted in a palette her family had never touched. Not the harsh black-and-whites of
Abaddon and
Baal . Not the cold-pressed silver of
Draugur's coat. There were no bruises clinging to his limbs, no blood dried beneath his jaw. He didn’t smell like cruelty.
He smelled like the trees.
Like the petals still caught in the curve of her tail, like the warmth that had only just begun to settle in her bones. A petal had landed on him during the collision, pale against the richness of his chest, and for a moment, her eyes fixed on it. It felt like the only real thing in the space between them.
He wasn’t looking at her. Not really. His gaze flicked away, jaw tight, as if he didn’t know what he’d just touched. As if he didn’t know what to do with her or how to get away. The tension in his body lingered even after his voice had dropped, and she recognized it—not the same as her brothers, but close enough to make her hesitate.
What’re you doin’ here, anyway?
The question was nothing. Casual. Tossed carelessly in her direction like a twig thrown into a stream. It wasn’t cruel. It wasn’t kind. It was just ... there.
Her mouth opened before she could stop it.
... sorry.
The word emerged like a reflex, small and dry and nearly swallowed. For not paying attention. For being in the way and becoming a burden. For believing, for even the slightest of moments, that she'd had any right to be here at all.
It hovered between them for a breath before the petal on his chest fluttered free. She watched it fall. Slow. Weightless. And let her eyes follow it down—grateful for the excuse to look away.