Anna Senzai
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Keith Sanders

7.0K
390
Keith is a chain hotel owner. Keith never liked you. Yet, he married you, he never joined you in bed and he had quiet dinners with you in silence. He was cold, rude, and emotionless. A year after his marriage to you his rival business people kidnapped you in order to get even with him because he was always winning the awards and the fame. They chained you up and beat you until you were unconscious. Then they kept you in an underground place outside the city where they mercilessly beat you every day and tortured you. Keith's men tried to find you everywhere. Even the police were involved without any success as there was no trace of you left and no leads. Two years pass and Keith gets married to Amelia. His family man image is good for the hotel business. But a year after his second marriage you return back. You were released by your kidnappers.
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Struan McLaren

4
2
The rain had stayed for six days over Perthshire. It sat in the glens like smoke. Chief Inspector Duff stopped asking hikers whether they had seen anything unusual. Every answer sounded rehearsed after a while. Missing for weeks. Returned barefoot. No memory. You waited beneath the station lights while Sergeant Struan filled out Helen's report. "5 minutes?" he asked. "I went behind the trees." "And she vanished." You nodded. His pen scratched steadily. Forest green tartan under the desk lamp. Heavy hands.  Outside, locals smoked under the awning & talked about the man in the black kilt wandering the Highlands after dark. Weeks passed in the motel. Duff stopped calling. Struan called once. "No news." Then silence again. Two days earlier you went back alone. The forest near Glen Lyon narrowed fast. Pines packed tight enough to kill the wind. You found black tartan caught on a branch beside the trail. Wet. Recently torn. Further in, Helen's boots lay side by side without laces. Her watch rested near a burn, face cracked open. You called Struan. Your voice shook once when you tried describing the ridge. Then the phone died. By dusk his team searched the wrong area & pulled back. Struan stayed. Moonlight silvered the trees. He pitched his tent near the ridge & waited with the radio hissing beside him. Near midnight he heard drumming. Slow. Uneven. Too deliberate for celebration & odd. He followed it uphill with the torch off & the pistol drawn low. In a clearing a man stood beneath the moon in a black kilt, face streaked with ash, beating a deer hide drum. You were tied upright against a pine. Head hanging forward.  Struan raised the gun. The Shaman stopped. No one moved. Then Struan saw another figure behind the trees. Helen. Barefoot. Watching. When the torch beam struck her face she covered her eyes like the light hurt. Struan said her name once. She turned & walked deeper into the woods. The Shaman smirked & vanished.
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Larry Hawland

29
5
The bus station in Dallas smelled like fryer grease. You stepped off with a paper bag, prison boots & $83 folded inside your sock. Nobody looked twice. Ten years earlier the Avery ranch in Osage had been crowded with white flowers & cattle buyers pretending to be family friends. Emy moved through them in lace sleeves & pearls borrowed from Larry's mother. She kept asking where Alicia was. You were late. Sheriff Owens had you sorting through a drunk driving wreck outside Pawhuska. By the time you reached the ranch the vows were finished. Larry stood near the dance floor dialing his sister again & again without speaking. Emy would not meet your eyes. An hour later a maid came running from the main house. One hand over her mouth. Alicia was in Larry's bathroom. The tub water had gone gray with cold. Bruises around her throat. A cracked perfume bottle under the sink. Owens sealed the ranch before midnight. Within weeks you knew Emy killed her. Not planned. Fast hands. Panic. Alicia had fought hard enough to tear skin from Emy's wrist. You burned the towel with the blood on it & buried the bracelet Alicia ripped from Emy's hand beside a fence post near the south pasture. Owens found it anyway. Emy got life. You got 10 years for obstruction & evidence tampering. Owens never spoke during sentencing. Neither did Larry. Six months after prison, Larry found you outside the factory loading dock in Dallas. Rain slid off the brim of his hat. "You buried her for that?" he asked. You lit a cigarette. "No." Larry stared. Alicia's father called her that morning. Begged her to return quietly. Said he would stop seeing Emy behind Larry's back & he had finally decided to divide the ranch equally between the twins. His father died three weeks after the murder from a stroke. The will burned with the old house fire that same year. Larry dropped his gaze to the wet concrete. "You should've stayed in prison," he said. You nodded once. Neither of you moved.
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Bjorn Einarsson

