
Chapter 1 of The Anatomy of an Eternal Howl
At the Aethelgard Institute, the air seemed to die rather than move. It was a mixture of recycled, pressured oxygen that had been thoroughly cleaned of dust, pollen, and all traces of the natural world. It smelled safe to Dr Elara Vance. It had a progressive scent. She checked the digital readout on her iPad while adjusting her white coat, the fabric crisp and heavy with starch.
Subject 731.
She was only allowed to use that name. His bone density was three times that of a high-impact athlete; his heart rate was 40 beats per minute at rest but could reach 300 in a matter of seconds. His genetic sequence contradicted every known Darwinian law, all of which were recorded in the archives.
"Dr Vance," rang the security gate's computerized voice. "The biological scan is finished. Level Alpha clearance was verified. The Lupus Wing is open to you.
With a hiss of hydraulics, the hefty titanium doors slid open. The temperature of the lupus wing was maintained at 18°C. The notion was that it was cold enough to keep the specimens lethargic and the workers vigilant. Elara passed the lower-level participants' observation windows. She continued despite seeing the golden glints of eyes and the flickers of grey fur behind reinforced glass. The reason she was here was for the "Primal."
She arrived at the centre containment room, a huge translucent poly-glass cylinder. A man stood on the opposite side of the glass. Or the outline of one, anyway. He was tall, with a slanting body of corded muscle that appeared to have been carved from obsidian. Elara felt the force emanating from him like a physical weight against her chest, even though the moon was only a crescent tonight. With his back to the door, he wore the Institute's grey linen trousers without a shirt. His skin was a map of tales Elara was not yet permitted to read: white against the bronze of his flesh, long, jagged scars stretched from his shoulders to his waist. Compared to the silence. "I am Dr. Elara Vance. I’ve been assigned to oversee your genomic stabilization for the next lunar cycle."
The man didn't move an inch. "A new voice," he remarked. It wasn't a growl, but there was a vibration behind it, a low-frequency hum that Elara felt deep in her marrow. "The last one smelled like cheap cigarettes and old fear. But you... You smell of chemicals and a reticent kind of loneliness."
Elara’s breath hitched. She gripped her tablet until her knuckles turned white. "My personal life isn't a variable in this study. Now, please turn around. I need to calibrate the sensors."
Slowly, with a grace that was far too fluid, far too predatory to be human, he turned.
Caspian. That was the name he’d whispered to the guards when they first dragged him in, though her files strictly forbade its use. His eyes were molten gold, trapped behind a layer of ice. They weren't the eyes of an animal, but they weren't quite human, either. They looked ancient. He didn't look at Elara like a scientist; he looked at her the way a predator eyes a puzzle it hasn't decided whether to solve or tear apart.
"Biometrics," he echoed, a ghost of a smirk tugging at his lips. "You want to measure my heart, Doctor? It hasn’t changed its rhythm in three hundred years. Why start now?"
"Because you’re dying," Elara snapped, forcing herself back into her professional shell. She stepped toward the glass, her eyes darting to the readouts on the wall. "The silver nitrate they’re pumping into the air is causing cellular decay. If you don't cooperate with the treatments, your heart is going to stop. Simple as that."
Caspian took a single step towards the glass. Despite the reinforced barrier between them, Elara instinctively flinched back. He noticed. The gold in his eyes flared.
"My heart stopped a long time ago, Elara," he whispered.
She stiffened at the sound of her name. "How did you"
"I read your badge," he said, though they both knew the text was far too small to see from there. "And I can hear your pulse. It’s erratic. 112 beats per minute. Your pupils are blown wide. Your adrenaline is spiking. Tell me, is it the 'Primal' that scares you, or the fact that for the first time in this white-walled tomb, you’re looking at something you can’t put in a box?"
Elara tapped a command on her tablet, flooding the cell with harsh, blinding light. He winced, his pupils shrinking to needle-points, but he didn't look away.
"I categorize everything," she said, her voice firming up. "You are a biological anomaly triggered by a dormant retrovirus. My job is to map that virus, neutralize the aggression, and save your genome. Nothing more."
Caspian pressed a hand against the glass. His palm was massive, his nails just a fraction too sharp to be normal. "You think this is a virus?" He laughed, a dry, hollow sound like dead leaves skittering over a headstone. "This is a symphony, Doctor. And you’ve spent your whole life listening to silence."
He leaned in closer, his face inches from hers. Elara found herself leaning in too, pulled by a magnetic force she couldn't explain. For a heartbeat, the clinical world of Aethelgard vanished. The monitors, the guards, the sterile hall it all faded. There was only the gold in his eyes.
"The anatomy of a howl isn't in the throat," Caspian whispered, his breath fogging the glass. "It’s in the soul. Do they have a chart for that on your tablet?"
Elara opened her mouth to shoot back a retort to tell him that souls were just stories people told themselves but the words died in her throat. A strange sensation, like a spark of static electricity, danced across her skin. It started at her fingertips and surged up her arms, settling heavy in her chest.
It was a pull. A tether.
On her tablet, a red warning light began to pulse.
WARNING: BIO-RESONANCE DETECTED. SUBJECT 731 HEART RATE SYNCING WITH OBSERVER.
Elara looked down at the screen, then back at Caspian. Her heart was no longer racing. It had slowed to a steady, heavy thrum.
Thump-thump. Thump-thump.
It was beating in perfect, haunting unison with his.
"What did you do?" she whispered, her voice trembling.
"I didn't do anything," Caspian said, his playfulness vanishing into something deathly serious. His hand stayed on the glass, and for a split second, Elara felt a phantom warmth on her own palm, as if the barrier had melted away. "It’s beginning. The Anatomy of the Howl. You aren't just here to study me, Elara. You’re here because you belong to the moon."
Elara scrambled back, nearly tripping over her own feet. "That's... that’s scientifically impossible."
"Science is just the name you give to the things you've forgotten how to feel," Caspian said. He turned away, retreating into the shadows at the back of his cell and leaving Elara alone in the cold, blue light.
She looked down at her shaking hands. The tablet showed two identical lines on the graph, moving together in a perfect, terrifying rhythm.
She was a woman of logic. She believed in facts. But as she fled the Lupus Wing that night, the scent of rain and ancient fur followed her all the way to her car. The silence of her apartment felt louder than it ever had before.
The study had begun. But as Elara stared at the moon through her window, she realized she wasn't the one holding the scalpel anymore
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