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Chapter 30:

  Chapter Thirty

  The park was still. Almost peaceful.

  I

  was still in my werewolf form, and as with the meal earlier in the

  night—when our combined senses had elevated taste into something

  transcendent—so too were all my senses now heightened and interwoven.

  The world didn’t just look or sound different; it felt more immediate,

  more present. I didn’t have to focus to notice everything around me. It

  simply arrived, all at once.

  The

  deep background hum of the city pressed in from every direction. Cars

  whispered along the Mark Clark overpass above, their tires hissing like

  serpents against the concrete. Beyond it, the WestRock paper mill loomed

  in the dark, rusted and hulking but still present in scent and

  sound—pipes ticking, metal groaning faintly, the occasional thump

  echoing through the night. The Cooper River carried its own symphony:

  distant water lapping against the bank, and somewhere farther upstream,

  the long, hollow bellow of a cargo ship's foghorn as it navigated the

  channel.

  Closer

  to us, Virginia Avenue cut a scar through the quiet. Every so often, a

  car screamed down it, tires whining as they tore past. The Buckeye

  terminal across the way hummed with latent life, the hiss of compressed

  air and the low hydraulic chuff of industrial systems powering down for

  the night. The marsh beside the park crackled with tiny life—fiddler

  crabs bubbling and popping through mud, insects clinging to tall reeds.

  The

  park itself was calm. Just a sliver of city green tucked between the

  industrial seams. Insects thrummed steadily, a familiar chorus of

  crickets and cicadas. The only electric light came from a single lamp

  above the restroom facility, casting a warm, amber halo across the

  parking lot. But the moon did the rest, pale and bright, washing the

  world in silver. Everything had the soft contrast of a black-and-white

  photo. Shadows long. Colors bleached. But to me, it was clear as day.

  And there, at the base of a tree near the fence line, lay the dog.

  He

  looked peaceful, from a distance. Curled neatly with his head resting

  on his paws, as if napping after a long day of exploring the park.

  But this picturesque tranquility only endured if you could ignore the smell.

  That—more than anything—shattered the illusion.

  The

  air was rich with smells: oil and ozone drifting down from the

  overpass, the brackish sweetness of the Cooper River, the sulfur-laced

  industrial tang from the nearby paper mill. Beneath it, the softer

  scents of the park—pine bark and damp soil, trampled grass and warm

  wood. The story of a city in flux, laid bare through scent alone.

  But all of it paled in comparison to the strongest smell of all:

  Decay.

  And woven through it, sharp and unnatural—

  the stench of that foul magic.

  I

  crouched beside the dog and reached for his collar. The tag read

  "Tyson," with a cute little paw print etched on the back. Behind it, a

  second tag listed his owner’s number, but no name. I recognized the dog.

  I’d seen his face pinned to the board at the community center and

  posted on the neighborhood Facebook group.

  His

  body was curled at the base of the tree, tucked in as if he’d laid down

  intentionally. I examined the wound: a bullet hole in the abdomen, low

  and off-center. Not the kind of shot that would drop a target instantly.

  Lethal, sure, but not clean. The angle suggested he’d been close—facing

  his shooter, maybe even rearing up when it hit him. It looked like a

  shot fired in panic. A defensive shot.

  Compared to the precise hits that had dropped Matty and Daisy, this was sloppy.

  It wasn't hard for me to speculate this dog was the one who'd wounded the cologned man.

  He

  was a pit bull—big, burly, full-blooded. The kind of dog whose sheer

  presence made people cross the street to avoid them even when muzzled

  and leashed. Built like a brick wall with fur. A dog like this could

  take a person down without much effort. Especially with supernatural

  rage fueling him.

  Which

  was a shame really. I'd known several such dogs growing up—purebreds

  and mixes alike—as my dad, every time we sought to adopt another dog,

  could always find a young pit in need of a good home. People practically

  gave them away for free. Loyal, goofy, eager to please. Sweet-natured

  dogs with better temperaments than most of the yappy little cotton-ball

  mongrels people insisted on keeping as indoor pets, if you asked me.

