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My Wolfboy

“I want to feel human one last time.” That was what the wolf boy whispered to the night sky. So destiny taught him two most human things: love and death. And he was grateful. From the very beginning, Sophia Forster was destined to become the protagonist of her story. She was clever and ravishing, a loveable character. The only thing that went wrong was that the hero’s affection was a temporary obsession, and the villain was too weak to fight. One day Sophie discovers a boy who calls himself a monster. And maybe he’s right. But what she had always overlooked is that monsters are not like machines. They can love, they can hate. And they have their nightmares. The boy who had endured too much in complete silence, is now ready to end it all. But Sophie is there. And before she could realize, she has become the only thing that holds him from plummeting into endless pain and darkness. As secrets begin to unravel and destiny overturns, love sparks. But I warn you; sparks means fire, and sometimes love itself is meant to burn. An unexpected beginning, and a heart-breaking ending. Nothing is sweet. Nothing is romantic. It doesn’t work that way here. We have one rule, simple, and quite easy to remember: Love hurts. Are you ready to dive into the world of pain, loss, and yet the most beautiful love this universe could ever contain? Are you?

Starry_Nightt · Fantasy
Not enough ratings
4 Chs

Chapter 3 Fix You

We were both lying on our backs on the cold wet puddles, the rain sloshing from the late afternoon sky.

I still held onto his arm. I was afraid to let go.

Eventually he yanked free, giving me a disgusted look as if I was some slimy monster.

"Wha-what's so hard about it?" I intended to keep my voice calm, but I was barely choking the words. "What's so hard about your life that you have to do it this way?"

He got up and staggered away from me. I sat up. We locked eyes.

When he spoke at last, his voice was heavy, fierce.

"Why."

It sounded more like a full stop than a question mark.

"Why did you do it?" He asked.

I forced my heartbeat to slow.

"You've just finished your first chapter; there's so much more ahead."

His chest was heaving to the rhythm of his rapid breathing.

"You know nothing about me. Nothing. So why can't you just leave me alone?"

"You've been alone all this time."

"Yeah, thanks for the reminder."

"And you've been lonely."

All of a sudden he was laughing like crazy.

Anger thrummed in his veins. "So? I was dying in loneliness, so what? It's none of your business. Why do you care anyway? Now that my last wish is to just die, have I become so pitiful?!"

He was yelling, and that made me flinch.

I took a deep breath, trying hard to convince myself that that's not what he meant.

"You were lost. You had nowhere to go. You were hungry. Weren't you?"

He was still laughing, but there was a bitter taste to it. "You think I'm—," then his voice cracked.

He looked away, and when his eyes finally returned to mine, they were teary.

He was smiling, but it wasn't the warm smile that I craved. It was the broken smile of sadness, the one that comes with tears.

All the rage and hatred was gone. His voice was feeble, more quivering than mine. I could tell that he was trying very hard not to cry. "Who cares?"

He was just five steps away from the railings, and five steps away from me.

I walked towards him, as cautiously as approaching a frightened animal.

One. Two. Three.

Four.

I reached out.

My fingertips brushed his hair, then down his wet cheeks.

And under the beating rain, I whispered, "I do."

I didn't know why I had done it, but something seemed to change.

I could tell by the look of his face that it had been the first time he heard that confession.

First time somebody told him that she cared.

And then he opened his mouth to say something, closed them, swallowed and opened them again.

Muffled in tears he whispered just two words: I'm sorry.

I shook my head slowly. "You shouldn't be."

But he went on, uttering the same words again and again. "I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry."

I didn't know if he was saying that to me or to himself. But one thing I knew was that he had done nothing wrong.

"It's hard, isn't it?"

I let him wrap his shaking arms around me and press me into himself. I let him embrace me, hold onto me tightly.

I let him share my warmth. I let him know that I wasn't lying, that I did care.