“This is a serious injury,” I continue, my voice growing stronger with each word. “If it doesn’t heal properly, I won’t be able to collect herbs next week. I need to be able to walk through the forest—”
“Not my problem.” Healer Morrigan reaches into a cabinet behind her desk and pulls out a small glass vial filled with a murky, brown liquid. She tosses it to me. “Here’s a basic healing tonic. It might help with the pain.”
I stare at the vial, recognizing it as the weakest remedy they produce—one usually given for minor scrapes and bruises, not deep claw wounds. My jaw tightens as I lower it to my side, my movements deliberate and controlled.
“This won’t be enough for injuries this severe,” I say, my voice neutral despite the anger burning in my chest. “I need—”
“You need to get out of my office,” the head healer interrupts with a deceptively kind expression. “Take your half payment and your tonic and leave. I have real patients to attend to.”
I stand there for a moment, gripping the pathetic healing tonic and staring at the small pile of coins on her desk. Everything in me wants to storm out empty-handed, to maintain some shred of dignity. But I need those coins, meager as they are.
“Fine,” I say, my voice quiet but firm. I take the coins with steady hands, meeting her gaze the entire time. “But if this injury is not healed by next week, I won’t be going into the woods for your herbs. You should look for another shifter willing to risk their life.”
She half rises out of her chair, clearly angry, but I’m already shuffling out of her office.
My back is straight despite the pain shooting through my leg. The other healers avoid eye contact as I pass, probably having heard every word of my exchange with their boss. As I exit the healing center and step back into the evening air, I can’t help but think that sometimes the creatures in the Wyvern Woods show more mercy than the people in my own pack.
Clenching the tonic bottle, I make my way toward the edge of the settlement, where I’ve been allowed to live.
Exhaustion accompanies the burning sensation in my leg. The bear must have hit an artery because the bleeding hasn’t stopped. If I were fully human, I would be dead by now. Tears sting my eyes, but I don’t allow them to fall.
I can’t.
If any other shifter had an injury like this, they would be admitted to the infirmary and given the best care possible.
But I’m not any other shifter. In fact, I shouldn’t even call myself a shifter.
I was born with a latent wolf. Shifters like me are typically killed at birth, but my mother was the previous alpha’s daughter, so I was spared.
I don’t remember much of my childhood, but I recall my mother’s warm hands cupping my face and telling me to hold on, that everything good will come my way eventually. I don’t know when that warmth disappeared or when she died. One day, she simply wasn’t there anymore, and I was expected to look after myself.
Finally reaching the very end of the settlement, I open the gate of the small, faded cottage next to the woods. A small cat is napping by the front door, and she stretches when she sees me.
Luna.
She showed up when I was young. She was a kitten herself. And she has been here all these years.
I unlock the door with a groan. “Sorry, Luna. Let me deal with this first.”
After hobbling into the kitchen, I pour some water in a basin and carry it to the small living room, along with a clean rag.
I settle onto the worn couch, wincing as I prop up my injured leg on the coffee table. The basin of water sloshes slightly as I set it down. Luna jumps up beside me, her amber eyes studying my wound with the kind of concern I never get from my own pack.
“Don’t look at me like that,” I murmur to her, dipping the rag into the water. “I know it’s bad.”
The cold pressure against my torn flesh makes me hiss through my teeth. Blood has dried in crusty streaks down my calf, and fresh crimson still seeps from the deepest gouges. I work methodically, wiping away the dirt and blood, my hands surprisingly steady despite the pain.
Once the wound is clean, I uncork the pathetic healing tonic Healer Morrigan gave me. The cloudy liquid looks more like muddy water than medicine. I pour it directly onto the gashes, hoping against hope that maybe it will work better than it looks.
Five minutes pass. Then ten. The bleeding continues, and the pain hasn’t lessened even slightly. If anything, the wound looks angrier than before, the edges red and inflamed.
“Useless,” I mutter, tossing the empty vial aside.
Luna meows in what sounds like agreement.
I lean back against the couch cushions, fatigue weighing heavily on my shoulders. But I can’t just sit here and bleed. Not when I have another option.
Standing carefully, I shuffle toward my back door, the cat following at my heels. Behind the cottage, hidden from the settlement’s view, lies my secret garden. Rows of carefully tended herbs grow in neat lines, each one planted and nurturedby my own hands. Moonbell, silverleaf, crimson sage, and dozens of others that most pack members can’t even name.