found at least some comfort held gently
against his chest. At least she didn’t feel
as if she would drift away on the current
of her tears. When she had quieted to
shaky sniffles, he released her, handing
her a handkerchief so she could dab at her
swollen eyes and blow her nose. He
reclaimed his handkerchief and tucked it
in his pocket, as if unconcerned by its
apparent dampness.
“Feeling better?” he asked.
“A little.”
“Do you think you might like to eat
something?”
“No, I’m too tired to eat.”
He smiled. “Well, that’s something.
I’ll keep you here at the clinic tonight for
observation, and tomorrow, if you eat a
good breakfast, I’ll release you.”
She nodded in obedient agreement.
“Sleep well.” He lifted a lantern from
the stand beside the bed. “If you need
anything before morning, just give a shout.
I’ll be sleeping in the next room.”
She nodded again, but thought she
would never have the need of something
so badly she would call for assistance
from a perfect stranger in the middle of the
night. Of course, she hadn’t thought she
would ever faint either.
The dream went on and on: a
ceaseless torment. Punishment for all the
blood she’d spilt over the years. The
dream played through from beginning to
end as before, but it continued now and
she couldn’t wake up.
Nash had succumbed to her sword.
He lay at her feet, the blank stare of
death on his face. Carsha confronted
Maralee, who stood over his body in
utter shock.
“You killed Uncle Nash,” she
accused. “First my father and now Uncle
Nash! I hate you!”
Maralee was confused. She needed to
deny it. She needed to plead her
innocence. “Your father? I didn’t kill
your father. I’ve never killed a man. I
only kill monsters.”
The woman who had once cleaned
Nash’s wounds and ignited Maralee’s
jealousy was holding Carsha’s hand
now. Rella. She spoke as if she were
talking about the weather. “A monster to
you. A brother to Nash. A father to my
children. A husband, a lover, a friend to
me.”
“No,” Maralee denied. “I only kill
wolves. I only kill…I kill…people…”
She screamed so loudly it woke her
up. Her entire body was drenched in cold
sweat. She was trembling so hard her
muscles ached. Dr. Sabin was suddenly
beside her bed. He hadn’t even bothered
with the candle. He found her in the
shadows of the dawn and gripped her by
both arms.
“Miss Decatur, what is it?”
“I—nothing,” she gasped. “It was
nothing.”
“You screamed,” he said. “You were
terrified. I heard you scream.”
“No, just a dream. A dream, that’s
all.” It was still haunting her even now
that she was awake.
“Do you often have nightmares?” he
asked. He sat down on the edge of her
bed, checking her for fever with his
fingers.
“Yes. Every night. I’m used to it by
now.”
“No wonder you don’t want to go to
sleep.” He looked at her with compassion
in his blue eyes. “I can give you a
concoction that will allow you to sleep
more peacefully.”
“Truly?” It was bad enough dreaming
about the massacre of her family every
night, but now she was dreaming of being
a murderer—a murderer of people, not
monsters.
“Would you like to try it? You will
probably sleep twelve hours.”
She gazed across the room out the
window at the pinks and oranges
spreading across the sky. “It’s morning.
You said you’d release me if I ate a good
breakfast.”
He sighed, looking worried. “I did say
that. Where are you staying?”
“At Smithy’s Inn.”
“I could stop by this evening and give
you the concoction. You would sleep very
soundly tonight.”
She smiled, fighting an urge to hug
him. “I could sleep without dreaming?”
He nodded, smiling in return.
“That would be wonderful.”
She could see the caring in his eyes,
his urge to help others, his need to do
everything he could for even strangers.
“Very good,” he said. “Now to find
you some breakfast. I guarantee you will
not enjoy my cooking, so why don’t we go
over to the inn. I could go for some of
Phyllis’s fantastic griddlecakes.”
“That’s a deal,” Maralee said. She
wondered if the innkeeper and his wife
knew she had spent the night at the clinic.
She wouldn’t be surprised if Gordon had
a posse of armed men standing out in the
street waiting to come to her rescue. Like
he had when she’d first stayed with Nash.
Nash.
If she’d heeded Gordon’s warning
that day, she might have forgone the agony
of losing Nash, though she wouldn’t have
traded those two weeks of blissful
ignorance in his arms for anything.
“It’s a date,” Dr. Sabin said.
Maralee raised her brows at him in
question.
“Not a real date, Miss Decatur.” He
chuckled and shifted his eyes to one side.
“I’m your doctor. I can’t go around falling
for every beautiful, young lady in my care.
I’d never have time to shave.”
He scratched his jaw, covered with a
night’s
growth
of
beard.
Maralee
chuckled, the lump of lead in her chest
lightened marginally.
He smiled at her and turned to leave
the room. “You’ll find your clothes in the
wardrobe.”
He left her alone, closing the door to
respect her privacy, though he must have
seen her naked already. She climbed from
the bed, noticing her weakness for the first
time. The moon would be full in ten days.
