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CHAPTER THIRTEEN: I Still Hear The Call Of Life

  Wilderness

  Survival – Night 2 - Continuous

  Cain’s

  body jerks backward so fast his breath tears out of him. The coyote’s

  teeth clamp the fabric of his hood and rip,

  dragging him off balance. Snow rushes up toward him, but

  Lucille is already there.

  She lunges, one hand

  clamping onto the back of Cain’s coat. With a snarl of effort she

  wrenches him forward, tearing him out of the animal’s jaws. The

  force sends Cain sprawling to his hands and knees beside the fire,

  sparks leaping at the sudden violence.

  At the same instant her

  kukri arcs upward, clean, vicious, its chipped serrations catching

  the firelight before slicing across the coyote’s nose. The animal

  yelps and recoils, blood spotting the snow.

  The pack reacts instantly.

  The sudden flurry of motion

  near the flames startles the two coyotes that had been inching closer

  from behind Cain. One skitters back, hackles raised; the other lunges

  defensively, jaws snapping for Cain’s exposed side.

  Cain throws himself

  backward, rolling in the snow, fingers clawing for the spear he’d

  left stuck upright near the shelter wall. His heart slams against his

  ribs. His glove closes around the shaft and he rips it free just as

  the lunging coyote snaps at empty air.

  Lucille doesn’t get the

  same breath of space.

  The wounded coyote whips

  away, and another bolts from the dark, slamming full-force into her

  flank. Teeth sink into her sleeve, dragging her down, snow exploding

  around her as she hits the ground. She twists, driving her forearm

  between its jaws to keep them from her throat, even as she swings the

  kukri blind and furious.

  Chaos detonates.

  Coyotes pour in, a shifting

  ring of shadows and teeth, darting forward, darting back, testing,

  harassing, overwhelming. Fourteen, maybe fifteen of them, large and

  half-starved. Their yips and snarls meld with the crack of the fire

  and the scraping of claws on frozen earth.

  These aren’t shy

  scavengers. These are predators accustomed to dragging down bucks

  twice their weight. These are animals that challenge bears for

  carrion. And two human teenagers, small, exhausted, underfed, are

  nothing but opportunity.

  Cain rises just in time to

  jam the spear toward a coyote leaping for his chest. The point rakes

  fur; the animal veers away with a howl. Another darts behind him and

  snaps at the back of his leg. He spins and thrusts, the spear’s

  reach barely keeping them at bay.

  Lucille fights like she’s

  being swallowed by the pack.

  Pinned beneath the coyote

  on her arm, she slashes upward with the kukri in brutal,

  close-quarter arcs. Metal bites fur and flesh; a coyote shrieks and

  reels back, another immediately taking its place. Snow under her is

  trampled red.

  Everywhere is motion, dark

  shapes weaving in and out of the firelight, teeth glinting, eyes

  flashing amber, white breath pouring from their jaws.

  Cain plants the butt of his

  spear in the snow and drives it forward, impaling one through the

  shoulder. The impact shudders down his arms. The coyote thrashes

  around the shaft in a frenzy of blood and snow, and Cain has to brace

  with both hands just to wrench the weapon free.

  Lucille kicks a coyote off

  her hip, rolls to her knees, and slices open another that rushes her

  from the side. Blood spatters across her cheek as she rises, shaking,

  panting, feral.

  And still the pack circles.

  Still they test. Still they charge.

  The two teenagers stand in

  the swirling firelight, backs not quite touching, blades and spear

  flashing as fifteen starving predators close in for the kill.

  Another coyote lunges for

  Cain, a blur of teeth and snow. This time he meets it clean, wooden

  tip slamming into its chest with a jolt that rattles up his arms. He

  drives forward, boots skidding, and forces the animal backward. Its

  claws scramble uselessly on the ice before it crashes into the

  firepit.

  The beast’s scream rips

  through the night as flames crawl up its fur. Cain tries to wrench

  the spear free, tries to hold it down, but the coyote thrashes

  violently. The fire sputters under the chaos, embers scattering, and

  in a burst of sparks the creature flings itself away, burning,

  shrieking, and vanishes into the dark.

  The flame dies with it.

  Sudden blackness folds over

  everything.

  Cain’s breath catches. He

  staggers back, eyes wide, blind except for the vague sheen of

  moonlight off snow. The shadows become alive, shifting, circling,

  closing.

  Lucille can see. Not

  clearly, not comfortably, but enough. Silhouettes flicker at the

  edges of her vision, low and fast and many.

  Cain bumps into her spine,

  panic in the tight rasp of his voice. “I can’t see, Lucille, I

  can’t see anything.”