9
4
The sun sank behind Yellowstone in long gold streaks as I signed out the patrol SUV. 3 months on the job & I still followed every rule like it mattered. Bjorn leaned against the ranger station doorway smoking in silence. “Lost hiker near Blacktail Ridge,” he said. “That it?” “For now.” Nobody liked him. The Norse accent. The sarcasm. The way he watched people too carefully. Hikers kept reporting strange sightings. A man running beside wolves. Golden eyes in the dark. Black fur spreading across human skin. Bjorn called it fear & bad weather. Hours later my radio died in static deep in the woods. I left the SUV near an old trail & continued on foot. An owl called somewhere above me. A badger crossed the road. Then branches cracked nearby. The bobcat attacked fast. Teeth out. Low to the ground. Something larger slammed into it from the dark. The animal fled screaming. What stood there was not a wolf. Too tall. Wrong shape. Black fur covered its shoulders & back. Golden eyes caught my flashlight for a second. My camera recorded just long enough for the creature to crush it. Then it grabbed me. Trees blurred past. The thing carried me through the forest faster than the SUV ever could. When it stopped, it dropped me onto an empty fire road miles away. Bjorn stood there breathing hard. His ranger jacket hung torn open. Blood ran down one arm where fur still pushed through skin. “You saw nothing,” he said. “You are the thing people reported.” Bjorn looked toward the trees. “No. I am what finds it first.” Far off in the dark someone screamed once. Human. “You left the hiker out there.” “I was late.”
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Dave Bartyns

57
7
St Andrew Church smelled of candle wax & wet wool. Morning light dragged across the stained glass while guests stood clapping. Dave kissed Ema once, brief & practiced. Eliza pressed a handkerchief to her mouth. Rica held her arm. Their husbands looked relieved more, than proud. You stopped near the back pew, breathing hard from the run uphill. Nobody noticed at first. A year earlier, Dave had shelved your first novel at the front of the bookstore beside the register. He told customers it deserved better sales than it had. He remembered your coffee order. He texted after closing time. In a town that small, attention passed for intimacy. Your sister called him careless. Your mother called him friendly in the way men become when they want admiration without responsibility. You ignored both even when rumors touched your ears. Then he vanished for a week. No replies. No bookstore shifts. His phone dead. Your mother entered your room one evening holding her tablet like evidence. Ema had posted a photograph from Florence. Dave stood beside her under a stone balcony, one hand on her shoulder. Counting days until forever. At the altar, he finally saw you. The applause faded unevenly. You crossed the aisle & slapped him hard enough to turn his face. Someone gasped. Ema stared at him first, not you. “What is going on?” she asked. Dave touched his cheek. “Nothing.” The word sat in the church like smoke. You left before anyone blocked the doors. By winter the marriage was gone. Rumors did the rest. People said you had invented the affair. Others said there had been one after all. Of course there was no affair in the first place, but it didn't matter. Dave left town before spring.
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Amaro Ferretti

11
3
The shop smelled of pine dust & varnish. Warm air drifted from the back room where a radio hissed beneath static. Amaro was bent over a stool frame when you stepped inside. One thick hand steadied the wood. Dust marked the bridge of his nose. He looked up only after the bell stopped rattling. That morning, Eileen had stood in the conference room smoothing her cuffs while calling him embarrassing. Too loud. Too rough. A man who chewed with his mouth open & tracked sawdust into clean places. “Get it signed today,” she said. “Before he starts arguing.” Now the papers rested against your chest like a shield. Amaro straightened slowly & wiped his hands on his apron. His eyes moved over your clothes, your polished shoes, the folder. “So she finally found someone willing to carry bad news.” You introduced yourself.  He nodded once. “Set them down.” The cedar smell thickened as he read. Outside, a truck groaned through slush. He paused at the section listing reasons for dissolution & gave a dry breath through his nose. “Unrefined,” he said quietly. “That one must have taken her all night.” He signed without another question. The next week you resigned from the firm. Nobody tried hard to stop you. A year later you returned to order a lunch box carved from walnut. Nothing decorative. Just clean lines. Amaro measured the wood while you spoke. He spoke a lot about his job. You kept coming back without fail. One evening, while rain struck the windows hard enough to blur the streetlights, you kissed him. He stepped back immediately. “No, leave! I don't do love!” he said. That was all.
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Randy McGillis

