ROGUE
Hunger drove him through the trees.
Not the dull ache of missed meals — he knew that feeling, had lived with it more times than he could count. This was sharper. Cleaner. The kind of hunger that narrowed the world to a single point: prey.
The deer had been careless. Old, maybe, or sick — something wrong in the way it moved, a hitch in its gait that sang weak, weak, weak to every predator within miles. He'd caught the scent an hour ago, tracked it through the undergrowth with the patience of something that had learned long ago that rushing meant losing. Now he was close. Close enough to hear its heartbeat, rabbit-fast and desperate, pushing blood through a body that already knew it was going to die.
He moved low through the brush, belly nearly touching the ground, each paw placed with deliberate silence. The moon was high and bright, filtering through the canopy in shafts of silver that turned the forest floor into a patchwork of light and shadow. He stayed in the shadows. He was good at shadows.
The deer stood in a small clearing, head up, ears swiveling. It knew something was wrong. Could feel the weight of eyes on its flank. But it couldn't see him — couldn't smell him, not with the wind in his favor — and that moment of confusion was all he needed.
He launched.
The distance closed in three bounds, massive paws tearing earth, muscles coiling and releasing with the efficiency of a machine built for exactly this. The deer bolted — Loss too late, far too late — and he hit its hindquarters with the full force of his weight, bringing it down in a tangle of legs and terror. His jaws found its throat before it could scream.
One bite. One crush. One wet snap of cartilage and the frantic drumming of hooves against dirt, slowing, slowing, stopping.
He held on until the body went limp. Until the heartbeat faded to nothing beneath his teeth. Then he released, sat back on his haunches, and began to eat.
The meat was good. Rich with fat, the deer having fed well before whatever sickness slowed it down. He tore into the belly first — the organs, soft and vital, the parts that spoiled fastest. Liver. Kidneys. The heart, still warm, swallowed in three bites. Then the haunches, stripping muscle from bone with teeth designed for exactly this purpose.
He ate until his stomach stretched tight against his ribs. Until the hunger dulled to something manageable. Then he dragged what remained of the carcass into the brush, half-buried it under leaves and dirt, and marked the spot so he could find it again tomorrow.
This was life. Hunt. Eat. Sleep. Hunt again.
It should have been enough.
The restlessness had started three days ago.
He couldn't name it — didn't have words for things, not really, just impressions and instincts and the dim awareness that he was more than what he appeared to be. But he felt it in his bones, in the itch beneath his fur that no amount of scratching could reach. Something was wrong. Something was missing.
He paced his territory — though territory was a generous word for the stretch of forest he moved through, unclaimed by any pack, unwanted by anything except the small prey that lived and died beneath the trees. He'd tried to claim real territory once. Twice. More times than he could remember. Every time, the same result: snarls and snapping teeth, bodies larger than his driving him back, away, out.
Wrong, they seemed to say. You smell wrong. You don't belong here.
He didn't understand it. He was strong — stronger than most of the wolves who'd driven him off. He was fast. He was smart, in the way that mattered: smart enough to survive alone when alone should have killed him. But something about him made other wolves bare their teeth before he could even speak. Something in his scent that said danger and death and stay away.
So he stayed away. He wandered. He survived.
And he tried not to think about how much longer he could keep doing this.
The scent hit him like a blow to the chest.
He'd been moving through the trees, heading vaguely north, not hunting but not resting either — just moving because stillness made the restlessness worse. The wind shifted, carrying something from the east, and he stopped mid-stride.
What was that?
He lifted his nose, nostrils flaring, dragging the air across his tongue. Forest smells: pine and rot and the distant musk of a fox who'd passed this way hours ago. Deer — not his deer, a different one, younger and faster and not worth the chase. And under all of that...
Something else.
Something new.
He turned east and followed.
The scent grew stronger as he moved, and with it, a feeling he'd never experienced before.
It wasn't hunger. It wasn't fear. It wasn't the wary alertness that kept him alive in a world that wanted him dead. It was something deeper — something that pulled at a place beneath the wolf, a place he hadn't known existed until this moment.
Her.
The word rose from somewhere inside him, unbidden and undeniable. Not a thought, exactly. More like a recognition. The same way he recognized water when he was thirsty, shelter when he was cold, danger when it crept too close.
Her. Her. Her.
The scent was female. Human. But that wasn't what made it different — he'd smelled humans before, avoided their roads and their houses and their sharp, chemical stench. This was... softer. Warmer. Like something blooming in the dark, calling to him across the miles.
He shouldn't follow. He knew that. Humans meant trouble. Humans meant noise and light and the possibility of death — not from the humans themselves, fragile as they were, but from the attention they brought. Other wolves. Other dangers.