  And

  yeah, I’d heard the horror stories—headlines about maulings, sudden

  attacks, joggers pulled down in broad daylight. A single outburst from a

  dog like Tyson could mean a trip to the ER—or worse.

  They

  were a breed built to bite. Bred to take on creatures many times their

  size—bulls, bears, opponents far more imposing than any person. A

  Chihuahua might go ballistic at the drop of a hat, but that rat of a dog

  wasn't likely to maul anyone—though their spirit may be eager and

  willing, their bodies just weren't physically capable. Just a nip at

  your ankle, and bite on the wrist, but nothing that was likely to land

  someone in surgery.

  A

  pit didn’t need to be mean to be dangerous. That same strength—the one

  that made them formidable fighters—also made them risky to own in a

  modern world.

  Even

  the best-trained, most even-tempered dog had a razor-thin margin for

  error. And for pits, a single bad moment could mean stitches. It was why

  they were a tricky dog to own. Why so many neighborhoods banned them.

  Why shelters across the country were full of them. Not because they were

  bad dogs. They just didn’t fit into a world they weren't bred for.

  And

  yet, despite being bred to fight, they could be so loving. And someone

  had loved this one. No one puts a cutesy paw print tag on a pit unless

  they really, truly love dogs.

  Maybe

  he was a rescue. Or maybe his owner was like me—someone who lived alone

  and needed protection. I'd considered getting a big dog when I first

  moved into an apartment all by myself. But my old lease had that 'No

  Pet' policy.

  So I’d opted for a gun. And if we were being honest, guns didn’t have a great track record in this country either.

  It made me angry. Angry that it had come to this.

  Tyson

  hadn’t deserved to die—not like this. He’d had someone who loved him.

  Someone who probably went through hell trying to give him a good life. A

  dog like that wasn’t just a pet. He was a companion. A friend. Family.

  And now that family had lost him.

  But

  I couldn’t even blame the cologned man for pulling the trigger. A dog

  like Tyson, when compelled into violence, left little room for

  alternatives. He was strong—strong enough to hurt someone. Strong enough

  to keep going even after he’d been shot.

  That

  strength was probably the only reason he made it this far. Past the

  depot. Through the lots. Across the treeline. Until he found this quiet

  patch of grass beneath a tree, where he could finally lie down.

  He’d died slowly. Stubbornly. Hours after he'd been shot. Because he was strong. Because he was a fighter.

  No. My anger wasn’t for the man who shot him. It was for whoever had twisted Tyson into something he was never meant to be.

  The

  wolf had shut herself off completely, giving me room to move freely and

  examine the scene without her instinct getting hijacked. Here, this

  close to the source, I didn’t just smell the magic—I felt it. Tasted it.

  It wasn’t a physical thing, not really. It didn’t hit the nose or

  tongue in any tangible way. It registered in the mind, like the idea of a

  scent more than the scent itself. An impression.

  It brought back a memory. One from years ago.

  I’d

  helped my dad and brother clean out the truck after a hunting trip.

  They’d field dressed a deer and collected the blood in a five-gallon

  bucket. Most of it had been tossed, but no one had rinsed the bucket

  out. It had baked in the back of the truck for a full day, soaking up

  the summer heat.

  When I went to move it, I got a full whiff of it—thick, clotted, old blood that had dried and cracked like paint.

  And I'd retched.

  That’s

  what the magic felt like now. Rank, metallic, corrupted. Like dried

  blood, long forgotten, gone rancid in the heat. A scent that struck some

  deep and visceral chord in me. Something primal.

  Yet, once plucked, it elicited no further response. Whatever the mechanism it sought to hijack had rusted away, lost to time.

  It

  probably had something to do with why it had such an affinity for dogs.

  Or maybe why dogs had an affinity for it—a distinction as pointless as

  the chicken and the egg. My own magic, if it could be called magic,

  seemed to vary by species as well. Strongest with dogs. Decent with

  birds and reptiles. Barely there with spiders. Almost nonexistent with

  cats—granted, that was based on a single test. One smug, pompous cat.

  If

  my magic worked that way—had a preferred target—why not this? This

  magic that seemed to reach into dogs and pull at the chords that had

  once made them beasts.