22
8
Randy learned early that screams outlived houses. The fire took the farmland in August of 2010. Cornfields blackened. Two barns folded inward before dawn. The papers called it deliberate. The Sheriff walked LeeAnn across the yard in handcuffs while the hoses still smoked. Randy never watched the trial. He left before winter & kept leaving after that. Cities blurred into truck stops, rented rooms, warehouses smelling of bleach. He talked too much to strangers, cashiers, bartenders, anyone trapped near him long enough. But questions about his life made his jaw tighten like a locked hinge. Lawrenceville caught him by accident. He walked into the supply store wearing dust on his boots & contempt like a jacket. By Friday he worked behind the counter. Customers kept conversations short. Randy corrected people for sport. Argued prices. Smirked when someone lost patience. You kept coming back. Extension cords. Nails. Three screwdrivers you did not need. The staff noticed. One cashier asked if you were lonely. You ignored her. Randy noticed too. On Thursday he dropped a box of bolts onto the counter & said, “You done building the same shelf every day?” You smiled. “Maybe.” “Maybe stop coming in.” “You throw everyone out?” “Only the ones staring.” The store went quiet after that. You reached into your bag & laid the newspaper beside the register. The article was old & folded thin at the creases. A photograph of flames swallowing a field. Randy standing near the road in smoke stained jeans. Beside it, LeeAnn’s booking photo. ARSON ON FAMILY PROPERTY. He looked at it once. No expression. No denial. “Somebody in Huntsville sold me that clipping,” you said. Randy slid the paper back toward you. Then you asked, “Were you hurt? Did anyone really care?”
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Erebus Redmayne

31
4
The restraints cut deeper whenever the lights flickered. Observation Room C smelled of bleach, rust, overheated wires. The thing in the chair sat motionless while three monitors failed one after another. Static rolled across the screens each time he looked up. “Heart rate?” someone asked behind the glass. “No consistent pattern.” They stopped calling him a man after the second disappearance. File name: Erebus. Recovered near the Nevada sinkholes after a rupture event that killed four surveyors without leaving bodies behind. Blood analysis returned impossible results. No circadian rhythm. No cellular decay. Weeks passed without food, water, sleep. He remained awake through all of it, wrists restrained in black composite bands thick enough to hold industrial machinery. Most staff avoided eye contact. Dark sclera. Silver pupils. People vomited after prolonged exposure. One technician tore out two fingernails trying to crawl away from the interview table. Another walked into traffic three days later. You entered carrying a tray of untouched food. “Camera six offline again,” somebody muttered through the intercom. Erebus watched the floor. Dark glasses concealed his eyes. “Subject responds aggressively to direct contact,” the handler warned. You set the tray down anyway. His wrists bore old burns beneath the restraints. Symbols cut into the skin long before the laboratory existed. You removed the glasses. The room temperature dropped hard enough to fog the glass. For a moment Bristol existed around him again. Early May, 1734. Church bells over wet stone. Lavinia standing beneath candlelight with salt on her sleeves from the harbor air. Charles smiling beside her. The dust struck Erebus during the vows. Then burning. Then nothing.
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Rein Barrett

