Chapter 9 Electra
NINE
ELECTRA
Four days had crawled by since Rune’s impromptu tour of Blackpine, and Electra found herself checking the cabin windows more often than she cared to admit to see if his truck or his cruiser was coming up her driveway.
She’d managed the practical necessities of settling in—grocery runs to the quaint general store where the elderly clerk had eyed her with curious interest, cautious exploration of the well-marked trails during daylight hours, and even a return visit to Millie’s diner where the woman had peppered her with friendly questions about her writing.
But no sign of the enigmatic sheriff who’d occupied her thoughts far too much.
He said to call if I needed anything, she reminded herself for the dozenth time, phone in hand as she paced the living room. Maybe he’s just waiting for me to make the next move.
She’d nearly caved three separate times, finger hovering over his contact information before setting the phone down in frustration. The last thing she needed was to get tangled up in some mountain romance that would derail everything she’d come here to accomplish.
Focus, Calloway. You didn’t move here to chase after some alpha male in a uniform.
Though the memory of sitting beside him in his truck, breathing in his intoxicating scent of pine and spice and something distinctly masculine, made her pulse quicken despite her best intentions.
The way he’d stared at her at the scenic overlook—like she was something precious and dangerous all at once—had awakened parts of her that had been dormant for far too long.
Two years, her traitorous mind supplied. Two years since you’ve had decent sex.
She dropped onto the couch with an exasperated sigh.
That was probably all this was—sexual frustration manifesting as an obsession with the first attractive man she’d encountered in months.
Rune was undeniably gorgeous, with those gray eyes and that controlled authority.
But she’d sworn off letting men derail her career.
The pattern was always the same. She’d meet someone, get swept up in the intoxicating rush of new romance, and gradually find herself putting her writing second to their demands for attention.
Her last relationship two years ago had nearly cost her a book deadline.
Tyler had constantly guilt-tripped her into accompanying him to every social event and weekend getaway, claiming she was “too anti-social” and needed to “live a little.”
Never again.
Her career had exploded after she’d finally cut him loose and recommitted to her craft. She couldn’t afford to repeat those mistakes, especially not when she was already struggling with creative blocks.
“Just focus on the book,” she muttered, grabbing her laptop and settling at the desk by the window. “He’s probably just another commitment-phobic man who wants the fun without the complications anyway.”
But when she opened her document and stared at the blinking cursor, the familiar panic crept in.
Four days of absolutely nothing. Not a single coherent sentence, not even a fragment of dialogue worth keeping.
The creative flow that had felt so promising during her first few days had evaporated the moment Rune disappeared from her daily routine.
It’s just a temporary block, she told herself, her fingers hovering uselessly over the keys. You pushed too hard initially. Your brain needs a rest.
Except this didn’t feel like burnout. This felt like denial—like she was deliberately cutting herself off from whatever wellspring of inspiration this place had unlocked.
The words were there, she could sense them hovering just out of reach, but every time she tried to access them, her mind circled back to gray eyes and the memory of strong hands helping her into a truck.
After an hour of producing nothing but frustrated sighs, Electra slammed the laptop shut and grabbed her notebook instead. Maybe the tactile sensation of pen on paper would break through whatever wall she’d built.
The porch swing creaked gently as she settled into it and she inhaled deeply, breathing in the crisp mountain air that should have been invigorating.
Spring was painting the mountainsides in fresh green, and birds called from the towering pines that surrounded her cabin like silent sentinels.
It was exactly the kind of setting that should’ve had her creative juices flowing like a river.
Instead, she found herself replaying that moment in Rune’s truck when their eyes had met and the air had practically crackled with electricity. The careful distance he’d maintained even as his gaze had devoured every detail of her face.
“God, you’re pathetic,” she said aloud, hoping the sound of her own voice would snap her out of this ridiculous spiral. “The man was being polite. Showing a new resident around. That’s literally his job.”
But her body knew better. She’d seen enough desire in men’s eyes to recognize the real thing, and Rune had looked at her like a starving man presented with a feast. The restraint he’d shown had been palpable—not disinterest, but iron-willed control that had made her wonder what would happen if that careful composure ever cracked.
Stop it. She gripped the pen tighter, forcing herself to focus on the blank page. He’s probably just like every other man you’ve met. Wants the thrill of the chase but will run the moment things get real.
The thought should have been reassuring—a reminder of why keeping her distance was smart. Instead, it left her feeling hollow and inexplicably disappointed.
An hour later, the notebook remained as blank as her laptop screen. Every attempt at writing devolved into vivid memories of sitting beside Rune at that scenic overlook, feeling more content than she had in months.
This is borderline obsession, Electra.
She snapped the notebook closed and stalked back inside, her reflection in the hallway mirror showing flushed cheeks and wild hair. She looked like a woman on the edge of something—whether breakdown or breakthrough, she couldn’t tell.
“I need a nap,” she announced to the empty cabin. “And when I wake up, I’m going to write something brilliant and forget all about mysterious sheriffs with control issues.”
But even as she headed for the bedroom, Electra knew she was lying to herself. Whatever this was—attraction, obsession, or something deeper—it had sunk its claws in deep.
