Home / Werewolf / WEREWOLVES MAY CRY / Chapter 1 - The Smell of Blood in Chicago
WEREWOLVES MAY CRY
WEREWOLVES MAY CRY
Author: Digital Ola
Chapter 1 - The Smell of Blood in Chicago
Author: Digital Ola
last update2025-09-23 04:16:06

### Chapter One – The Smell of Blood in Chicago###

(Bryan's POV)

Chicago never really slept. It just groaned, restless, like a wounded animal too stubborn to die. The city’s neon lights, late-night cabs, and the heavy sound of machines that never shut down. Somewhere between those shadows and the lights, Bryan Amarkson hunted.

He hated the word hunter. It sounded too noble. Too professional. In reality, what he did was dirtier, meaner, and paid less than minimum wage. He hunted werewolves, not because he believed in justice, but because it was the only thing that kept the nightmares quiet.

Nightmares of her.

Her scream always came first in his dreams, sharp enough to cut glass. Then her eyes, desperate, shining unsteady with moonlight, before vanishing into blood and teeth. His mother’s face. Samantha. The only person who had ever made Bryan feel like he wasn’t alone. And the face that haunted him every time he closed his eyes.

He adjusted the strap of the crossbow digging into his shoulder as he leaned against a crumbling brick wall in a back alley. His boots were wet from the Chicago rain, and his hoodie clung to his back like a second skin. The stench of garbage clashed with something else, something sharper, metallic.

Blood.

Bryan wrinkled his nose and muttered under his breath. “Great. Another Saturday night in paradise.”

His partner wasn’t beside him yet. Not the kind of partner normal people had. No loyal cop, no military brother-in-arms. No, his so-called partner was Pa Clever, a greasy, balding businessman who ran more cons than Bryan could count. Pa Clever wasn’t here, of course. He rarely was. He stayed behind the safety of his liquor-stained desk, sending Bryan into the filth to do the work.

That was fine. Bryan didn’t like sharing the stage anyway.

His hand twitched slightly as he touched the shaft of one of his silver-tipped bolts. He’d carved a little lightning bolt symbol into the shaft earlier out of boredom. He liked to joke that it made his shots faster. Nerd habits.

There it was again, the scent of blood. Stronger this time. And underneath it, something wild. Something that made the hairs on the back of his neck stand on end.

He swallowed hard.

Bryan hated himself for it, but he always recognized that smell. Even though he never admitted it out loud, some part of him understood it too well.

Werewolves.

He loaded his crossbow and muttered, “Let’s play fetch, doggy.”

The warehouse at the end of the alley was lit from the inside, yellow glow seeping through grimy windows. Bryan crept closer, footsteps soundless on the wet pavement. His heart thumped in his chest, but not with fear. More like anticipation. Hunting was the only time he felt alive.

He slid around the corner, layed low, and peeked through a broken panel.

Inside, three figures stood over a man tied to a chair. The man’s head hunged loosely forward, blood dripping from his mouth onto his shirt. The others weren’t men at all, not anymore.

Their skin rippled in patches, their fingernails curved like claws, their teeth glinting in the low light. Their voices were guttural like a crow, distorted animal trying to crawl through human throats.

Bryan’s lip curled. “Half-shifted freaks. Guess you boys missed the memo on full moons only.”

He raised his crossbow, sighted the closest one. A thick-necked brute sniffing the air — he fired the bolt from his bow.

The silver-tipped shaft buried itself into the beast’s chest. It let out a gurgling snarl, stumbled backward, and collapsed on the floor.

The other two beasts, snarling, their eyes glowing yellow in the dim.

Bryan stepped through the broken panel like he owned the place, loading another bolt. saying. “Hey, boys. Did I crash the family dinner?”

One thursted forward suddenly. Bryan dodged sideways, slammed the butt of the crossbow into the creature’s face, and kicked its legs out from under it. The other rushed him from behind. He felt claws scrape across his hoodie, tearing fabric, missing flesh by an inch. His pulse jumped, not just with adrenaline, but with something stranger, something he didn’t understand.