  “Stay close,” she

  whispers. Her stance lowers, kukri poised, every muscle trembling

  with cold and adrenaline.

  He tries. He really does.

  It doesn’t matter.

  The pack surges,

  coordinated and merciless, dividing them with practiced ease. Cain

  swings blindly at the rush of snow and fur. The haft of his spear

  cracks against a skull, sending one coyote tumbling. Another leaps in

  and he thrusts low, the point catching its collarbone and flipping it

  head-over-paws, pinning its head briefly into the snow before it

  writhes free.

  Lucille fares worse.

  She slashes open a muzzle,

  hot blood spraying across her forearm, only for another shape to slam

  into her flank. She’s ripped off her feet, crashing into the snow.

  Her kukri spins from her grip, skittering across ice, landing just

  out of reach.

  Then the weight hits her.

  Snarling, snapping, biting. A second coyote piles on. Teeth tear

  through her fatigues like paper, finding flesh beneath, hot, bright

  pain exploding under every bite. She twists, kicks, tries to protect

  her throat.

  Cain isn’t doing much

  better. One coyote clamps onto his arm, shaking savagely, dragging

  him off-balance. Another sinks teeth into his ankle and yanks. He

  stumbles but refuses to fall, driving the butt of his spear into the

  attacker’s side before ripping his arm free, skin torn and blood

  hot on the snow.

  But the pack only tightens.

  More shapes. More eyes. More breath.

  The night becomes a frenzy

  of screams, snarls, and steel. The dark swallowing almost everything.

  Except the red.

  Lucille resorts to the only

  thing she can do. Claw. Tear. Bite. Her fingers seize the nearest

  coyote’s ear and wrench hard, twisting its head sideways until she

  feels cartilage tear under her nails. The beast shrieks, thrashing to

  escape, but its violent jerk rips itself free, leaving Lucille with a

  streak of hot blood across her palm.

  Another coyote lunges at

  her flank, she clamps her jaws around its foreleg. Fur fills her

  mouth, coarse and bitter, but she bites down anyway, tasting iron.

  The animal yelps, kicking madly, trying to rip its limb from her

  teeth.

  Then an opening, a throat,

  exposed for an instant. Lucille surges up. She bites deep.

  Her teeth sink into flesh,

  and despite the suffocating wad of fur, she clutches and tears until

  the throat gives way. Blood floods her mouth, hot and metallic. The

  coyote gurgles, staggers, tries to backpedal but only makes it a few

  steps before collapsing in a twitching heap.

  Lucille spits blood,

  scrambling across the churned snow. Her hand slams onto the kukri’s

  handle. She spins just as another coyote springs at her, she drives

  the blade into its ribs, dragging it out in a vicious arc that spills

  the beast across the snow in a dark spray.

  Meanwhile, Cain is losing

  ground. A coyote drags at his arm, teeth locked just above his elbow,

  shaking savagely. Another clamps onto his ankle and yanks, dragging

  him lower, forcing him onto one knee. He can barely keep his grip on

  his spear, his vision a blur of shifting shadows and gleaming teeth.

  But he knows the sound of a

  lunge. He hears the rush of paws over snow and thrusts blind. The

  spear cracks into a chest, punching through muscle. The coyote howls,

  kicking wildly as Cain forces it back, then rips the spear free and

  whips the butt end behind him.

  Luck, instinct, both. The

  haft catches another coyote in the face. Cain shoves hard, slamming

  the spearhead upward into its eye. A burst of hot blood splashes

  across his knuckles as the animal crumples.

  He turns again, panting,

  half-blind. One more shadow leaps at him, he stabs through it. Then

  another. He can’t tell if he’s hitting fur, snow, or nothing at

  all. His world is breath and screams and the crunch of teeth on bone.

  But eventually, the pack

  breaks.

  One coyote yelps, another

  whimpers, another limps backward dragging a bloodied paw. Their

  formation fractures. Their rhythm falters. Too many dead. Too many

  wounded. The big prey is not falling.

  The surviving coyotes

  scatter. Tails tucked. Ears flat. They vanish into the tree line,

  disappearing between the trunks one pair of glowing eyes at a time.

  And then, silence.

  Lucille lies sprawled in

  the snow, steaming blood soaking her clothes, her breaths sharp and

  fast. Cain kneels in the mess of trampled snow, arm throbbing, ankle

  burning, spear trembling in his grip as the reality settles over

  them: They are alone in the dark. Alone in the cold. And the night

  around them is very, very quiet.

