It was the most handsome face I had ever seen, even twisted as it was in a mask of pure agony. High cheekbones, a strong jaw, dark hair floating like a halo in the murky water. But his eyes... they were a vortex of pain, fixed on me with a terrifying intensity. And his hands were the source of the crushing pressure on my neck. He was killing me.
My brain was a blank slate of panic. Thrash. Fight. Get away.
But my body didn't listen to the panic.
Instead, a strange, cold calm washed over me. It was a foreign feeling, an instinct that wasn't my own. This new instinct told me that struggling against his superior strength was a waste of precious energy.
So I stopped fighting.
I let my body go limp, my arms floating uselessly at my sides. I allowed the last of the air to bubble out of my lungs, a final, silent surrender. To him, it must have looked like I was dead.
His grip faltered for a fraction of a second. The pressure on my windpipe eased just enough.
It was the only opening I needed.
In one explosive, fluid motion, my body coiled. My knee slammed upward, driving hard into the soft, vulnerable flesh of his groin.
A choked grunt vibrated through the water, the sound muffled but the impact undeniable. His body convulsed, and the hands around my neck went slack.
Instantly, I twisted. My arm snaked around his neck from behind, locking him in a chokehold. My other elbow, guided by a precision I didn't know I possessed, jabbed sharply into the side of his neck. The carotid sinus. A perfect, professional strike designed to cause instantaneous blackout.
The man's powerful body went rigid for a moment, then completely limp. He was a dead weight, his consciousness snuffed out.
I shoved him away and shot towards the surface.
My head broke through the water, and I took a huge, ragged breath of cold, damp air. It felt like swallowing glass. I coughed violently, my body shaking as I expelled water from my lungs. I clung to a mossy rock, my knuckles white, just trying to breathe.
When the coughing subsided, I finally looked around. I was in a shallow, fast-moving stream, surrounded by a dense, unfamiliar forest. The sky above was a grim, overcast gray. I was soaked to the skin, shivering, and utterly alone except for the unconscious man floating face down a few feet away.
Suddenly ,a tidal wave of memories crashed into my mind.
They weren't my memories.
A girl named Chloe Hayes. A life of being called "wolfless," "ugly," "stupid." The constant sneers, the quiet bullying, the crushing loneliness within her own family, the Stonefang Pack.
Then a specific, vivid memory surfaced. My cousin Cassidy Hayes leaned close to me, her face forever wearing that sweet, concerned expression, her fingertips gently stroking my hair as if soothing a disobedient pet dog. She brought a porcelain cup to my lips; the liquid inside glowed with an amber sheen.
"Drink up, my dear cousin," she murmured, the curve of her lips perfectly nauseating, "do you know that your very existence is the greatest disgrace to the Stonefang Pack? No wolf nature, dull as a pig, and yet you still occupy the bloodline legacy your mother left behind-do you even deserve it?"
She let out a low chuckle, cloyingly sweet.
"Your mother drank this very tea before she quietly disappeared. You two are cut from the same cloth-equally obtrusive. Don't worry, this tea won't make you suffer for long-after all, for a waste of space, eternal sleep is the kindest ending."
She personally poured the tea into my mouth, her fingertip lightly scraping across my cheek, as if wiping away a tear that never existed.
The memory of the tea was followed by a searing pain in my gut, a fog descending over my mind, the sensation of being dragged, helpless, through the forest floor.
I understood. I wasn't a different soul in a new body. I was Chloe Hayes. This body, on the brink of death, had awakened something that had been dormant my entire life. A bloodline. And a legacy left by my mother.A mental imprint. The fog that had clouded my mind for years-the dullness, the confusion that earned me the label "intellectually disabled"-was gone, burned away by this awakening. It had been poison, a slow and steady drip designed to keep me docile and stupid. Now, my mind was clear, sharp, and filled with cold fury.
But what awakened wasn't just my instinct-it was another legacy my mother left behind: a complete system of battlefield surgical medicine, like an encrypted encyclopedia now decompressing in my mind. From bone reduction to toxicology analysis, from trauma hemostasis to nerve blockade, every piece of knowledge was as clear as if I had practiced it a thousand times with my own hands. This "Surgeon System" wasn't designed for healing the sick and saving the dying-it was a survival tool my mother built for me.
I looked down at my hands. The skin was pale and marred with ugly, discolored patches. The poison. It hadn't killed me, but it had left its mark.
My gaze shifted to the man in the water. His body was slowly drifting towards a deeper part of the stream. He was still unconscious, his handsome face partially submerged.
The assassin's instinct-The Asset-screamed at me. Leave. He's a threat. You're weak. Survive.
He had, after all, just tried to murder me.
I turned him over, and when I looked at him, I saw the pain that twisted his face. It wasn't the face of a cold-blooded killer. It was the face of someone in unbearable pain, someone who had lost control. I could almost feel a phantom echo of it, a wild, chaotic energy similar to the poison burning in my own veins, but a thousand times more powerful.
Then I noticed something else.
My chest-which had been cold and numb-suddenly flooded with an unfamiliar warmth. It felt like... a string had been plucked. A string I never even knew I possessed. I couldn't tear my gaze from his face-the wet black hair, the tightly pressed thin lips. A thought blazed through my mind like wildfire, absurd, illogical, terrifying: I can't let him die.
This wasn't just the Surgeon System's directive-"you cannot let anyone die." It was something deeper. Something primal, instinctual, something that belonged to my werewolf bloodline. Like a gravitational pull, a fate-bound tug, radiating outward from deep within my chest.
I didn't know him. He had just tried to kill me.
But as I looked at his drowning face, at the lingering pain still etched between his brows even in unconsciousness, my body reacted in a way I couldn't understand. My pulse-which should have been too weak to even sustain life-began pounding violently. My palms tingled. My throat tightened, not from the lingering ache of strangulation, but from something older, something far more powerful.
A scent hung in the air. Even submerged in water, even with my own lungs still burning, I could catch it-a deep, mingled fragrance of cedar and wildfire, and that fragrance resonated through my very blood. The resonance was so fierce it nearly drove me to my knees.
My werewolf instincts, only just awakened, roared inside me. Not a threat. A confirmation. A summons.
I didn't know what it meant. But I knew I couldn't walk away.
I had to save him.
A groan escaped my throat, a sound thick with frustration and exhaustion, and then I made my decision.
Damn it.
I pushed off the rock, my legs trembling. I waded through the icy water, grabbed the collar of his expensive-looking shirt, and began dragging his heavy, unconscious body toward the shore with all the strength I could muster.