Meet your enemy
Meet your enemy
Hybrid. This one word bounced inside my mind as I tried to grasp the meaning of it. There was no
reliable information about creatures being a mix of werewolf and vampire. According to the legends,
there was a tiny possibility of a child of a vampire and a werewolf being born, but no records were
found to prove that. To give us any information, Leo read the notes that Doctor Will Duarte provided
after examining the body of one of the degenerates. RêAd lat𝙚St chapters at Novel(D)ra/ma.Org Only
Will found many similarities between them and vampire commoners, which could suggest that the one
creating the degenerates had to be a vampire noble or at least have a lot of noble genes. At the same
time, their insatiable hunger could only be compared to those who were born to live with a commoner
vampire's bite: the vampire degenerates. The hybrid degenerates didn't have fangs but massive jaws
with sharp teeth. Their claws also resembled those of wolves rather than blade-like vampire claws.
They were all at least 6.7 feet tall, with their postures slightly resembling werewolves in their wolf form,
standing on two feet.
The description itself injected fear into the hearts of those who listened. I became more nervous, as I
realized that my human body was more than unprepared to face those hybrids, and I would have to go
far beyond my limits just to survive. I looked at Sariel and saw how restless he was. He was worried
about me. He surrendered to my stubbornness, but he was more than aware that he couldn't possibly
guarantee my safety during the battle. I wanted to fight to help him, not to make him worried, but at that
moment, I was wondering if I truly was able to be of any help. I needed to find a quick pattern to defeat
those creatures, just like I did when I fought against the wolf for the first time. I glanced at Sariel and
smiled at him, trying to convince him that I was fine after hearing the news, and he smiled back at me,
pretending that he believed my superficial confidence.
"There is one rule in this battle," Leo said, finishing our meeting. "We don't take prisoners. We kill. The
creatures we are fighting against are monsters. Their only purposes in life are to feed and kill, and it
doesn't matter if they drink the blood of a human, a wolf, or a vampire. Those who try to show mercy
will be the first to die." He glanced at me meaningfully, making me uncomfortably shift in my chair.
I couldn't help that I wasn't ok with killing anyone. The fact that I knew those degenerates used to be
simple humans didn't help at all. Nonetheless, I got the meaning of Leo's words, and engraved one
argument in my mind: they used to be humans, but now they were monsters, and the process was
irreversible.
The preparations for the upcoming battle started immediately after the meeting. I was assigned to lead
three teams responsible for evacuating humans and weak wolves from the western districts. Since the
degenerates were already surrounding the whole area, those people could only be moved to the center
part of the town.
The town hall sent messages alerting every citizen, wolf or human, and informing them of what they
should do, but we still needed to go from door to door and force people to evacuate.
"I don't understand what is urgent! What kind of crisis are we expecting? The fire? The flood? I need
answers before I get my ass anywhere out of my home!" A mother of three meaningfully crossed her
hands over her chest.
She was a human, who most likely had no idea of the existence of a supernatural. I struggled to tell her
how important it was for her to take her kids and run the hell out of the area, which was right at the
town's western border. She was making it harder for me and wasting the time that I didn't have.
"Step outside of your house and close the door for a second, if you don't want to scare your children," I
demanded harshly but was convincing enough for her to obey. "Stay here and wait."
I ran towards Patrick, grabbed him by the elbow, and dragged him to the stubborn lady's porch. He
looked at me questioningly, but I didn't say a word until he was standing in front of the fiercely frowning
300-pound woman with curly ginger hair. He smiled awkwardly and greeted the lady with a brief nod,
before raising his brows at me.
"Show her your claws," I told him.
"Are you serious?!" Patrick's eyes widened in disbelief.
"Deadly," I confirmed, "It will make my explanation quicker."
The woman narrowed her eyes at us while Patrick hesitantly raised his hand towards her, making her
focus on his palm.
As his nails turned into 6-inch blades, she screamed her lungs out, "Monster!"
I patted poor Patrick's shoulder, releasing him from this unfortunate task, and shielded him before the
terrified lady thought of throwing objects at him.
"He's one of the good guys," I assured, "but, trust me, you don't want to meet the bad guys. I suggest
you stop arguing and start packing the necessary things to leave in fifteen minutes."