  That

  was why, even the lingering trances, had affected the wolf so acutely.

  She was basically the optimal target. I was why we’d had to shut her off

  entirely. Taking the passenger seat hadn’t been enough. She could still

  sense the magic from there. Still be influenced by it.

  That scared her.

  Not

  just the involuntary loss of control induced by the magic, but the

  voluntary loss of control that shutting herself off would entail.

  Letting me take over completely meant surrendering control. With no

  oversight. No safeguards.

  This book was originally published on Royal Road. Check it out there for the real experience.

  It

  wasn’t that she didn't trust me. Not when we, who knew the others

  thoughts, had no means to deceive the other. When we could know the

  other implicitly.

  I

  knew she was a wolf—instinctive, narrow-minded, impulsive. She knew I

  was human—clever, manipulative, opportunistic. And also a little

  impulsive at times.

  And

  she knew I had my car back. Knew that I could hop in, floor it, be home

  in ten minutes, lock us in the barn, and pretend none of this happened.

  She knew that I wasn't above the temptation. Or any temptation really.

  But she also knew I had a reason to stay—beyond having trapped myself in a sinking ship fallacy.

  This wasn’t just about finding Boden anymore.

  Tyson’s

  corpse confirmed it. The magic that twisted him was the same that had

  poisoned Daisy and Matty. It wasn’t just an affliction—it was a

  mechanism of control. A tool. And I was pretty sure I understood how it

  worked.

  The

  curse hadn’t forced Tyson into violence directly. It had driven him

  into an emotional state—rage. Not a command, but a feeling. A powerful

  one.

  And I understood why.

  Because that’s what I would’ve done.

  Though

  if it were me, I wouldn’t have chosen rage. There were plenty of strong

  emotions that left animals vulnerable to suggestion: curiosity, hunger,

  excitement, confusion, lust, pride. You didn’t have to fight

  instinct—you just had to give it a new direction. That was the trick.

  I’d

  used it before, with Sandy’s dogs. I didn’t bark orders—I redirected

  their emotions. Got them excited and turned that excitement into

  momentum, got them to follow me into the yard, just as the wolf got them

  to follow her into the woods and to dog-pile JT. I’d done the same with

  the wolf, luring her with hunger or lulling her to sleep with fatigue.

  Even when she was at her most obstinate, I didn’t break her will. I just

  adjusted her aim.

  That’s what this was. That’s what someone had done with these dogs.

  They hadn’t given orders. They’d instilled rage.

  And once the dogs were brimming with it, they gave that rage a target.

  Whoever

  had cursed them hadn’t sent them into a frenzy for chaos’ sake—they’d

  weaponized them. Directed them. Created mobile, emotional bombs, able to

  slip in anywhere, spread the curse further, wreak havoc, and disappear.

  No evidence left behind but blood, paw prints, and teeth marks.

  The cologned man hadn’t been caught in a freak incident. He’d been targeted.

  Which meant someone had sent them after him.

  And that someone? They could do the same thing I could.

  Sure,

  JT could compel animals, sure—but not like this. He couldn’t feel them.

  Couldn’t reach inside them. Couldn’t stir their thoughts or plant his

  own.

  But whoever had done this could.

  And that begged the question—how?

  My ability came with my lycanthropy. I hadn’t been born with it. It was something done to me.

  So how had they gotten theirs?

  Could they be like me?

  A werewolf?

  It

  was a far-flung and far-fetched idea. That I would just stumble across

  another like me so happenstance. But the idea wasn't without merit.

  I

  thought about Nevermore’s theory. About my tattoo and the spellwork to

  hide it. Someone had done this to me. And if they did it to me, they

  could’ve done it to others.

  And

  a curse that spread from animal to animal, inflicting a mindless rage,

  was pretty damn similar to some renditions of lycanthropy.

  As well as zombies.

  But that's besides the point.

  I

  had to find this puppeteer. Not just to stop them, but to find answers.

  Answers about what had happened to me. If there was even a slim chance that our abilities were connected, I had to know.