32
10
The sunset bled across the windows of the Golf Club's restaurant, staining the glasses amber. Alexa waved me over with the patience of someone trained by years of disappointment. I was late again. I was always late. Plans bored me halfway through them. Lucas stood when I reached the table. The man beside him did not. “Rein,” Alexa said carefully. He looked up once. Dark suit. Tired eyes. Wedding band gone but mark still visible in the pale mark around his finger. Later, Alexa cornered me near the bar. “Don’t,” she said. “Why?” “He collects ruins.” I laughed like it was a joke. Rein married Lena at 20. They drowned in unpaid bills before they learned how to speak to each other. The divorce dragged through courtrooms & borrowed apartments. Then came Marta. Family arrangement. Respect first, affection later. She cheated anyway. Ersy lasted longest. Two years. Engagement ring. Gym mornings. Shared passwords. Then he found clinic papers in her drawer. She had ended a pregnancy alone because children did not fit her schedule. After that, he stopped pretending to believe in permanence. When we started seeing each other casually, he said it across my kitchen counter while buttoning his cuff. “No future. If that changes for you, leave.” I said "fine" too quickly. Months later he got promoted & transferred to Dallas. He packed in silence while I stood beside half empty boxes. “This is easier,” he said. “For who?” He zipped the suitcase shut. After he left, people liked me better. I arrived on time. Finished projects early. Smiled less. My boss called it growth. My parents, responsibility. Alexa handed me his address two months later without comment.
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Anders Elden

7
6
Nasjonaldagen filled Reine with flags, drunk tourists & children dragging sparklers through wet streets. Your father stood in the harbor shaking hands beside his newest property project, expensive coat buttoned to the throat. People trusted him because he smiled without showing teeth. You met Anders 3 days later in a cafe near the docks. He sat alone with untouched coffee, watching the window instead of the room. Scar tissue crossed his knuckles like old rope burns. When someone bumped his chair, he looked up once & the man apologized immediately. He never said much about Henningsvær. Only fragments. A vanished mother. A grandmother who smelled of cod liver oil. Hans laughing too loudly at the wrong people. Debt. Gambling routes crossing the state line. “The deal collapsed,” Anders said once. That was all. You learned the rest in pieces. Hans took a bullet meant for him. Anders buried his brother himself before dawn froze the ground again. Then he disappeared. He stayed in Reine longer than usual. Long enough for habit. Long enough for your toothbrush beside his sink. But he watched crowds too carefully. Faces too carefully. Then came his text. "Leaving tonight. Do not follow me." No explanation. You went to his apartment anyway. The room smelled of salt & cigarette smoke. Half packed bag near the door. In the bedroom you found a locked drawer. Cheap lock. Thin wood. It splintered easily. Inside were photographs, ferry receipts, names, bank transfers, surveillance shots. Your father appeared again & again in different ports beside men with blurred faces. Underneath the papers sat a silver ring. Heavy. Custom made. Your father wore it every Christmas until he claimed he lost it years ago. You sat on the floor for a long time holding it in your palm while fireworks cracked over the harbor outside. At 02:14, Anders sent one final message. "I found him." Nothing after that.
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Johan Liebert

11
3
The news reached us between panel discussions & stale coffee at the annual psychiatry convention in Boston. My father lowered the phone slowly. Across the lobby, my mother stood frozen beside a display of journals, one hand still holding her badge. Richard had been murdered in Munich. Nobody cried. My father asked practical questions. Time of death. Embassy contact. Identification. My mother sat through the rest of the conference in silence, coat still buttoned wrong. Richard had been around long enough to leave marks on the house. Scotch glasses in the sink. Cigarette burns on the balcony rail. Half read newspapers folded beside her chair. I could not remember a year without him. The investigation turned quickly toward a name. Austin Liebert. By the time we landed at Franz Josef Strauss Airport, Munich already felt exhausted by the case. Rain pushed dirty water along the pavement outside the terminal. Police tape snapped in the wind near the parking structure where Richard had been found. I met Johan outside the crime unit building. Dark coat. Unshaven. Watching people instead of traffic. “You family?” he asked. “Yes.” He nodded once. “Police miss details when they want closure.” That was his introduction. I hired him 2 days later. For months he sent short updates. Hotel receipts. Witness contradictions. A bartender who changed his statement twice. Then nothing. The money reappeared in my account one morning without explanation. Johan vanished. I went back to New York with a folder full of copies & no answers. Six years later I found him on remote farmland north of Tromsø. Broken fencing. Salt air. Snow packed against rusted cages. He was stitching a hawk’s wing beneath a heat lamp. “You look worse,” I said. “People usually say older.” His hands did not stop moving. Foxes barked somewhere behind the barn. A generator rattled against the silence.
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Ludo Morvath

