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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1

Silence could drown a person. 

At least, that's what Raven Nakamura's mother had said three years ago—the day she walked out and never came back. 

Her mother wasn't entirely wrong, but she wasn't right either. It wasn't silence that pressed down on Raven here. The refuge was never truly quiet. There was always something: the drone of insects thick in the summer air, the restless sigh of wind through elm and maple branches, the crunch of gravel under her boots. And above it all, the chorus of creatures—screeches, hoots, bellows, grunts, and growls—an orchestra of wildness that never slept. 

No, it wasn't silence that could drown a person. It was isolation. The kind that seeped into your bones until you forgot what laughter sounded like, until the world beyond the fences felt more like a dream than a place you could touch. Maybe her mother had simply been full of excuses, telling herself whatever story would make leaving her daughter behind easier. 

Raven leaned against the railing, eyes locked on the Siberian tiger sprawled in the shade below. Vlad's tail flicked lazily, but his gaze was sharp, unblinking. Yellow eyes glowed with a predatory intelligence that made her skin prickle. He was seven years old now, a massive male weighing more than five hundred pounds, his body stretching nine feet from nose to tail. 

He was magnificent. Rippling orange fur banded with black stripes, a thick white ruff framing his face, jaws that could crush bone, paws broad enough to cover a man's chest. Every inch of him radiated power, beauty, and danger. 

And yet, Raven felt a strange kinship with him. Caged, restless, waiting. Vlad had the strength to tear down the world, but here he was, pacing behind electrified fences, his freedom reduced to the length of his enclosure. She understood that hunger. She lived it. 

The tiger didn't mind isolation. Solitude was his nature—nomadic, self-contained, a ruler of shadows and silence. Vlad belonged to the jungle, but here he prowled the confines of Haven Wildlife Refuge, the family zoo Raven's father had carved into the rolling hills of northern Georgia. 

Raven understood him. She wasn't afraid of being alone either. In fact, she preferred it. People were messy, loud, disappointing. Animals were honest. That was something she'd inherited from her father—the ability to endure solitude, even embrace it. Her mother had been the opposite. Loneliness gnawed at her until she fled, chasing companionship somewhere beyond the fences, leaving Raven behind to tend cages and memories. 

Raven clenched her jaw. Usually she kept thoughts of her mother locked away, buried deep where they couldn't sting. But today was different. October sixteenth. Her eighteenth birthday. 

The irony wasn't lost on her. The only person who remembered was the one who had chosen to leave. Her mother—scatterbrained, emotional, fragile—had somehow managed to send a package weeks early. Lucky timing, since the postal service hadn't delivered a single letter in nineteen days. 

Raven stood beneath a cobalt sky, scraps of cloud drifting across the sun. Sixty-five degrees, crisp and perfect. She wore her usual uniform: cargo pants, black work boots, a loose T-shirt. Her mask dangled from her neck, ready if needed. It was a beautiful fall day, too beautiful for the storm of emotions twisting inside her. 

She turned the small box over in her hands. Unopened. Unwanted. She imagined tossing it into Vlad's enclosure, letting him shred it with those massive paws, scattering paper like autumn leaves. The thought almost made her smile. 

But curiosity tugged at her, insistent. If she destroyed it, she'd never know. And this was the last birthday she'd spend here, the last gift she'd ever receive from her mother. That knowledge made the box heavier than it should have been, as if it carried not just a present but every unanswered question Raven had been too proud to ask. 

Raven shifted on the tiger house's roof, the metal warm beneath her palms. From this perch she could see her hiking backpack slumped against the steel wall, a silent witness to the plan she'd been building in secret. 

For a week she had scavenged and packed, piece by piece, until the bag was heavy with escape: snare wire for traps, a one-person tent and sleeping bag, a LifeStraw and water tablets, tin cup and pan, flint and spare lighter, compass, toiletries, hunting knife, granola bars, and a few self-heating meal pouches. Each item tucked away like a promise. Each item proof that she was ready. 

Her father hadn't noticed. He never did, not unless it concerned the animals or the endless upkeep of the refuge. To him, Raven was a shadow—useful when scrubbing bear urine from concrete, invisible otherwise. He spoke to her only in lessons: survival skills, hunting, zoology. Never in warmth. Never in love. 

Now, with the keepers absent for three weeks, he was drowning in sixteen-hour shifts, patching fences, hauling feed, tending predators. Raven worked beside him until her fingers blistered and her bones ached, but he didn't see her. Not really. 

The pang in her chest was sharp, but she swallowed it down. It was just as well. 

Because today, she was leaving. 

She'd had enough—enough of people who only hurt, enough of this place that had once seemed magical but now reeked of disappointment. She knew how to survive. Her father had taught her that much, even if he hadn't meant to. She could tell poisonous berries from edible ones, track game, set snares, build shelter in the rain, coax fire from flint or steel. 

Fifty miles away, deep in the woods, her family's hunting cabin waited. Remote. Untouched. Far from humans, far from the chaos clawing at the cities. Most importantly, far from her father and the bitter ghost of her mother. 

A person could be loneliest in a crowd. Living, breathing, working beside someone who felt like a stranger—that was worse than solitude. That was the kind of loneliness Raven refused to

carry anymore. 

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