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  Cain’s breath fogs into

  the darkness, thin, ragged, shivering despite the heat still flaring

  painfully through his veins. The spear trembles in his hands as he

  forces himself upright, forces his head to turn, scanning blindly for

  movement he cannot see. Every inch of him throbs. Blood, his and

  theirs, sticks his sleeves to his arms.

  The silence presses in,

  thick and wrong. Bitter. Victorious in a way that feels hollow.

  A sharp hiss cuts the

  night. Cain jolts, whipping toward the sound so fast he nearly loses

  his balance. “Lucille!” His voice cracks. He stumbles forward,

  boots slipping in churned-up snow soaked with shadowed red. “Lucille,

  where—”

  “I’m here!” she gasps

  back.

  He follows her voice,

  half-running, half-staggering. Her silhouette finally registers,

  small, hunched, shaking. She pushes herself upright but only reaches

  her knees before collapsing forward with a trembling grunt.

  “Damn it, Lucille—”

  “I’m fine,” she

  snarls, breathless, lying through her teeth. “Just—just give me a

  second—”

  But even in the dark he can

  hear it, the wet patter of blood hitting snow. Her breath catches on

  something sharp, her whole body curling inward around the pain. Cain

  drops to her side, hands searching for her shoulder, her arm,

  anything to anchor himself in the smothering dark. His fingers brush

  her sleeve and she flinches, not from him, but from pain radiating

  beneath the shredded fabric.

  “Shit, no, no, we need

  light. We need fire. It’s freezing. Lucille, it’s gettin' colder.” His teeth chatter mid-sentence. Now that the adrenaline

  ebbs, the night’s bite crashes in, merciless, immediate. The cold

  feels like it’s reaching inside him, clawing through the wounds he

  didn’t even realize he had.

  Lucille sucks in a ragged

  breath, lifting her face toward him though he can barely see her

  outline. “Cain… we need to get the fire back. Now.”

  He nods even though she

  can’t see it. “I know. I know.” His breath shudders. “Stay

  with me, I’ll-I'll get somethin' burnin', Just don’t move too

  much, okay?”

  But the darkness is deep,

  and the cold is deeper.

  Cain focuses on the fire

  like it’s the only thing keeping them alive. He drops to his knees,

  blindly clawing through the shelter for whatever scraps of wood and

  tinder he can grab. Everything aches, everything burns, and his

  fingers feel half-numb as he drags the bundle back to the dead fire

  pit.

  He fumbles through his

  pockets for the firestarter. Too many pockets. Too much panic. His

  breath rasps, sharp and uneven, the cold sinking deeper now that the

  adrenaline is bleeding out of him. When his fingers finally close

  around the metal, he exhales a broken curse and starts striking it

  against the tinder. Sparks spit, but refuse to take.

  “Just... just hold on,”

  he mutters. “I’ve got it. I’ve got it…” Lucille doesn’t

  answer. He keeps talking anyway, the words for himself more than her,

  the silence around them far too heavy.

  Behind him, Lucille shifts.

  She presses a palm against the ground and forces herself upright,

  only managing a kneel. Her kukri is still clenched so tightly her

  knuckles are the only pale thing on her blood-slicked hand. Her

  breath rattles; each inhale sounds like it hurts.

  She drags herself to Cain’s

  side, the movement a painful crawl. She puts her free hand, wet,

  warm, trembling, on his shoulder. He flinches at the touch.

  Lucille hisses through her

  teeth. “Relax… Cain. Take your time.”

  Her voice is thin, frayed,

  but steady enough to cut through his panic. The tinder still refuses

  to catch. The cold presses in. And they both know they don’t have

  time, yet she tells him anyway. Take your time.

  Cain takes another breath,

  slow, deliberate, letting it burn its way down his throat. His hands

  stop shaking just enough. He drags steel across stone.

  Spark. Spark.

  Spark.

  Finally the tinder blooms

  with a soft orange glow. Cain bends over it, cupping it from the

  wind, blowing until the glow turns to flame. He jams it under the

  waiting wood, breath held. Ignition.

  A thin ribbon of fire

  crawls up the bark. Another breath from Cain feeds it, and the flame

  finally takes, climbing into something real. He sags with relief, a

  tiny, breathless laugh slipping out of him. He tosses another piece

  of wood on, then another, building the fire back into a proper

  barrier against the dark.

  Lucille, still kneeling,

  still gripping her blood-slick kukri, reaches one hand behind the

  small of her back and rips the IFAK from her belt. She drops it

  between them, flipping it open with clumsy fingers.

  “Let me see,” she

  whispers, no softness, only urgency.

  “No,” Cain immediately

  counters, turning toward her, “you first. You’re worse.”