But his legs kept moving. His nose kept tracking. And the pull in his chest grew stronger with every step.
The forest thinned. The trees gave way to a narrow road, cracked asphalt and gravel shoulders, and beyond it — more trees, but different. Sparser. The edge of something.
He stopped at the tree line, hackles rising.
Her territory.
He could see it now: a structure, small and dark, nestled among the trees on the other side of the road. Human-made. A dwelling. And from it, the scent poured like smoke, thick and intoxicating, filling his lungs with every breath.
She was in there.
He didn't know how he knew — couldn't see her, couldn't hear her — but the certainty was absolute. The female who smelled like warmth and want and something he couldn't name was inside that structure, and every instinct he possessed screamed at him to go to her.
To claim her.
The thought rose savage and sudden, and he shook his head, confused by its intensity. Claim? He'd never claimed anything. He was a rogue, a wanderer, a wolf without pack or place or purpose. Claiming was for alphas, for wolves with territory and status and the right to take.
But the instinct didn't care about logic. It just wanted.
He forced himself to stay still. To watch. To wait.
Time passed. He wasn't sure how much — time moved differently when you were hunting, and this felt like hunting, even though he wasn't sure what he was hunting for.
The structure's lights went out, one by one. The scent remained, but it settled, grew quieter, like she was sleeping. He imagined her in there — though he didn't know what she looked like, couldn't picture her face, only knew the smell of her and the way it made something in his chest ache.
He should leave.
He should turn around, head back into the forest, put miles between himself and this human and whatever madness had gripped him. That was the smart thing. The safe thing. The thing that had kept him alive for years when everything else should have killed him.
He didn't leave.
Instead, he crept closer. Across the road, quick and low, keeping to the shadows. Into the trees on her side, circling the structure, learning its shape and its scent and the way the moonlight fell across its roof.
There was a window on the far side. Large — larger than he'd expected, the kind that let the outside in. Dark now, like the others, but the scent was strongest there. Her sleeping place.
And through the glass, he could see her.
Just a shape. A lump beneath the coverings on the raised platform humans slept on. But it was her — the source of the scent, the reason his heart was pounding, the thing he'd crossed miles to find. She lay still, curled on her side, and even from here he could see the pale curve of her shoulder, the spill of pink across the pillow.
He settled into the brush beneath the window. Curled his massive body into the smallest shape it could manage. And watched her sleep.
He didn't understand what was happening to him. Didn't understand why this human, this fragile creature who should have meant nothing, suddenly meant everything. But understanding could wait.
Right now, he just needed to be close to her.
Right now, that was enough.
Dawn crept over the horizon, pale and cold.
He should have been gone hours ago. Should have retreated to his makeshift den, slept through the daylight hours, emerged again at dusk to hunt and wander and survive. That was the pattern. That was the life.
But he couldn't make himself leave.
The scent had seeped into him, wrapped around his bones, made a home in the hollow space behind his ribs. Even the thought of putting distance between himself and this place made his chest tight, his breathing shallow. Wrong. It felt wrong to leave her.
So he stayed.
Hidden in the brush, invisible against the dark earth and the darker shadows, he waited. Watched. The dwelling was full of windows — tall, wide, letting the forest peer inside — and as the first light touched the glass, he saw movement. A shape rising from the bed. The pink of her hair catching the dawn.
She moved through the space, appearing in one window, then another. He tracked her like prey, though she was nothing like prey. She was something else entirely. Something precious.
She was real. She was alive. She was there.
And he was never going to let her go.
He retreated deeper into the woods as the sun rose, but he didn't go far. Just far enough to stay hidden. Just far enough to keep her scent on the edge of his awareness, a constant hum beneath everything else.
He found a spot where the brush grew thick and the ground was soft, circled three times out of instinct, and lay down. His eyes stayed open, fixed on the direction of her dwelling. His ears swiveled at every sound, cataloging, dismissing, waiting for the one that mattered.
Sleep came in fragments, shallow and restless. He dreamed of fire. Of screaming. Of being small, so small, carried by hands he couldn't see toward a darkness that swallowed everything.
He woke with a snarl caught in his throat, heart pounding, fur damp with sweat.
The dreams had been coming more often lately. He didn't know what they meant — didn't know if they were memories or madness or something else entirely. They always slipped away before he could hold them, leaving only the feeling: fear, grief, loss.
And now, underneath all of that: her.
He stood, shook the debris from his coat, and began to move toward her dwelling again.
He couldn't help it.
She emerged in the early afternoon.