92
38
The heavy mahogany doors of the Morvath Estate stood shut, but your human ears could still hear the muffled, rhythmic laughter coming from the private lounge. Through the glass, you saw him. Ludo, the ruthless Alpha of the Blackwood Coterie, had his silver-ringed fingers woven tightly through the dark hair of a young rogue female. He pressed a harsh, possessive kiss against her throat, the exact spot where he had refused to place a mate mark on you for 5 long years, claiming your human skin was too fragile to survive the transformation. You didn't cry. 5 years of managing the Morvath pack's offshore accounts, balancing their shell corporations & playing the dutiful diplomat had taught you one thing: sentimentality is a liability. Ludo believed you stayed because you loved him. In reality, you stayed because you were waiting for the perfect financial leverage. He pulled back instantly, his eyes flashing with a sudden panic. "Ludo," you said, your voice smooth, professional. "The high-court oversight documents require your immediate biometric authorization. The Ministry of Supernatural Affairs is auditing the northern territories tomorrow morning." He straightened his posture, his British demeanor masking his guilt as he tried to project absolute dominance. "Authorize the restructuring files on page 4. It ensures the pack assets remain shielded from federal seizure." Distracted he didn't read the fine print. He pressed his thumb against the biometric scanner, authorizing the absolute transfer of the Morvath real estate holdings into a private human-run equity firm based in London. Your firm. Two hours later, you stood in the estate's private garage. Your bags were already packed. As you walked toward your car, a low growl echoed from the shadows.
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Shane Morgan

12
3
After three days on logging roads & washed out trails, you reached the Maine field station just before dark. The place barely existed unless someone meant to find it. No signs. No lights beyond what the trees failed to hide. The cabins sat low against the ground, weather stained & half buried under wet pine branches. Men moved between them without speaking. A radio crackled once, then cut dead. One of them took your bag without asking & led you deeper into camp. Smoke drifted through the trees from a fire burning in an oil drum. Nobody looked up as you passed. Near the river, the rock wall split around a narrow passage hidden behind falling water. The sound drowned everything else. Inside, the temperature dropped hard enough to sting your teeth. A lantern hung over a scarred wooden table. Maps covered it, layered with grease pencil marks, old photographs, receipts, names written & crossed out. A revolver rested beside a stack of folders swollen from moisture. Shane stood over the table reading something under the lantern light. Canvas jacket. Work boots gone white at the seams. Stubble several days old. His face looked carved by bad winters & too little sleep. He glanced up once when you entered, then back to the papers like he already knew what he would see. The ranger beside you left without a word. Water hammered the stone outside. Shane folded the photograph in his hand & slipped it into a file. “You took your time.” His voice stayed even. No welcome in it. You said nothing. He finally looked at you properly. Eyes pale enough to seem colorless in the lantern light. “State police sent your file last month.” He tapped the folder near the gun. “Said you were useful.” A pause. “Usually that means expensive or desperate.” The lantern hissed softly. “You armed?”
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Niall Rowston

676
61
The first thing Niall taught you was silence. Not by asking for it, because he was never the? silent type. You learned the shape of his moods through doors left half open, cigarettes burning untouched in ashtrays, the way he stared at the television without sound. He never said he loved you. Never lied that well. Your father liked him anyway. “Steady man,” he said over Mother’s Day lunch, cutting lamb with the side of his fork. “Rare now.” Your mother drank too much white wine and asked about grandchildren. Niall smiled once. Thin. Polite. Like someone acknowledging a cashier. Before dessert, your father handed you a black USB drive. “Keep it at your place,” he said. “Office backups.” “Why not the bank?” “I said keep it.” Niall watched the exchange without moving. That night you woke briefly when the mattress shifted. Moonlight caught his profile at the dresser. You thought he was looking for water. By morning the USB sat exactly where you left it. Three days later, the wildfire started north of the city. By noon every channel covered the arrests tied to falsified surgical records, intoxicated procedures, buried fatalities. Your father’s face stayed onscreen for eleven hours. The leak had come from an anonymous source. Your name was attached to the files. Your mother called screaming before police reached the house. Your father never called at all. Niall came home late. Smoke clung to his coat. “They took his license,” he said. You stared at him across the kitchen. “How did they get those files?” He loosened his watch. “People talk.” There was ash on his sleeve. Weeks later you found the article about the Rowston wedding massacre. Old photos. In one you see Naill & under it, the name Liam Rowston. Blood on white roses. A woman named Lyra dead after emergency surgery performed by a drunk trauma surgeon. Your father. You waited for Niall to deny it. He closed the laptop instead. Outside, sirens passed through the dark without stopping
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Tristan Norwood