  Lucille shakes her head

  sharply. “Cain. You’re bleedin' everywhere.” She tries to force

  more command into her tone, but her voice wavers. “Give me your

  arm.”

  He doesn’t. He reaches

  toward her shoulder instead, where the fabric of her jacket hangs in

  tatters, soaked through with blood. “Lucille, you need—”

  She growls, actually

  growls, and grabs his wrist hard enough to make him wince. Her eyes

  burn brighter than the firelight.

  “You. First.”

  Her breathing is ragged.

  Her face is pale beneath the blood. But her hands move, determined

  and practiced, dragging out gauze and disinfectant with a snap of

  fabric and plastic.

  Cain hesitates. The fire

  crackles, casting light on the snow, on the blood, the pawprints, the

  bodies cooling in the dark beyond.

  He meets her eyes. They’re

  steady. Fierce. Unyielding. “…Fine,” he mutters. “But after

  this, it’s your turn.”

  Lucille snorts, a breath of

  a laugh through clenched teeth, then reaches for his wounded forearm.

  Cain freezes. The fire

  crackles, growing, its orange light licking across the snow, and

  across Lucille.

  Now that he can truly see

  her, his breath leaves him in a single, hollow exhale.

  Blood. Everywhere.

  Splattered across her sleeves, smeared across her throat, soaking

  into the wool of her shirt. He can’t tell which wounds are hers,

  which stains belong to the coyotes she ripped apart with her bare

  teeth.

  The tears in her clothing

  reveal pale skin beneath, sliced open in a dozen places. Snow melted

  by the heat of spilled blood runs in thin red rivulets down her

  sides.

  He reaches for her coat,

  hands trembling. “Lucille… take this off. I need to...just let me

  look.”

  She tries to turn away from

  him, voice hoarse. “Cain, your arm is pouring, take care

  of yourself first.”

  He doesn’t listen. He

  can’t. He works at the blood-slick zipper until it finally gives.

  Lucille’s protest is little more than a breath now; she’s too

  drained, too hurt to fight him.

  Cain eases the jacket off

  her shoulders. The fabric peels away with a sound that turns his

  stomach, frozen blood unsticking from cloth.

  Her long-sleeved shirt

  underneath is torn, punctured, clinging wetly to her skin. Bite

  marks, some shallow, others deep enough to expose raw flesh, run

  along both arms. Her ribs are covered in jagged claw slashes. Her

  shoulder is a blooming mess of bruises and teeth.

  And then he sees it. Her

  left hand. Or… what’s left of it. Her pinky is gone. Not

  a clean cut, ripped. A ragged stump, already clotting but still

  oozing.

  Cain’s breath catches.

  Heat stabs behind his eyes.

  “Lucille,” he whispers,

  voice cracking as he cups her trembling arm, careful not to press too

  hard. “Gods… Lucille…”

  She swallows, jaw clenched

  so tight the muscle jumps. “It’s fine,” she rasps. “I don’t…

  I don’t need all of them.”

  But he sees the faint

  shiver in her shoulders, the tight hitch in her chest each time cold

  air touches a wound, pain she refuses to admit, refuses to give voice

  to.

  Her eyes flick toward him,

  wild and sharp in the firelight, as if daring him to pity her. He

  doesn’t. He just kneels there with her, the fire crackling, the

  night still and heavy around them, and he sets his jaw with a resolve

  as fierce as hers.

  “No,” Cain says quietly

  as he lifts the IFAK with bloodstained fingers. “Come here, let me

  patch you up.”

  And this time, she doesn’t

  argue. Only watches him, breath shallow, as he begins the grim work

  of piecing her back together in the flickering light of their

  struggling fire.

  Cain gently takes one of

  Lucille’s arms in both hands, steadying her trembling limb as he

  digs into the IFAK. His fingers are clumsy with cold, but determined.

  He finds the antiseptic jar, twists it open with his teeth, and

  begins working; quick, diligent, careful. The sting makes Lucille

  flinch, but she doesn’t pull away. He scrubs the blood from her

  skin, cleaning each gash with slow, deliberate strokes. Then he wraps

  gauze around her entire forearm, layer after layer, until the

  bleeding slows. He repeats the process on her other arm, hands

  shaking, breath visible in the frigid air.

  Cain’s breath fogs the

  air as he stares at her hand, what’s left of it. His jaw sets. He

  hates this. Hates every part of it. But he can’t show it. If he

  cracks now, she will too.

  He hesitates before

  reaching for her hand. She watches him, silent, jaw tight. They both

  know they won’t find the finger. They both know how much it’s

  still bleeding.

  His stomach turns at the

  thought. “…We might have to cauterize it,” he says, voice low.