He was back in his spot beneath the trees, watching, when the door opened and she stepped onto the wooden platform at the front of the structure. He went still — completely, utterly still, the way only a predator could be — and drank in the sight of her.
Pink.
That was his first impression. Something on her head, long and flowing, a color he'd never seen on a human before. It caught the autumn sunlight and seemed to glow, bright against the muted browns and oranges of the forest behind her.
She was small. Smaller than he'd expected, though he wasn't sure what he'd expected. Her body was curved in ways that made his breath catch — soft where he was hard, delicate where he was brutal. She wore strange coverings, like a second skin, and carried something in her hand that she looked at, touched, put away.
She stretched. Arms over her head, back arching, and the movement did something to him — made his blood run hot, made his claws dig into the earth, made the ache in his chest sharpen into something almost painful.
Mine.
The word again, savage and certain. Mine. Mine. Mine.
She couldn't hear it. Couldn't know that a monster crouched in the shadows, claiming her with every beat of his heart. She just stood there, breathing in the autumn air, and then she walked down the steps and into the trees.
Away from him.
He followed.
She walked like she belonged here.
That surprised him. Humans usually moved through the forest like intruders — loud, clumsy, afraid of their own shadows. But she walked with confidence, her steps sure and quiet, her head turning to take in the colors of the leaves and the shape of the sky through the branches.
She wasn't afraid.
He stayed far enough back that she wouldn't hear him, but close enough that he could still see her. The pink of her hair was a beacon, impossible to lose, and he tracked it through the trees like a star guiding him home.
She stopped at a creek, crouched to touch the water. She picked up a stone, turned it over in her fingers, put it in her pocket. She looked up at a bird passing overhead and smiled — a small, private smile, meant for no one but herself.
He wanted to see that smile closer.
He wanted to make her smile like that.
He didn't know where the thoughts were coming from, these strange impulses that had nothing to do with survival. He only knew they were powerful, undeniable, and growing stronger by the hour.
She turned back toward the dwelling, and he followed.
That night, he brought her a gift.
He didn't plan it. Didn't think about it in any deliberate way. He just caught a rabbit — quick and easy, practically walked into his jaws — and instead of eating it, he carried it to her dwelling.
He laid it on the wooden platform. Right in front of the door, where she would find it.
Food, the instinct said. Provide. Show her you can provide.
He didn't know if she would understand. Didn't know if humans thought about such things the way wolves did. But it felt right. It felt necessary.
He retreated to the trees and waited.
She didn't find it until morning.
He watched her open the door, watched her stop, watched her face change as she looked down at the rabbit on her porch. She went still for a moment, then crouched down, her hand hovering over the soft fur.
Yes. See? Good food. Fresh kill.
But she didn't pick it up to eat. Instead, her face did something strange — soft, sad, her brows drawing together. She touched the rabbit's fur gently, almost tenderly, and made a sound he didn't understand. A sigh. A murmur.
She disappeared inside and came back with a tool — long handle, flat blade at the end. She scooped the rabbit up carefully, cradling it like something precious, and carried it into the woods at the edge of the cleared space.
He watched, fascinated, as she dug a hole in the earth. Deep enough to fit the rabbit. She placed it inside, covered it with dirt, and stood there for a moment with her head bowed.
Oh.
Understanding flooded through him. Not eating it now — saving it. Burying it the way he buried his deer carcass, storing it for later when she was hungry. Smart. His female was smart.
Pride swelled in his chest. She'd accepted his gift. She was keeping it safe.
He would bring her more.
The rabbit had worked. She'd kept it.
But a rabbit was small. A rabbit was easy. If he wanted to prove himself — really prove himself — he needed something better. Something that showed his strength, his skill, his ability to provide.
A deer.
He spent the next day hunting — really hunting, not the lazy stalking of easy prey but the focused pursuit of something worthy. He found a young doe at the edge of a meadow, healthy and quick, and he chased it for miles before bringing it down.
It was a good kill. Clean. The kind of kill an alpha would be proud of.
He dragged it to her dwelling under cover of darkness. It took hours — the deer was heavy, and he had to stop and rest, had to fight the urge to eat even a little of it, to save it all for her. By the time he reached the wooden platform, his jaws ached and his muscles burned.
He arranged it carefully. Laid it out so she would see the quality of it, the size, the proof of his strength. Then he retreated to his spot in the trees and waited for dawn.
She would be so pleased.
Her scream woke the birds.
He watched her stumble back from the door, hand over her mouth, eyes wide and white-rimmed. The deer lay where he'd left it, blood dark on the wooden boards, and she stared at it like it was a threat instead of a gift.