She nodded hysterically and ran back into the house to prepare for evacuation. I turned around and
bowed to Patrick, mouthing a sorry and a thank you. He winked at me in response, which made me
smile. His presence there turned out to be amazingly helpful. He was good at handling people. They
believed whatever he told them. I wished I could say the same about my performance…
In less than an hour, we managed to move ninety percent of the population living in the danger zone
into the safer town center. As the one who organized the evacuation and secured a temporary location
for the evacuated people to stay, I felt proud of a job well done. The worst part of it was that all humans
learned about the supernaturals' existence in a harsh way. Some of them took it surprisingly well, but
some of them entered a state of panic or became hysterical. As much as I was still mad at Melinda, at
least she provided tons of sedatives for those who seriously needed drugs to calm down. It worked. We
got the situation under control while humans slowly began to acknowledge that they weren't the most
advanced race living on this planet.
"Lilith, there are a few houses on the western hill five miles outside the town. People living there
weren't registered in the town hall and are still not aware of the danger," Rayden said, handing me their
addresses.
"Shit," I cursed under my breath.
Rayden gave that list to me since he and Ari were busy providing guns and bullets with silver and
aconite. It was a specially prepared mix that they were hoping would kill the hybrids. Patrick was also
gone, doing other tasks, and taking care of the fortifications in the southern part of town. I took a deep
breath, grabbed three quickly picked volunteers, and got into the van.
"Wait! Let me be your driver!" Ian called out, running towards us.
I smiled, seeing at least one face I recognized. I agreed with a nod. He grinned, jumped in front of the
wheel, and a heartbeat later, we were moving towards the western town border. Once we drove out of
town, I realized the road was getting narrower until it turned into a sandy path leading straight into the
forest.
The houses we were looking for were in the clearing in the middle of the woods. It took us a while to
get there, but we finally saw four houses standing less than fifty meters from each other. Ian drove us
to the nearest one. I got out and took a blonde she-wolf, one of the volunteers, to go and knock on the
first house's door while Ian and two other Moon Hill wolves went to the second house.
As we were getting closer, I felt a chill running down my spine. The air I breathed suddenly became
thicker. Something was wrong. I looked at the other three houses, and the abrupt realization came: it
was quiet. We were in the middle of the forest, and yet no birds were singing, there were no sounds of
animals, and not even bees were flying. We were surrounded by complete silence.
"Keep your eyes wide open," I told the she-wolf as we slowly approached the door.
I knocked, but nobody answered. The anxiety increased my blood pressure, generously spreading the
adrenalin across my body. I knocked again, this time louder, and slightly pressed my ear to the door,
hoping to hear at least someone's heartbeat. I heard nothing. I swallowed, stepped back, and then
kicked the door open. The she-wolf gasped, then she took the breath in through her nostrils.
"Blood," she muttered, looking at me with fear in her eyes.
I nodded. The stink of death was vividly sensible inside the house. I exhaled slowly and took the first
step in. I passed through the short corridor and saw the first corpse lying on the floor. It was a middle-
aged man with one arm separated from his body and his stomach cut wide open. One of his legs
looked like it had been eaten. The whole view was horrifying. With a shaky breath, I stepped further
into the house. Three more victims were lying in the kitchen area. As soon as the she-wolf saw them,
she ran outside the house to vomit.
The middle-aged woman, with her skull ripped open and the pieces of her brain covering the floor lay in
the middle of the floor. Two of her younger than teenage children had their throats mercilessly cut.
Their bodies were curled up by the bathroom door as if they were trying to escape.
My whole body started to tremble. I couldn't believe that there was a creature capable of doing
something like that. I covered my mouth with my hand to restrain myself from crying out loud while my
tears flew down my cheeks. Yet, there was no time to become emotional. The degenerates must have
been somewhere close.
Suddenly, I felt a fast movement right behind me. I turned around. I couldn't see anyone, but I felt the
enemy's presence. I ran out of the house to warn the blonde she-wolf… but it was too late. Her
headless body lay right outside the threshold. I pulled out my knife and slowly moved forward, trying to
sense the murderous creature lurking somewhere near me. I closed my eyes and located the faint
sound.
"The roof," I muttered under my breath and threw my knife aimed at the huge wolf-like creature,
standing right above me.
My knife stabbed it around its chest, making it jump down while letting out a vicious scream. It landed
just a few inches away from me, furiously panting and towering over me by more than two heads.
I gulp. "Oh, fuck…"