FAOLAN
She saw him.
The curtain moved — a flutter of fabric, a sliver of golden light — and then her face appeared in the window. Pale skin, pink hair, those eyes he'd only glimpsed from a distance finally fixed directly on him.
He didn't move. Didn't breathe. Didn't do anything that might break this moment, this impossible, perfect moment when she was looking at him.
See me. See that I'm not here to hurt you. See that I'm—
Her expression shifted. Fear. Raw, unmistakable fear, flooding her features, turning her skin even paler. Her mouth opened slightly — a gasp, maybe, or the beginning of a scream that never came.
But she didn't run. Didn't look away. She stood there, frozen, staring at him across the darkness, and he stared back.
Yes. Look at me. Know me. Understand.
The moment stretched. Seconds or hours, he couldn't tell. Just her eyes and his eyes and the darkness between them, heavy with everything he couldn't say.
Then she pulled the curtain shut.
He stayed exactly where he was.
She'd seen him. She knew now — knew he was real, knew he was watching, knew the shape and size of the thing that had been circling her territory. The hiding was over. The uncertainty was over.
And she hadn't screamed. Hadn't run. Hadn't done anything except look at him with those wide, frightened eyes and then... close the curtain.
She's thinking. Processing. Deciding what to do.
He understood that. He was a predator; he knew how prey reacted to threats. Some ran. Some froze. Some fought. And some — the smart ones, the survivors — stopped and thought before they acted.
She was thinking.
He could wait.
The night crawled past.
He didn't move from his spot at the edge of the trees, didn't take his eyes off the cabin. The lights stayed on inside — all of them, blazing against the darkness — and occasionally he saw her shadow pass behind the curtains. Pacing. Moving from room to room. Never settling.
She wasn't sleeping. Neither was he.
Sometime in the deep hours of the night, he heard a sound from inside. A voice — hers, but not directed at him. Talking to the small glowing rectangle she carried everywhere. Talking to someone far away.
He couldn't make out the words, just the tone. Scared. Tired. But also... determined. Like she was making a decision.
What are you deciding?
He wished he could ask. Wished he had words, had a way to communicate beyond dead offerings and silent watching. He wanted to tell her she was safe. That he would never hurt her. That everything he did — the hunting, the gifts, the circling — was because she was his and he didn't know any other way to show it.
But he was a wolf. And wolves didn't have words.
Dawn came slowly, gray light bleeding into the sky.
The cabin lights finally went off — not all at once, but one by one, like she was making her way through the space. He tracked her movement by the darkening windows. Kitchen. Living room. And then the bedroom, where the curtains stayed firmly closed.
Sleeping. Finally.
He should sleep too. Should retreat to the trees, find a safe spot, let exhaustion pull him under. But he couldn't make himself leave. Not now. Not when everything had changed.
She'd seen him. She knew his shape, his size, the color of his eyes. She could describe him now, could tell others what stalked the woods around her cabin.
And she hadn't left.
That meant something. He didn't know what, exactly, but it meant something.
He dozed in the brush, one eye always half-open.
The dreams came again, but different this time. Less fire, less chaos. Instead, he dreamed of warmth. Of being small and held close to someone's chest, a heartbeat against his ear, a voice murmuring words he couldn't understand but that meant safe.
Mother, something whispered in the dream. Pack. Home.
He woke with an ache in his chest that had nothing to do with hunger.
The sun was higher now, mid-morning maybe. The cabin was still quiet. He stretched, shook the debris from his coat, and settled back into his watching position.
She would wake soon. And when she did...
He didn't know what came next. He just knew that something had shifted between them. The curtain had been opened, however briefly. She had looked at him and he had looked at her and the world had tilted on its axis.
Nothing would be the same now.
She emerged in the early afternoon.
He went completely still as the door opened, as she stepped onto the porch. She looked... different. Tired, yes — deep shadows under her eyes, her movements slower than usual — but also alert. Watchful. Her gaze swept the tree line immediately, searching.
Looking for me.
He pressed himself lower to the ground, melting into the shadows. Part of him wanted to step forward, to show himself again, to build on the connection they'd made last night. But another part — the part that had survived eleven years alone — knew better. She was still afraid. Pushing too fast would only drive her away.
So he watched. And waited.
She had something in her hand. The weapon — the small metal thing he'd heard click in the night. She held it at her side, not pointed at anything, but ready. A warning.
I understand. You're protecting yourself. That's smart.
She walked to the edge of the porch and stopped, staring out at the trees. At the exact spot where he'd stood last night. Where she'd seen him.
"I know you're out there."
Her voice carried across the clearing, steady despite the fear he could smell. She was talking to him. Talking to him.
"I don't know what you are. I don't know what you want." She paused, swallowed. "But I'm not leaving. This is my home. And if you try to hurt me, I will shoot you. Do you understand?"
Yes. Yes, I understand. I won't hurt you. I would never—
He couldn't answer. Couldn't do anything except stay hidden and listen to her stake her claim.
"I don't know if you can understand me. You're probably just... an animal. A big, weird, terrifying animal." She laughed — a short, sharp sound that held no humor. "God, I'm talking to a wolf. Rowan was right. I'm losing it."
She stood there a moment longer, scanning the trees. He held perfectly still, letting the shadows swallow him, giving her nothing to see.
Finally, she turned and went back inside. The door closed. The locks clicked.
But she'd spoken to him. She'd acknowledged him. And she'd said she wasn't leaving.
Good. Stay. This is where you belong. With me.
He settled deeper into the brush, something warm blooming in his chest.
She was stubborn. Fierce. Refusing to be driven from her territory even when a monster lurked at the edges.
He liked that. He liked her.
Now he just had to figure out how to show her that the monster wasn't here to destroy her.
He was here to protect her.
The day passed in a strange kind of truce.
She stayed close to the cabin, never venturing far from the porch, always armed. He stayed in the trees, watching, visible enough that she might catch glimpses if she looked hard enough. Not hiding, exactly. Just... present.
She saw him twice more.
The first time, she was standing at the window — the one she'd opened last night. She looked out, and he was there, at the edge of the trees, not concealed. Their eyes met again. She didn't close the curtain.
Progress.
The second time, she was on the porch, eating something from a small container. She looked up, and he was there — closer this time, maybe thirty feet from the tree line. She froze, food halfway to her mouth, and stared.
He held her gaze. Didn't advance. Didn't retreat. Just let her look, let her see that he wasn't charging, wasn't attacking, wasn't doing anything except existing in her space.
After a long moment, she went back to eating.
Still watching him. But eating.
She's getting used to me.
It wasn't trust. Not yet. But it was something.
That night, he crept closer than ever before.
Not onto the porch — he'd learned that lesson. But to the edge of the cleared space, close enough that she could see him clearly through the window if she looked. He lay down in the grass, rested his head on his paws, and watched the cabin.
The curtains were open.
She was inside, moving around, doing the things humans did in their dens. He watched her make food, eat it, sit on the soft platform and stare at the glowing rectangle. Occasionally she looked up, looked out, looked at him.
He didn't look away.
I'm here. I'm not going anywhere. Get used to me.
Sometime late in the night, she turned off the lights and went to bed. The curtains stayed open.
He took it as an invitation.
He stayed in that spot all night, guarding her door, watching her windows, keeping vigil over the female who had finally — finally — begun to see him.
Not as a monster.
Not as a threat.
Just as something that was there. Something that wasn't going away.
It was a start.