Confusion crashed through him. The rabbit had made her soft, sad, careful. The deer made her terrified.
Why?
He didn't understand. This was bigger. Better. More impressive. She should be happy. She should see his strength, his dedication, his ability to provide for her. Instead she was backing away, her breath coming fast, her scent sharp with fear.
But then she stopped. He watched her take a breath, square her shoulders, force herself to move. She went back inside, and when she emerged again, she'd changed into different coverings — older, worn. She grabbed the deer by its hind legs and pulled.
His eyes widened. She was strong — stronger than he'd expected. The deer was heavy, but she dragged it across the wooden platform, down the steps, across the cleared space. Her face was set, jaw clenched, arms straining. She didn't stop until she'd hauled it to the tree line, far from her dwelling.
She left it there and went back for more.
A long, coiled thing attached to the dwelling — she turned something and water sprayed out, hard and fast. She used it to wash the blood from the wooden boards, scrubbing with a brush until the dark stains faded. The smell of iron and death diluted, replaced by wet wood and something sharp and clean.
When she was done, she stood on her porch, hands on her hips, staring at the spot where she'd left the deer.
Then she went inside. Locked the door.
He waited until dark.
The deer was right where she'd left it.
He approached carefully, sniffing for other predators, other wolves who might challenge him for the kill. Nothing. Just her scent, faint now, and the rich smell of meat beginning to turn in the cool air.
She didn't want it. That much was clear. But he wasn't going to let it go to waste.
He ate his fill — the haunches, the organs, everything she'd rejected. Then he dragged what remained deeper into the forest, buried it the way he always did, and returned to his spot beneath her window.
The next morning, she went to check.
He watched her walk to the tree line, watched her stop where the deer had been. She stood frozen, staring at the empty space, at the drag marks in the dirt leading into the forest.
Her hand came up to cover her mouth.
He could smell her fear now — sharp and bright, cutting through everything else. She turned in a slow circle, scanning the trees, her eyes wild.
Something had killed a full-grown deer. Left it on her porch like a message. And then come back in the night and taken it.
She ran back to the dwelling. The door slammed. The locks clicked — all of them, a frantic series of sounds.
No. No, that's not — I didn't mean —
He pressed himself flat to the ground, frustration and confusion churning in his chest. Everything he did was wrong. Every gift, every gesture, only made her more afraid.
When she finally emerged hours later, she was carrying the knife he'd smelled on her before. She held it like she knew how to use it. She walked to the tree line and stared into the shadows, jaw set, eyes hard.
She was looking for him. Not to thank him. To fight him.
He stayed perfectly still. Let her look. Let her see nothing but trees and darkness.
The rabbit made her gentle. The deer made her afraid. The disappearance made her terrified.
He turned the puzzle over in his mind, trying to understand. She didn't know it was him. She didn't know he was trying to provide. She just saw dead things appearing on her territory, then vanishing in the night, and assumed the worst.
He needed to show her. Needed her to see him, to understand that he wasn't a threat.
But how?
Eventually, she went back inside. The door closed. The locks clicked. And he was alone again, watching, wanting, trying to figure out how to make her understand.
He didn't leave.
He couldn't leave.
She was his. She just didn't know it yet.
That night, he crept closer than he'd ever dared.
The lights in her dwelling were on, golden and warm against the darkness, and the big windows made the whole structure glow like a lantern in the forest. He could see everything — the space where she cooked, the soft place where she sat, the doorways leading deeper inside. It was like watching a world he could never enter, a warmth he could never touch.
He moved to the window where her scent was strongest and pressed his nose to the gap between the frame and the wall.
And he saw her.
She was moving. Not walking — something else. Something fluid and strange, her body swaying to a rhythm he couldn't hear. Her arms lifted, her hips rolled, her head tipped back. The pink hair cascaded down her spine. She wore almost nothing — thin fabric that clung to her curves, that showed the shape of her body in ways that made his blood run hot.
Dancing. She was dancing.
He didn't know the word, but he knew the feeling: beauty. Grace. Something wild trapped in a soft body, trying to get out.
He watched until she stopped. Watched her pour a drink, carry it to the window, stand so close he could have touched her through the glass if he'd dared. The window was so large she seemed framed by darkness, lit from behind, and he could see every detail — the curve of her lips, the rise and fall of her chest, the way she stared out at the night like she was looking for something.
She was looking for him. She just didn't know it.
For one moment, their eyes almost met.
Then she turned away, and the light went out, and he was left in the dark with his wanting and his confusion and the absolute certainty that this human — this small, fierce, pink-haired creature — was the reason he existed.
He would figure out how to reach her.
He would find a way.
He had no other choice.