The sky was screaming again, a sound Ren had carried in his marrow since he was a cub. The high-pitched, mechanical whistle of a Sector 1 ripper tore through the bruised clouds of the Ashworld like a blade through silk. To the high-borns in the stars, it was a "Containment Strike." To the wolves grounded in the silt, it was the sound of the world being erased.
Ren crouched in the jagged shadow of a collapsed overpass, his fingers digging into the grey earth. He did not shift. To shift was to surrender to the primal rage, and as Alpha, he couldn't afford the luxury of mindless fury. He had to be the anchor for the ghosts of his people.
Then, the Static began.
It wasn't the howl of the wind or the crackle of burning brush. It was her.
As the orbital fire struck a coordinate miles away, Ren didn't just hear the thunder; he felt a sharp, cold spike of terror that was entirely alien to his rugged constitution. It was a sterile fear that smelled of ozone and recycled air.
Star-Girl.
He squeezed his eyes shut, pressing his forehead against the grit-covered concrete. In his mind’s eye, the scorched horizon flickered and died. It was replaced by a flash of blinding white LED light and the rhythmic chime of a digital interface.
For a heartbeat, he wasn't in the ruins; he was sitting in a high-backed chair, surrounded by the clinical hum of machines. He felt a bead of sweat trail down a spine that felt too delicate, too smooth. He felt the phantom weight of a lab coat on his shoulders.
Ren growled, a low vibration that shook the dust from the rubble. He had lived with this "glitch" for a decade; a piece of his soul was abducted during the Great Mutation and placed in a glass cage above the clouds.
This bond was his greatest strength and his deepest loneliness. When she was terrified in the Orbit, his heart rate climbed until his ribs felt ready to snap. When she was calm, his predatory rage cooled into a manageable ember. He knew her heartbeat better than his own. He knew the scent of her phantom thoughts; lavender and electricity, better than the smell of the rain.
"Ren."
The voice was gravelly. Kael stepped out from the swirling ash, his silhouette tall and lean. His eyes, a restless blue, scanned the sky with a hatred that could have set the clouds on fire.
"The pack is restless, Alpha," Kael said, his voice tightening as thunder rolled across the plains. "The young ones... their lungs are failing. They want us to stay in our holes like rats until the soil turns to glass."
Ren stood, slowly uncoiling his frame until he towered over Kael. He radiated a raw, predatory heat that pushed back the chill of the ash-fall.
"They aren't closing a circle, Kael," Ren said, his voice like stones grinding together. "They think there is nothing left down here worth saving but the secrets in our marrow."
"Then let us show them that blood!" Kael barked, his hands curling into claws. "Give us the order to hunt, Ren. Don't let us die in the dark."
Ren looked at his pack-brother, and for a moment, the loneliness of leadership nearly broke his mask. He felt the collective hunger of the forty souls hiding in the warrens beneath him. He was the last line of defense for a race the universe had decided to delete.
"We wait," Ren commanded. The Alpha-tone was an invisible shockwave of authority that made Kael’s knees buckle. "We are the dust and the shadows. We don't move until the wind changes."
Kael lowered his head, submissive instinct overriding his rage. "As you command, Alpha."
But as Ren spoke, the bond flared with a violent, unprecedented intensity. It wasn't a flicker this time; it was a flood. Ren stumbled, his hand flying to the wall for support.
The vision slammed into him. A white corridor. The hiss of hydraulic doors. A sickening jolt of artificial gravity, followed by the terrifying sensation of weightlessness.
And then, he saw the ship. A sleek, silver hull vibrating with the power of a descent engine.
She's moving.
The Star-Girl wasn't just a voice in the attic of his mind anymore. She was descending. The tether between them, stretched thin across the vacuum of space for two decades, was suddenly snapping back, drawing her toward the soil with the velocity of a falling star.
Ren looked up at the toxic clouds, baring his teeth in a snarl that was half-prayer and half-threat. The silver crescent mark on his shoulder; the mirror to hers, began to throb with a rhythmic, lunar heat. He could taste her presence on the wind; the scent of lavender and high-voltage electricity was cutting through the sulfur.
"Come then," Ren whispered into the wind, his voice a dangerous promise. "Come and see what's left to burn."





