The Girl Who Saved Twelve Wolves And Woke The Alpha King In The Snow-mdue - Chainityai

The Girl Who Saved Twelve Wolves And Woke The Alpha King In The Snow-mdue

The winter of 1342 did not fall on Oak Haven.

It buried it.

Snow swallowed the road to Kel and turned the valley into a place where sound went to die.

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Mave Dunmore lived where the Blackwater Gorge cut through the pines.

Her cabin had been her father’s before it became hers, and before it became a warning.

Do not go near the Dunmore place.

The girl there speaks to things that bite.

Her father, Alistair Dunmore, had once been master of the hunt for the northern lords. Then one winter he refused an order no one in Kel would repeat in daylight, and the Dunmore name was scraped from every respectable table.

By the time Mave was grown, people remembered only the shame.

They forgot the reason.

On the night the river screamed, Mave was fastening her shutters with numb fingers.

The storm had been building since noon. She had rabbit stew thinning over the hearth, dried comfrey under the table, and enough firewood for three nights if she slept in her coat.

Then the smell reached her.

Blood.

Burned metal.

Cracked ice.

The first howl rolled up from the gorge so deep that the windowpanes trembled. Then another joined it, and another, until the whole ravine sounded alive with enormous pain.

Anyone else would have barred the door.

Mave grabbed rope.

Her father’s logging line hung above the shed, stiff with cold and oil. She took two iron hooks, a skinning knife, and the old medical roll Alistair had used when hunters came home torn by tusks, antlers, or worse.

The path to Blackwater had vanished, but Mave knew the trees by their shapes. She ran until the ground fell away and the river appeared below.

The gorge was a mouth of black water and broken white plates.

In the center, wolves fought the current.

These beasts were massive, with shoulders high as warhorses and eyes that looked back too clearly. They were tangled between ice shelves and submerged roots, trying to climb, slipping, sinking, rising again.

There were eleven.

Mave tied her rope around an oak, looped the free end around her waist, and slid down the bank before fear could catch up.

The first wolf was ash gray, his forelegs scraping uselessly at ice.

She threw the noose and missed. The current snatched it sideways. She hauled it back, threw again, and this time the loop caught around his chest.

The moment she pulled, the rope tried to take her arms from their sockets.

Mave screamed through her teeth and leaned back with every pound of her body.

The wolf came out of the river like a drowned horse made of iron. He crashed into the snow and lay there shuddering.

Mave waited for the bite.

It never came.

He lowered his head.

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