  Even

  before I’d examined Tyson, the idea had been forming in the back of my

  mind. The wolf had felt it—sensed my priorities shifting—and that’s why

  she gave me space. No conditions. No negotiations. Just a quiet

  concession.

  Because she knew.

  Our goals were aligned now.

  Now I too was on the hunt.

  She

  wanted to find Boden. To do that she needed to find the cologned man.

  And the best way to do that was to beat him to his target.

  My target.

  When

  I was done examining Tyson, I backed away and called to the wolf. She

  stirred, reawakened, and I relegated myself to the passenger seat so

  that she may take the wheel. I shared what I’d learned with her to get

  her up to speed as she returned us to full wolf form. Together, we began

  canvassing the park, searching for signs of where Tyson might’ve gone

  before he died.

  A

  part of me hoped he'd been trying to return to his puppeteer, to the

  source of the magic. It was a thin hope, but better than none. Because

  if he'd just wandered off aimlessly after being shot, then our search

  was liable to turn into a wild goose chase, and we'd be forced to start

  scoping out other nearby depots one by one until we found another lead.

  The idea of spending the rest of the night scouring the more than two

  dozen other storage depots just in the nearby vicinity—even with my

  car—wasn’t exactly appealing.

  But, fortunately, we found what we were looking for.

  More paw prints and the scent of other dogs.

  Dog that bore the telltale stench of that foul magic.

  More curse-bearers.

  They’d passed through here recently, headed out into the city.

  Had they been sent out to assault the cologned man again?

  No,

  that seemed unlikely. My intuition told me that it was still too early

  for him to have made a move yet. It wasn't quite midnight, and it had

  been closer to two or three in the morning when the man had gotten in

  trouble last night.

  If I had to guess, these dogs had been sent out preemptively in preparations to gather more forces.

  A recruitment campaign.

  Following them would be pointless. They could be anywhere by now.

  Better to follow the trail they'd left behind and figure out where they came from. Follow the strings back to the puppeteer.

  The

  trail led us to the marsh, where it met the remnants of an old rail

  bed. Most of the tracks and pilings were gone, but the raised foundation

  remained, a crumbling spine of gravel and dirt stretching through the

  wetlands. We followed it as it passed beneath the Mark Clark overpass,

  the rumble of engines echoing overhead like distant thunder.

  And at the end of the tracks: the WestRock paper mill.

  The

  WestRock paper mill rose ahead, sprawling and silent—but far from

  unnoticeable. Towering concrete smokestacks pierced the night sky,

  silhouetted against the clouds. The main buildings, tall and blocky,

  were painted a weathered baby blue, while the adjoining refineries

  gleamed white beneath the orange-yellow glare of sodium floodlights.

  Steam billowed from countless release valves and tangled pipes, the hiss

  and churn of pressure echoing faintly across the marsh. Toward the

  southern end of the site, wide circular retention ponds shimmered in the

  darkness, collecting runoff like stagnant mirrors rimmed with algae and

  iron stains.

  I

  remembered this place from childhood—not from visits, but from the

  smell. When the wind blew the wrong way, everyone within twenty miles

  downwind caught a lungful of it. A sulfurous stench, the fumes that

  smelled like pluff mud but sharper, refined. An odor that bored its way

  into your subconscious such that you never forgot it.

  Which

  was ironic, really, given the mill only employed about 500 people. A

  facility that inconvenienced nearly the entire city for decades managed

  to employ fewer people than a Costco.

  Its

  main products were containerboard and kraft paper under brand names

  like DuraSorb and KraftPak. Useful, albeit it not glamorous—industrial

  staples that kept the city’s shipping lines fed. But even that wasn’t

  enough to save it.

  As

  Charleston's economy leaned harder into tourism, pressure to shutter

  the mill grew. Gentrification crept outward from Daniel Island and Mount

  Pleasant, bringing new homeowners and real estate interests who didn’t

  want suburbs that smelled of rotten eggs. Once the new Cooper River

  Bridge opened, connecting the city with a new main artery, the calls to

  clean up Charleston's air became harder to ignore.

