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The last Werewolf's

B_M_2829
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Synopsis
The moon hung high, its light seeping through the dense canopy of the ancient forest. Ethan, a man of thirty, found himself lying on the cold, damp earth, his body changing in ways he could neither comprehend nor control. The last memory of his human life was fading as he awoke to the sensation of fur, the wild, primal essence of a werewolf emerging within him.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: The Bite

Ethan Hart had consistently viewed himself as a normal person, not a big deal — simply one more face in the group. He worked a fair occupation at a tech firm, spent time with his companions on the ends of the week, and minded his own business more often than not. His life was unsurprising, agonizingly in this way, however it was agreeable, and he preferred it as such. However, all of that transformed one critical night when his normal life was broken most uncommonly.

The night had begun like some other. Ethan was heading back home after a late shift at the workplace, the warm shine of his PC screen actually engraved on his drained eyes. The day had been tiring — a significant task cutoff time lingered, and he'd been staying at work longer than required for a really long time. The work kept his psyche occupied, however this evening, fatigue gripped to him like a subsequent skin. The cool night artificially glamorized against his skin as he traveled through the obscured roads of the city, the heaviness of the day settling vigorously on his shoulders.

The city was calmer than expected, a thick cover of quietness lingering palpably. The roads were without the standard clamor as though the world had chosen to take an aggregate breath and interruption. Indeed, even the typical murmur of far off traffic appeared to be quieted, making a ghostly tranquility that set Ethan nervous. The moon hung high overhead, full and brilliant, projecting a frightful sparkle over the abandoned walkways. It was the sort of night that made you need to rush home, lock the entryways, and fail to remember the rest of the world existed.

Ethan animated his speed, anxious to put the disrupting calm behind him. The sensation of being watched worried the rear of his brain, a nonsensical suspicion he attempted to forget about. He looked behind him, half hoping to see somebody following him, however the road was vacant, save for the glimmering streetlamps that cast long shadows across the asphalt.

[You're simply being paranoid], he told himself, attempting to quiet the disquiet working in his chest. Be that as it may, no measure of self-consolation could set him up for what was going to occur.

The principal sign that something was off-base came as a delicate stir, similar to leaves blending in the breeze, yet there were no trees close by. Ethan froze mid-step, stressing to tune in, his heart beating in his chest. The sound was weak to such an extent that he nearly persuaded himself he'd envisioned it. Nearly.

Then, at that point, it returned once more, stronger this time — a snarl, low and threatening, resonating through the tranquility. It made the hairs on the rear of Ethan's neck stand on end, and a nervous perspiration broke out across his brow. He twirled around, his eyes wide, didn't however see anything.

"Who's there?" he called out, his voice shudder in spite of his endeavors to keep the apprehension under control. The sound reverberated back at him, deriding in its void.

Quiet.

Once more, the snarl returned, closer this time — excessively close. Before Ethan could respond, a monstrous figure rushed out of the shadows. It moved with blinding rate, banging into him with the power of a cargo train. The effect thumped him off his feet, sending him colliding with the ground with a bone-jolting crash. The breeze was taken out of him, and briefly, he lay there, shocked and panting for air.

Torment shot through his body as dangerously sharp teeth sank into his shoulder. A shout tore from his throat, a crude, basic sound loaded up with dread. He whipped fiercely, his hands tearing at the animal in a frantic endeavor to free himself, yet it was no utilization. The monster was serious areas of strength for excessively, quick. He could feel the hot breath of the animal against his skin, the rotten smell of rot filling his noses.

The main thing Ethan could zero in on was the singing aggravation that spread from his shoulder, consuming his veins like fire. It felt like his whole body was being consumed from the back to front. Each sensitive spot was land with distress, and he could feel his solidarity ebbing away as time passes.

Similarly as abruptly as it had gone after, the animal delivered him and disappeared into the evening, leaving Ethan lying on the cool asphalt, blood leaking from the injury on his shoulder. He lay there, panting for breath, his psyche hustling to deal with what had simply occurred.

What on God's green earth was that? A wolf? In any case, wolves didn't go after individuals — not in that frame of mind of a city, and not with that sort of accuracy. It had been something different, something undeniably more hazardous. His contemplations were a muddled wreck of dread and disarray, every one more frightening than the last.

Ethan battled to his feet, his legs flimsy underneath him. He needed to find support, however every step felt like a stupendous exertion. His vision obscured as he staggered forward, one hand gripping his draining shoulder. His general surroundings began to turn, and murkiness crawled into the edges of his vision. The aggravation was becoming horrendous, a steady, pulsating hurt that beat with each thump of his heart.

As he stumbled down the road, the encompassing structures appeared to twist and wind, their natural shapes contorting into something horrendous. The streetlamps flashed and diminished, projecting everything in a supernatural sparkle. His contemplations became disconnected, divided pictures of the assault blazing through his psyche like a messed up film reel.

He attempted to call out for help, yet his voice was scarcely in excess of a murmur, lost in the evening. Each step wanted to swim through a sand trap, the ground appearing to pull him down, further into obscurity. The final thing he saw prior to everything went dark was the full moon, sparkling forebodingly above, light the main observer to the abhorrences had occurred for him.

The dimness was all-consuming, a void that gulped down him. For what felt like an unfathomable length of time, Ethan drifted in that perpetual darkness, suspended among cognizance and blankness. There was no aggravation here, no trepidation, just a dead, void quiet that squeezed in on him from all sides. He had no clue of time, no healthy identity — just the unclear mindfulness that something had occurred, something horrendous, and that he was changed as a result of it.

And afterward, gradually, mindfulness started to return. First came the aggravation, a dull pulse that transmitted from his shoulder and spread through his whole body. It was different now, however — not the burning distress he'd felt previously, yet something more profound, more treacherous, as though the torment had saturated his actual bones. He attempted to move, however his body felt weighty, and lethargic, like he were caught in a body that wasn't completely his own.

Voices contacted him through the murkiness of agony, far off and unclear. He was unable to make out the words, however there was a note of desperation in them, a feeling of frenzy that slice through the haze obfuscating his brain. He needed to answer, to get down on, yet his mouth wouldn't comply, his lips frozen completely still.