Grace could not move.
Her hand stayed stretched toward the trees, shaking in the cold air.
“Eli?” she whispered.
The boy stared at her like he was afraid she might vanish.
His hair was longer. His face was thinner. Dirt marked his cheeks. But the scar above his eyebrow was the same one she had kissed every night when he was small.
“Mom?”
The word broke her.
Grace tried to stand, but pain shot through her belly and she cried out, folding forward.
The wolf stepped closer, not growling, not attacking.
Just watching.
Eli ran to her.
“I told him you would come,” he cried. “I told him you’d find me.”
Grace pulled him against her chest, sobbing into his hair.
“I looked for you every day. Your father said you drowned.”
Eli shook his head violently.
“He took me here,” he whispered. “He said you didn’t want me anymore.”
The little girl covered her mouth and began to cry.
Grace’s face went still.
Her husband had not just abandoned them today.
He had stolen her son years ago.
Another wave of pain made Grace clutch her stomach.
“Eli,” she gasped. “The baby…”
The wolf suddenly turned and trotted down a narrow path between the trees.
Eli grabbed his mother’s hand.
“We have to follow him. He knows where the ranger cabin is.”
Grace looked at the animal through tears.
“He saved you?”
Eli nodded.
“I was alone the first night. He stayed near me. Every time I cried, he came back.”
Grace leaned on both children as they struggled through the forest.
The wolf kept stopping, waiting, guiding them through the damp leaves until a small cabin appeared between the trees.
Smoke rose from the chimney.
A ranger burst through the door and ran toward them.
Hours later, under warm blankets, Grace held her newborn baby girl against her chest while Eli and his sister slept beside her.
Police lights flashed outside the cabin.
Her husband had been found trying to flee.
Grace looked through the window.
At the edge of the forest, the grey wolf stood beneath the trees.
Eli woke and whispered, “He came back.”
Grace kissed her son’s forehead, tears sliding silently down her cheeks.
“He brought you home twice,” she said.
The wolf held her gaze for one quiet second.
Then it turned and disappeared into the woods, leaving behind the family he had refused to let the forest keep.