And the worst part was, she wasn’t entirely sure she wanted it to let go.
Darkness had swallowed the cabin whole when Electra’s eyes finally fluttered open.
The digital clock on her nightstand glowed an accusatory 9:47 PM—she’d been sleeping for nearly six hours.
Her body felt heavy with the kind of deep satisfaction that came from truly restorative sleep, the first she’d managed since arriving in Blackpine.
Thank God, she thought, stretching languidly beneath the soft quilt.
For once, her dreams hadn’t been populated by gray eyes and commanding voices, or vivid sequences of running through moonlit forests alongside creatures that felt more real than fantasy.
Her subconscious had finally granted her a reprieve from the relentless carousel of thoughts that had been plaguing her.
The silence pressed against her eardrums as she turned on the lights and padded barefoot to the kitchen, her stomach growling in protest at the missed dinner.
She opened the refrigerator and grabbed a turkey sandwich and a bottle of water, when suddenly, a haunting sound drifted through the night air.
Wolves.
But tonight, they sounded closer. Much closer.
Just wildlife doing wildlife things, she reminded herself, echoing Rune’s warnings about maintaining distance from the local predators. The sensible thing would be to close the blinds, finish her sandwich, and return to the blissful unconsciousness that had eluded her for days.
Instead, curiosity unfurled in her chest like a living thing.
Just a quick look. Her hand was already reaching for the back door handle. I write about wolves all the time. This is research.
The lie fell flat even as she told it to herself, but her feet carried her onto the porch and into the crisp night air.
The howling grew more distinct, layered with harmonies that spoke of pack communication rather than random wilderness sounds.
Something about the cadence tugged at her writer’s instincts—this wasn’t chaos but coordination.
This is stupid, Electra. But her legs moved anyway, following the half-formed trail that wound behind her cabin into the dense treeline.
Moonlight filtered through the canopy, casting everything in silver and shadow as she crept forward with the stealth of someone who knew they were breaking every safety rule in the book.
The howling ceased abruptly, replaced by an expectant silence that made her skin prickle with awareness. She pressed herself against the rough bark of a massive oak, peering around its trunk toward a small clearing where movement caught her eye.
Eight wolves materialized from the shadows like something out of a dream, their forms flowing with liquid grace across the moonlit space. But this wasn’t the random wandering of wild animals—their movements were purposeful, synchronized, almost ritualistic in their precision.
This is amazing.
The words formed silently in her mind as she watched, transfixed. It was like witnessing a scene straight from one of her novels, the kind of mystical pack gathering she’d written dozens of times but never imagined she’d see in reality.
And there, commanding the center of the group like a dark king among his subjects, was the massive black wolf she’d glimpsed from her window a week ago. Even among his packmates, he stood apart—larger, more imposing, moving with an authority that seemed to bend the very air around him.
Do I know you?
The thought whispered through her mind, unbidden and inexplicable. Which was ridiculous. But something about the way he held himself, the controlled power in every step, felt hauntingly familiar.
Her creative mind exploded with possibilities, plot threads weaving themselves together with an urgency that made her fingers itch for her laptop.
This was it—the spark she’d been desperately seeking for days, served up by the universe on a silver platter.
She needed to get back, and needed to capture this raw inspiration before it slipped away.
She turned to retreat, already composing lines in her head, when a shadow detached itself from the trees beside her.
The scream tore from her throat before she could stop it, primal and sharp in the expectant silence. Her heart thundered in her chest as a familiar figure stepped into the moonlight, and relief crashed over her in a dizzying wave.
“Rune.” His name escaped on a breathless whisper.
He moved with the same fluid precision she’d just witnessed in the wolves, positioning himself between her and the forest with protective instincts that seemed hardwired into his very DNA.
The gray t-shirt stretched across his broad shoulders did nothing to diminish the aura of barely contained power that radiated from him like heat.
“You shouldn’t be out here alone.” His voice was low and controlled, but she caught the edge of something sharper beneath the calm surface. “Especially not at night. It’s not safe for humans.”
Humans. The word hit her like a slap, confirmation of suspicions she’d been trying to rationalize away for days. She straightened, refusing to let him tower over her despite the way his presence made her pulse race.
“I’m not afraid,” she said, lifting her chin with defiance she didn’t entirely feel. “But I’m done with the cryptic warnings and half-truths. The way people look at me in town, the synchronized wildlife, your emphasis on humans—there’s more to this place than you’re telling me, isn’t there?”
His jaw tightened. For a moment, she thought he might deny it and retreat behind that wall of professionalism he wielded like armor.
“I’ll explain everything,” he said finally, his gaze sweeping the treeline with predatory alertness. “But not here. Let’s get you back inside where it’s safe.”
The promise hung between them, electric with possibility and danger in equal measure.
They walked back through the forest in charged silence, the space between them crackling with unspoken tension. Every brush of his arm against hers sent sparks racing along her nerve endings, and she found herself hyperaware of the way he moved—like a predator comfortable in his domain.
Finally you’ll have answers. And him. In your space. With no barriers between you and whatever this is.