  Apologetic. Hating every word.

  Lucille breathes in once.

  Thinks. Then nods, sharp, decisive. “Do it.”

  She shoves the kukri’s

  end deep into the heart of the fire, the metal already reddening. Her

  face stays still. Focused. The only sign of pain is the slight tremor

  in her thigh where she braces her posture.

  Cain forces himself to

  move.

  He lifts her left hand,

  gently, so gently, trying to ignore the pulsing flow of blood from

  the torn stump where her pinky once was. She hisses, teeth snapping

  together, a sound somewhere between anger and agony. He murmurs an

  apology, but she shakes her head hard. No time for that.

  Cain grabs a strip of

  gauze, wraps it once around her wrist to help slow the bleeding until

  the metal heats fully. His fingers shake. He tries to hide it by

  tightening the wrap.

  The kukri’s tip glows a

  bright, furious orange.

  Lucille pulls her hand

  closer to herself in reflex. Her breathing quickens. Cain steadies

  her arm with one hand and reaches for the kukri with the other. It

  feels like holding a burning sun even with the thick gloves

  insulating him. His stomach rolls.

  “It’s okay,” Lucille

  says, voice thin. “Just...just do it.”

  He swallows hard. Nods. “On

  three,” he says.

  Lucille shakes her head

  again. “One.”

  Cain doesn’t hesitate. He

  presses the glowing metal against the open wound.

  Lucille screams, raw,

  guttural, animal. Her entire body convulses, spine arching, boots

  gouging trenches in the blood-stained snow. Cain nearly drops the

  kukri, but he forces himself to hold it there, forces himself to

  watch her flesh sear shut, forces himself to endure the smell of

  burning skin.

  He pulls the blade away the

  moment the bleeding stops.

  Lucille collapses forward,

  catching herself on her good hand, panting violently. Cain drops the

  kukri into the snow where it hisses and sputters. Then he catches her

  shoulders before she faceplants.

  “It’s done,” he

  whispers, barely audible. “It’s done.”

  Lucille trembles. Sweat and

  tears mix with the blood smeared across her cheeks. But she nods, jaw

  grinding as she forces herself upright again.

  “Your turn,” she rasps.

  Cain blinks. “Lucille,

  you can barely—”

  “No.” Her eyes lift to

  his, feral with stubbornness. “Your turn.”

  The fire crackles, casting

  long shadows across the shredded snow around them, blood-slick,

  paw-printed, littered with the bodies of dead coyotes.

  They are alive. Barely. But

  alive. And they still have to survive three more days.

  Lucille does the same thing

  for Cain, cleaning every wound with the antiseptic, scrubbing away

  the blood as gently as her trembling hands allow. Cain hisses at the

  sting but doesn’t pull away. She wraps the bandages around his

  arms, his shoulder, across his ribs where teeth nearly tore through

  him. When she finishes, she lets out a slow, shaking breath,

  exhausted and pale.

  They sit together before

  the fire, shoulders brushing. Lucille’s pinky-less hand trembles in

  her lap, wrapped tight in fresh, white bandages already spotting

  through with red. She leans forward, picks up the skewered fish,

  brushes the snow off with her wrist, and plunges the sticks back into

  the ground so the heat can rewarm them.

  For a while, neither

  speaks. The fire crackles. The wind sighs. Their breaths come uneven

  and tired.

  Then Lucille snorts. Just a

  tiny sound at first. But it breaks something in her, the tension, the

  fear, the pain. A small laugh escapes. Then another. She tries to

  swallow it down, but the sound only grows, spilling out of her in

  unsteady, breathless bursts.

  Cain turns to her, eyebrows

  raised, utterly lost. “What—?”

  But that only makes her

  laugh harder. Cain’s own laugh catches against his raw throat,

  half-disbelieving, half-hysterical. Soon it's both of them, laughing

  with the fire casting wild shadows across their torn clothes and

  bloodstained skin.

  Lucille wipes her eyes with

  her wrist. “We did it,” she chokes out. “Cain, we...we actually

  killed coyotes.”

  Cain shakes his head,

  wheezing a breathless laugh. “I know. I know. I can’t believe...

  I mean... shit.” He looks out toward the dark tree line where their

  battle had raged. “How many did you get?”

  Lucille follows his gaze,

  rubbing her palm over her mouth as she squints into the dark. “Looks

  like… two,” she says.

  Cain grins faintly. “I

  had three.”

  They both fall quiet again,

  but this time the silence feels earned, a fragile, victorious thing.

  The fire burns steady. The fish warms. And for a moment, despite the

  blood, despite the cold, despite everything…they’re alive.

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