It was always like this. He could read their movements before they happened, like his body already knew the rhythm of their fight. Like something inside him belonged to them.

He shoved the thought away, jammed another bolt into the beast’s throat, and twisted. Blood sprayed, hot and metallic, coating his cheek.

The third creature backed away, lips curled over bloody teeth. Bryan grinned at it. “Go on, run. Tell your friends the nerd says hi.”

It ran through the back exit. Bryan let it go. Always let one go. Pa. Clever paid better when the wolves knew who killed their buddies. Fear was profitable.

The man tied to the chair groaned, lifting his head weakly. Bryan walked over, crouched in front of him, and started cutting the ropes with a silver knife.

“You’re safe now,” Bryan muttered, though his tone was dry, like he was mocking him. “Congratulations, you get to keep breathing in this dump of a city.”

The man’s eyes flickered open, pale green, sharper than Bryan expected. He whispered something, voice trembling.

“...he’ll come for you.”

Bryan froze. “Who?”

The man’s lips curved, just slightly, into something that wasn’t gratitude. More like a warning.

“Your father.”

Bryan moved back, knife slipping in his grip. “What the hell did you just say?”

But before the man could speak again, a bullet tore through the window. It hit the man square in the chest, blowing him back in the chair. Bryan turned his head instinctively, his heart hammering as shards of glass rained around him.

From the broken window above, a shadow moved. A figure crouched with perfect balance, rifle still smoking.

The moonlight caught her face.

Sharp cheekbones, dark hair pulled back in a tight braid, lips curved into a smile expressing scorn. Her eyes locked onto Bryan with the calm precision of a predator who already knew she’d won.

Mayer Christabel.

Bryan’s chest tightened, but not with fear. With something hotter. Something dangerous.

She lowered the rifle and spoke, her voice cool, taunting.

“You’re in the wrong alley, hunter boy.”

Bryan raised his crossbow, even though his palms were slick. His heart didn’t know whether to race from adrenaline or something else entirely.

He forced a grin, saying. “Cute entrance beauty damsel. But next time, try knocking.”

For a second, the warehouse was nothing but silence — two predators staring each other down.

Then, outside, the faint echo of a howl cut through the city night. Long, deep, mournful.

Bryan felt it, vibrated in his bones.

And he had no idea why.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan the code to download the app
Next Chapter

Latest Chapter

  • Chapter 19 - Shackles and Leashes

    ### Chapter Nineteen – Shackles and Leashes ###The restraints were finally gone, but the marks they left burned like shackles etched into Bryan’s skin.He sat up slowly on the steel bed, his breath ragged, chest still heaving from the suffocating grip of Owen Zender. His muscles ached, his veins stung with the chemical still waging war against his wolf blood.And yet, none of that compared to the shock rattling through his skull.Because he had heard it—clearer than he wanted to believe.“My sister’s son,” Owen had muttered when Mayer blocked his blade, the words slipping out like a crack in armor.My sister’s son.Bryan’s chest constricted. Samantha. His mother. The woman whose face haunted him in dreams, whose absence was an open wound he never managed to close.Owen was her brother. His uncle.The strongest hunter alive—the man who almost ended him just minutes ago—was his own blood.Bryan’s fists tightened at his sides. He wanted to scream, to curse, to demand answers. But his th

  • Chapter 18 - Shackles of Blood

    ### Chapter Eighteen – Shackles of Blood ###The first thing Bryan felt was the cold.Metal against his back, pressing through thin fabric, sucking the warmth from his body. He tried to move, but his arms wouldn’t budge. His wrists burned, bound in steel cuffs bolted to the frame beneath him. His ankles were locked tight too, spread and fastened like a specimen waiting to be dissected.His head throbbed. The air smelled of antiseptic and iron, sharp enough to sting his nose. Faint humming filled the room—the low electric buzz of machinery. He forced his eyes open.The room was white. Too white. Walls washed in fluorescent light, sterile and lifeless. Beside him, instruments gleamed on trays—syringes, scalpels, vials filled with shifting silver liquid.A bed. No. A table. A cage made of science.He paniced through his chest. Bryan pulled hard against the restraints, veins bulging in his arms, teeth gritted until his jaw ached. His muscles strained, almost tearing themselves apart. But