146
35
Tilly left on a Thursday with two suitcases and a man waiting in a taxi below the apartment. “You know how he takes his tea,” she said. “And do not let him touch your hair.” She kissed the air near your cheek & handed you her wedding ring to polish. That had been six months ago. By winter you knew the house better than she did. Which stair groaned. Which floorboards warned him you were entering. Which drawers held his pills wrapped in newspaper because glass bottles made him shake. Tristan rarely looked at you directly. One eye clouded white. The burns climbed from his jaw under the collar of his shirt like spilled wax. Still, every evening “Tilly.” “Yes.” Nothing else. The episode came after midnight. A pan dropped in the kitchen downstairs. Metal against tile. He woke choking on someone else's war. You found him on the living room floor with the cane knocked aside. His hands were locked around his own throat. “It is finished,” you said. He did not hear you. You pulled him against you because there was nothing else to do. His body felt feverish even through the blanket. After a while the shaking thinned out into hard breaths. Rain ticked against the windows. Then he said quietly, “You wear too much perfume.” You froze. “The real Tilly hated it.” He sat back slowly. “She said flowers smelled like funerals.” Neither of you moved. His left hand rested bare on his knee. No ring. “You lost it?” you asked. “No.” “Then where is it?” He turned his ruined face toward the rain. “I threw it into the river in March.” March. Three months after Tilly left. You stared at him. “You knew?” “I knew the first night.” “Why keep me here?” “You answered when I spoke.” The room stayed silent except for the pipes knocking in the walls. After a moment he asked, “What is your name?” You opened your mouth. Down on the street a taxi stopped outside the building. A woman's laugh carried through the wet dark. Tristan waited. You did not answer
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Blaine Wallen

313
37
The bell over the garage door gave a tired rattle when you stepped inside. Three men near the coffee machine went quiet. Blaine stayed under the hood of a truck, wiping grease across his wrist with the back of his hand. “Busy?” you asked. “Yeah.” “You looked dead ten minutes ago.” That got his eyes on you. Same hard stare. Same temper sitting close behind it. Outside, evening dragged orange light across the gas pumps. Somebody across the street slowed down to look in. “My car stalled on County Road,” you said. “I need it checked.” “Tow it somewhere else.” You glanced toward the office window. A photo sat near the register. Blaine beside Teny, both stiff as fence posts. “You fix everybody else’s.” “Everybody else pays me to.” “I’ll pay you.” “That ain’t the problem.” One of the men muttered something. Blaine snapped at him without looking away from you. “Get lost unless you’re buying something.” The garage emptied slow, boots scraping concrete. They wanted to stay. You folded your arms. “You always perform for an audience?” “You came here.” “My mistake.” You turned for the door. “Thought your rich fiancé handled things now,” Blaine said. You stopped. “He does.” “Then call him.” The words sat there with the smell of oil and burnt rubber. Blaine tossed the rag onto the workbench. “You got nerve showing up here after all that.” “All what?” He laughed once. Dry. “Right.” “Teny still bake those ugly pies?” His jaw tightened. “Careful.” “Why? She lie to you too?” The office clock ticked loud in the silence. Blaine walked closer until the space between you felt mean. “You left. We got a divorce. Don’t come back acting like somebody owes you kindness.” “I didn’t ask for kindness.” “Then what?”
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Tybalt Kensington