  In

  May, WestRock finally caved, announcing the mill's closure. The

  Charleston Port Authority bought the land outright, announcing plans to

  expand the North Charleston Port Terminal, and the efforts to start

  decommissioning the mill would begin by the end of August. One unit at a

  time, the facility was being taken offline.

  But decommissioned didn’t mean abandoned.

  The

  chemical refineries, warehouses, and port access still worked. The

  infrastructure was still valuable and profits could be made in the time

  left. But the major paper producing capabilities were offline. So the

  mill no longer produced its signature olfactory experience.

  Beyond

  the paper mill lay the North Charleston Port Terminal—Charleston's

  third largest port and the logistical backbone of its economy. Five

  towering Panamax ship-to-shore cranes rose into the night, their arms

  illuminated by countless white lights, while steady red beacons pulsed

  at the tops of the central support towers—cautionary markers for any

  low-flying helicopter or careless pilot. Ships the size of apartment

  complexes were moored along the terminal's edge, their deck lights

  glowing softly against the water, reflected in long golden streaks.

  Hundreds—maybe thousands—of shipping containers stood in orderly stacks,

  painted in sun-bleached reds, blues, and greens. Toy blocks for giants,

  organized into a silent, steel city.

  And just beyond its west perimeter, the CSX rail line came to an end.

  That was the piece I’d been missing.

  The

  cologned man—he’d been following the rail line. Hitting depots, one

  after the next. And if I connected those dots on a map, they’d form a

  line. Pointing straight here.

  He hadn’t just been searching at random.

  He’d been closing in.

  No wonder he got attacked when he did.

  He’d made it to the puppeteer's doorstep.

  Whatever he was trying to hide, it had to be in there. Somewhere in the northern terminal.

  We

  kept tracking the scent, looping around the edge of the mill. The trail

  led us to a squat utility building tucked between two fenced-in supply

  yards. The door’s lock hung uselessly from the latch, clearly busted.

  The wolf inspected it cautiously, then nudged it open with her snout.

  Inside

  was nothing but an empty vehicle bay. A concrete floor, a

  grease-stained drain, and the faint scent of coolant. It looked like the

  kind of place meant to house a single maintenance vehicle—maybe a small

  truck used to service equipment across the mill site.

  The

  wolf slipped in first, nose low to the ground, sweeping from one side

  to the other. There were faint traces of the dogs—Tyson’s curse-bearing

  kin. The path had led here, but this wasn’t where they came from. Just a

  pass-through. A waypoint. The magic lingered in the air like stale

  cigarette smoke, but only just. They hadn’t stayed long.

  Perhaps,

  the dogs had been dropped off here by car or van, quickly prepped, then

  released. It seemed a little far-fetched. If the puppeteer had used a

  vehicle, why not just let them out on the side of the road. It wasn't

  like using the bay would have hidden anything, not with all the cameras

  all over the place.

  Perhaps there was something I was still missing.

  I

  scanned the walls, sniffed the air for anything unusual. The scents of a

  few people lingered—likely workers. None of them stood out.

  The wolf huffed and padded out. No answers here. No Coy. No Boden. No cologned man.

  We pushed onward toward the western perimeter, sweeping the edge for any new sign, any scent that might redirect us.

  Nothing.

  Maybe

  they weren’t here yet. Maybe the man was licking his wounds after last

  night’s run-in. Or maybe he was checking another depot nearby.

  As

  for the one controlling the dogs? I had no clue where they could be

  now. I'd been banking that the dogs' trail would lead me to them. Did

  they need to be somewhere close to the dogs to issue commands? Or could

  they direct them from a distance?

  If

  I could find one of the cursed dogs, I could potentially probe its

  thoughts for answers. But I'd have to find one of them first.

  I could follow the trail in the other direction, but trying to chase one of them down would take forever.

  Unless...

  What if I called them to me?

  With the wolf, and the moon this full, I could project my thoughts, my command much farther. Louder. Stronger.

  Strong enough to reach damn near every dog in the city.

  That would certainly throw a wrench into the cologned man and puppeteer's plans—a wolf jumping into their game of cat and mouse.

  If that didn’t force our prey to come crawling out of whatever hole they were hiding in, I didn’t know what would.

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