Embers and Fur

The first thing she smelled was smoke.

Not the choking, acrid kind from burning buildings—but the clean, ancient kind that clung to sacred fire. Ember-sweet. Ash-heavy. Familiar.

Seraphine’s fingers twitched against scorched earth. Beneath her palm, the ground still sizzled—warm, pulsing, like the heart of a dying star. Her breath came in ragged bursts as the world around her slowly came into focus: blackened trees. A blood-orange sky. Silence that rang like a scream.

She was alive. Again.

A sharp exhale left her lungs. She rolled onto her side, muscles trembling, hair stuck to her face with soot and sweat. Her skin, unmarred. Her body, whole. No blood. No wound. No sign of the blade that had pierced her the night before.

But the pain? That was always real. Dying still hurt.

She sat up, brushing ash from her arms, her bones creaking with resurrection. Around her, the forest smoldered—half-dead, like her. Her clothes were half-burned, hanging off her like shadows. Her wolf stirred beneath her skin, restless, already snarling for movement.

Then came the howl.

Low. Distant. Not hers.

She froze.

Another wolf. Close. Tracking her.

And where one came… more followed.

The moment the second howl pierced the trees, Seraphine was already moving.

Her bones cracked, fire licked beneath her skin, and she fell forward into the shift—white fur exploding from flesh, nails curling into claws, muscles stretching with feral freedom.

She hit the ground running.

The forest blurred around her in streaks of blackened trunks and glowing embers. Her paws pounded the ashen soil, scattering heat and cinders in her wake. Leaves smoldered beneath her touch.

Seraphine hit the forest floor running. Her body burned with the shift—bones warping, fur tearing through skin, vision sharpening into primal clarity. But even as the white wolf surged forward, a familiar presence clawed up from the depths of her mind.

Let me run.

Nyra’s voice curled like smoke in her thoughts.

Really run. You’re just borrowing the form—you haven’t let go.

Not now, Seraphine shot back. I don’t need you taking over. I just need speed.

You need fury. You need me. You’re limping. That last death hit harder than you think.

I’m fine.

You’re proud. That’s not the same thing.

Her paws slammed into the ground, scattering soot and sparks with every stride. Branches scraped past her fur, but the heat pulsed steady beneath her ribs. She could feel Nyra pressing at the edges—impatient, restless.

The wolf wanted blood.

Seraphine wasn’t ready to give it to her.

Nyra snarled inside her skull. You’re going to get us killed—again.

The scent of sweat and steel hit her like a whip. Bounty hunters. Rogues. Maybe even worse. Not pack wolves—they would have howled in unison. These were scavengers, and they were hunting her.

Her lungs burned, but the fire inside her pulsed harder.

I’ve got this.

You always say that right before we die.

She leapt over a fallen tree, flames flaring around her paws as they touched the wood mid-air. Behind her, voices echoed—shouts, snarls, the crash of someone clumsy enough to stumble into one of her fire trails.

Let me loose, Seraphine. Just once. Let me show them what it means to chase an Ashborn.

She almost did.

But instead, she growled low in her throat, kept her head down, and pushed harder. Her enemies thought they were hunting a wolf.

They had no idea they were chasing a wildfire.

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