  • Chapter 17 - Silver in His Veins

    #Chapter Seventeen – Silver in His Veins#The pounding at the door turned into an avalanche of sound, wood scattering, hinges groaning, and then the entrance gave way entirely. A flood of hunters stormed inside, rifles raised, their black coats flaring like the wings of carrion birds. Mayer barely had time to adjust her stance, sword raised, her eyes scanning the room for any sign of weakness.She’d taken down two already, but now there were nine—maybe more in the shadows, waiting for their moment to strike. Bryan staggered beside her, his chest hammering, blood dripping down his side. Even as it fell, the wounds began knitting together, muscles tightening, tendons pulling in ways he didn’t understand.He looked down at his arms, at the wounds that sealed themselves shut like invisible threads weaving skin back together. The hunters saw it too, their eyes widening in shock and fear."God—he’s healing," one of them said, fumbling with his rifle. "It’s him. He’s one of them."Bryan’s st

  • Chapter 16 - Blood at the Door

    ### Chapter Sixteen – Blood at the Door ###The footsteps outside grew heavier. Boots scuffed against the gravel, marching closer. Voices murmured, low, professional, the rhythm of men who’d hunted a thousand times before.Bryan’s skin prickled, his heartbeat drumming too loud.He pressed his back harder against the wall, every muscle screaming to run, to fight, to do something. His mind spun with the certainty that this was it—the hunters had tracked him, and Mayer… Mayer had led them here.He turned his gaze toward her.She was already at the door, her body in great tension, every movement was precise. Sword in her hand, her posture spoke of readiness, not betrayal. She caught his stare and hissed under her breath:“Stay down. Don’t move.”Bryan’s jaw tightened. He wanted to laugh in her face—how easy it sounded, stay down like some helpless child while hunters stormed in to carve him apart. But his ribs ached, his side throbbed, and deep inside, something primal warned him: disobey

  • Chapter 15 - Teeth Beneath the Skin

    ### Chapter Fifteen – Teeth Beneath the Skin ###(Bryan POV)The silence pressed down like a weight.Bryan sat with his back against the wall, bandaged side pounding in dull, persistent waves. Dust clung to the air, lit by thin streaks of morning sun slipping through boarded cracks.Across the room, Mayer was crouched over a metal basin, rinsing bloodstained cloth with the last of the water she’d scavenged. Her movements were efficient, calm, as if patching up injured fugitives was an everyday routine.Bryan’s jaw clenched.He hated the way she moved with such control, hated the ease in her face—like she hadn’t just seen him almost tear out of his own skin last night. Like she hadn’t dragged him, unconscious, into this rotten place and stitched him up like some… pet.She was a hunter. His enemy. His mother’s kind of murderer.So why the hell had she saved him?He wanted to ask. No, he wanted to demand answers. But the words jammed in his throat, blocked by something far uglier than an

  • Chapter 14 - Shadows Between Them

    ### Chapter Fourteen – Shadows Between Them ###(Mayer POV)The night air reeked of blood and damp fur.Mayer moved like a phantom along the rooftops, her boots skimming the ledge as she tracked the commotion below. A low snarl echoed through the alley, followed by the crash of a dumpster tipping over. Her pulse spiked. She crouched low, peering through the rain-slick darkness.There—Bryan.He was cornered by two full-grown wolves, their yellow eyes gleaming, claws tearing against the pavement. But it wasn’t just their attack that froze her breath—it was him.Bryan’s body shook, veins bulging at his neck, his hands flexing as if bones beneath were straining to break free. His teeth sharped, lips curling in a growl that wasn’t human.Her stomach lurched unsteadily.He’s shifting.“Damn it,” Mayer whispered, going down from the ledge.Bryan lunged forward with wild strength, tackling one wolf against the wall. His punches landed too fast, too hard for a human. His eyes flickered—silver,

More Chapter
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on MegaNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
Scan code to read on App