How would she fight Wolves if she
couldn’t stand? How could she kill them if
she dreamt they were people?
Damn Nash! He’d been the one who
had
given
her
this
feeling
of
incompetence. She had never questioned
her duty in the past. And now, she couldn’t
even decide upon her destiny. Her duty
had been clear before, but now it was a
hazy cloud of doubt, lined with regret.
Had her entire purpose in life been one
huge mistake? Was saving the lives of
strangers worth damning her soul to this
internal Hell?
What had been Nash’s purpose in
taking her to his village, in showing her
what it meant to be loved, and then
revealing to her he was the one thing she
hated more than anything in the world?
Why hadn’t he just killed her? She was the
last of the Hunters. With her out of the
picture, the Wolves he protected would be
free to devour entire villages at their
leisure. Nothing made sense and the only
one who might have the answers was
someone she never wanted to see again.
Except, she still saw Nash. Every few
minutes his image clouded her thoughts.
He haunted her dreams. He appeared in
her heart without any provocation. How
could she still love him now that she knew
what he really was?
“I do love him,” she whispered aloud,
“but I hate him more.”
A gentle knock at her door pulled her
abruptly back to the real world. She found
herself standing in front of the wardrobe
completely naked with no idea as to how
she’d ended up there.
“Are you ready, Miss Decatur?” Dr.
Sabin’s soft voice carried through the
door.
“Nearly.” She reached for her clothes
and dressed quickly. Several minutes
later, she opened the door, breathless from
her haste to become presentable.
Dr. Sabin smiled at her. He was clean-
shaven, had combed his hair and had
changed out of his rumpled clothes. He
took her wrist and placed something in the
palm of her hand. “Thomas said these
were yours,” he said. “I’ve been carrying
them around in my pocket.”
Maralee didn’t have to glance down to
know the warm metal in her hand was a
pair of dragonfly barrettes. She tucked
them into a pocket in her cloak, not even
thanking the doctor for returning them to
her.
“Let’s go. I’m famished,” she said.
He chuckled at her enthusiasm and
took her hand, placing it on his forearm as
he led her through the deserted clinic to
the outside.
The sky was a dull gray. Heavy clouds
blocked the warmth of the sun from
Maralee’s face as she looked up to gauge
the day’s weather. Dr. Sabin locked the
door to the clinic—a small, but well-kept
brick building in the center of town. The
dark blue door matched the awnings and
trim. A small sign beside the door read,
Dr. Jared Sabin, Medical Doctor. His
fingers covered her hand, which was
resting lightly on his sleeve and they
headed towards the inn.
“I guess being from the North you
would be used to the cold,” he said as he
turned up his collar against the chilly
breeze.
“I haven’t been home for many years.
Are you originally from Sarbough?”
“Actually I come from Rangling near
the Southern Sea. I’ve only been here a
few months. I just recently opened my
clinic.”
“Do they have Wolves in Rangling?”
she asked him, an old habit of hers. She
was always trying to decide where to go
next.
“Wolves?” He glanced at her,
perplexed.
“Large Wolves,” she clarified. “They
would stand about this tall at the
shoulders.” She held a hand waist high.
“Weigh around a hundred and fifty to two
hundred pounds. Seem to turn up only
when the moon is full.”
“Is that what you dream about? These
Wolves?”
“Mostly.”
“And you’ve seen them?”
“I kill them.” She expected him to be
shocked. Most people were, when she
told them she hunted enormous beasts for
a living.
“Are they somehow undeserving of
life?”
She paused, considering his question.
“Undeserving?”
“I’m sorry,” he said. “You don’t have
to answer that. I’ve never really
understood the point in killing. I saw too
much of it at the hospital in Rangling. It’s
a large city. Several territorial gangs have
formed. Nevertheless, I’d mend those
young men and send them back into the
world, only to see them again—sometimes
in surgery, but more often at autopsy. One
insulted another’s family. One became
involved with another’s sister. One stole
another’s property. One expressed a
different opinion. Always they had a
reason for fighting, for killing, but I never
understood the point. How does ending
another’s life bring peace? How can it
bring anything but sorrow?”
Maralee internalized his words but did
not comment on his logic. Apparently, he
hadn’t had his entire family slaughtered by
Wolves. He’d never known the absolute
rage or experienced the ceaseless need to
prevent the same tragedy from happening
again.
“It’s snowing,” he said.
She looked up at the sky and blinked,
as large flakes clung to her lashes. “Yes,”
she said. “Dr. Sabin?”
“Please, call me Jared,” he urged,
squeezing her hand.
“Jared, you never answered my
question.”
“Your question?”
“Are there Wolves in Rangling?”
“My
dear,
there
are
wolves
everywhere. Most of them are disguised
as human beings.”
Her eyes opened wide as she stared up
at him in disbelief. “How did you know?”
Were there others like Nash? Others who
were half-human, half-monster?
He gave her a puzzled look. “I was
speaking figuratively. Philosophizing. It’s
a bad habit I picked up at university.”