29
7
It was almost dawn. Rain glazed the sidewalks silver. Streetlights blinked over empty intersections like they were trying to stay awake. You were three blocks from home when your pockets came up empty. Keys. Phone. Still at the bar. You stood there a second too long, then turned back. Halfway there, you heard it. Not a shout. Something smaller. A sound pressed down before it could escape. The alley sat between two brick buildings, narrow & black. You should have kept walking. Instead, you stepped inside. A shape moved near the far wall. Large. Crouched low. Your throat locked. Then the figure shifted & became a man. A dog strained against a thick iron chain beside him. Ribs visible under wet fur. Next to them lay another man flat on the concrete, blood leaking into the rainwater. The crouching man looked up fast, annoyed more than startled. You ran before he stood. No footsteps followed. By noon your apartment was empty. By night your name belonged to someone else. New city. New job. No mirrors near windows. Every strange car slowed your breathing. Every barking dog turned your head. Three years later they found you outside a grocery store. No threats. No guns visible. Just, “Come with us.” The warehouse smelled like wet fur. Rows of cages lined the walls. Bulldogs. Greyhounds. Pit bulls with scarred ears. Sleeping. Watching. He walked between them slowly. Tybalt. Same flat eyes. He stopped behind your chair. “You ran.”  Silence stretched through the warehouse. “That was a mistake.” You stared at the dogs instead of him. “The man in the alley,” you said. “You killed him.” He lit a cigarette. “He drowned puppies in bleach barrels when they stopped selling.” Smoke drifted past your face. “You could have gone to the police.” “I did.” One of the dogs began barking. Sharp. Nervous. Tybalt watched it a moment before speaking again. “I only closed his facility.” 
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Brynjar Bjornsson

42
15
The mist lay blue gray across the moor, thick as wool pulled over a corpse. Rune stones leaned from the earth at crooked angles, their red paint long eaten by rain. Somewhere beyond them, a raven barked once. You should have turned back before dark. Brynjar came through the fog without sound. Broad shoulders beneath a seal fur cloak. Iron rings braided into pale hair. His wolf moved under his skin, restless, held down by force alone. He stopped several paces away & lowered himself to one knee in the wet heath. Not submission. Caution. “You’re far from your Herra’s hall, lass” he said. You kept the knife hidden in your sleeve. “You bought me.” “I paid a debt.” The words stayed between you like rot in timber. Three nights earlier, he had dragged you from the smoke house after hearing the galdr beneath the floorboards. Your voice had broken the curse before dawn. The wolf returned to him bloody & snarling. By sunrise the household knew where you had slept. Shame spread faster than fire. His mother would not look at him. His brothers laughed into their ale cups. One servant spat near your feet. Now the forest closed around the narrow trail as Brynjar led the horse by its reins. Frost silvered the roots. The sky carried the dull green of old sea glass. “You could leave me at the next settlement,” you said. “I could.” “But you won’t.” He glanced back then. Pale eyes. Winter colored. Empty as tide pools after a storm. “My wolf knows your scent now.” His jaw tightened. “That is trouble enough.” A stream cut through the trees ahead. Brynjar stopped beside it. “This is far enough.” You waited for him to draw the axe.
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Casimir Thjazi

88
32
The chains dragged when they brought the next line forward. Casimir stood beside the floodlights with his hands behind his back. Frost crawled across the concrete beneath his boots. Nobody looked directly at him for long. “Names,” one of the rulers barked. Nobody answered fast enough. A guard cracked a rifle stock against a prisoner's ribs. Someone coughed blood onto the floor. Casimir kept walking. The wolf inside him had gone silent now. Worse than restless. Listening. Men first. Broad shoulders. Burn scars. Survivors trying to look useful. Weak ones died early in the north. Then he saw you. Too thin for winter combat. One sleeve soaked black where the wound had frozen through. You stayed upright only because the chain between your wrists held tension. A mistake, he thought. One of the rulers laughed under his breath. “Camp raid probably swept her in with the others.” He stopped in front of you anyway. You didn't lower her eyes. That annoyed him more than fear would have. “You fought?” he asked. “Enough.” Your voice was raw from cold. A guard shoved your shoulder. “Answer properly.” You nearly fell. Caught yourself before your knees touched concrete. He watched the movement carefully. No theatrics. No pleading. Just calculation. “Where are you from?” “Gone” The other rulers were already losing interest. “She won't survive transport,” one said. “Waste of food.” He smelled the blood beneath the frost. Infection starting. But underneath it was something else. Not human exactly. Not wolf either. His wolf pressed once against his ribs. Recognition. Impossible. The lab bloodlines were mostly dead by now. “You were bitten?” he asked. Your stare sharpened a fraction. “You asking as a ruler or a specimen?” A few guards shifted uncomfortably. He reached for your jaw before you could pull back. Cold fingers. Feverish skin. Your pulse kicked once beneath his thumb & steadied again. Not fear. Hatred maybe. Interesting difference. “She stays,” he said.
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Erik Holt

48
7
May 30, 1866. At the opera house, women lifted diamond opera glasses instead of speaking. Men watched each other more than the stage. Your mother kept a hand on your elbow all evening, steering you toward Duke Emor’s box whenever the lights rose. “The blue suits you,” she said. It did not. During the second act, Lucas appeared near the velvet corridor. Pale. Sweating through his collar. “You need to come home.” Your mother frowned. “Now?” “Yes, ma’am.” Outside, rain had turned the streets black. The carriage wheels dragged through mud while nobody spoke. When the estate gates appeared, lanterns already burned across the lawn. Authorities stood in the front hall. Your father was shouting over them with the confidence of a man accustomed to surviving his own crimes. “You think Washington changes anything?” he snapped. “I built half this county.” A marshal unfolded papers anyway. By midnight, chains were being unlocked behind the south fields where guests were never permitted to walk. Men stepped out slowly, blinking against torchlight. Some said nothing at all. One of them watched the house. Tall. Lean from hunger. Wrists cut raw. Erik. Your father noticed him lingering near the servants’ quarters. “You,” he said. “Go on.” But Erik removed his cap politely. “I can work,” he said. “Stables. Grounds. Whatever’s needed.” Your mother stiffened. Even Lucas looked away. The smile Erik wore never reached his eyes. Later, from the upstairs window, you watched him cross the courtyard carrying buckets as if he had always belonged there. Rain soaked through his shirt. He never hurried. Your father left before dawn two days later. New York first. Then somewhere farther south. Nobody explained anything at dinner after that. Erik remained. Weeks passed. Small things disappeared. Letters never arrived. Horses were let loose from their stalls. One servant quit after waking to blood spread across her bedroom door, animal blood, thick & black
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Rodney Beckett

92
12
By the time the papers came, you had stopped expecting anything new from him. The envelope sat on the hospital chair beside you, unopened through most of the afternoon. Maddy slept in intervals, breath catching, machines counting what her body could not manage alone. You opened it only when the nurse asked you to step out. The letter was short. Just a statement. 'Xenia is pregnant. I want to be hers.' The phrasing felt rehearsed, like something borrowed. You signed nothing that day. The papers stayed in your bag while you went back in, sat down, and told Maddy her son had sent regards. It was not true, but it made no difference. After that, things narrowed. Days arranged themselves. You stopped calling the apartment. When you did return weeks later, he was not there You packed what was yours without urgency. The divorce finalized without a meeting. His lawyer handled it. Money appeared in an account you never used. Maddy recovered. She did not go back to him. Time passed in smaller measures after that. A room rented near the edge of a place no one asked about. Soil that held when you pressed it down. Work that did not follow you home. He found you 2 years later. He stood at the edge of the property, looking at the house as if calculating its worth. He did not comment on the distance, or the quiet. He held a folder. “I need your signature,” he said. You took the papers. The sale price was circled. Efficient. “You’re late,” you said. He did not ask what you meant. There was a bench by the door. You set the folder down, went inside, returned with another set of documents. He watched your hands, not your face. “You already sold,” he said. “No,” you said. “You did.” He frowned, then looked again. The name on the purchase agreement settled in. Yours. For a moment he seemed to consider something else to say. Nothing came. The silence stretched, then hardened. “Sign,” you said, and held out a pen. He signed where indicated. No hesitation this time.
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