
The Wolf Wars Saga
Author
Michelle Torlot
Reads
7.9M
Chapters
34
From the author of Choose Me or Lose Me.
Ellie has known nothing but the world after the Wolf Wars; her bunk in the Workers hut, the fences, and the border to the other side. Every night she thinks about what it must be like on the other side of the line, until she finally plucks up the courage to cross over. Little does she know of the monsters that wait for her in the wolf worldâŠ
Age Rating: 18+
Chapter 1
Ellie
I was perched on an overturned tree trunk, my gaze lost in the distance. The sun was low, not quite ready to set, casting a beautiful glow over everything.
âEll, what the hell are you doing?â
I glanced up to find my older brother, Jackson, towering over me.
âYouâre dangerously close to the border...you know the rules,â he chided.
I rolled my eyes and returned my gaze to the horizon.
âDonât even consider it, Ell. Theyâll punish you for even contemplating it, and youâll be on half rations for a month,â Jackson cautioned.
I rolled my eyes again, âhalf of nothing is still nothing.â
Jackson nudged my shoulder.
âHere, I know youâre hungry,â he said, a smirk playing on his lips.
I looked at his hand. My mouth dropped open in surprise. It was some sort of processed food. We never ate that, hell, Iâd never even seen anything like it before.
âWh...What is it? Where did you get it?â I whispered, my eyes fixed on the wrapper in his hand.
He split it in half and handed me one piece, popping the other half into his mouth.
âItâs called Choc-o-late,â he pronounced the word carefully, âand if you donât know, you canât get into trouble.â
I quickly started to eat it, savoring the sweet taste. It was so good!
I laughed, âand you scold me just for looking over the border.â
Jackson shook his head.
âThatâs different. If the guards find you, theyâll shoot you on sight.
âIf they find you...â he gestured towards the horizon, âwell, God only knows whatâll happen to you...if the rumors are true,â he finished.
I shook my head and pressed my lips together.
âThey have more food than they know what to do with, and we...we have none. Their animals eat better than us.â
I fought back the tears that were threatening to spill. I was grateful that Jackson didnât notice my distress.
Jackson chuckled. âThey're animals, Ell.â
I rolled my eyes as I finished the last of the snack. My stomach still felt hollow, but the chocolate bar had helped.
Jackson placed his hand on my shoulder.
âCâmon, let's head back before weâre missed. You need to get some sleep, get those crazy ideas out of your head.â
I stood up and let my brother guide me back to the work camp.
We would be up at dawn, tearing down what was left of the town nearest the border. Then the bulldozers would come in. After that, weâd pick out the rocks before they tried to plow and plant it.
It wasnât proper farmland. It was the remains of an old town, too close to the border to be inhabited. Besides, food was scarce.
If there was a chance that they could grow any food, it had to be taken.
It had been like this all my life, and most of my parents' lives. After the war, the humans got the cities and towns. The werewolves got the forests and plains.
You only had to look over the border to see grazing cattle, orchards of fruit, fields full of crops.
Towns were all very well, but you couldnât grow food there. The only spaces were the man-made parks. They had already been used for growing food. There just wasnât enough.
The only reason my brother and I survived when our parents died was because of the work camps.
You worked twelve hours, you got one meal. If you could call it a meal. Vegetable stew which was more water than vegetables, and a bed.
If you got caught stealing food, it was an instant death sentence. Crossing the border was the same. If the werewolves didnât kill you, the guards would.
Life for humans was a living hell. It had to be worth the risk, to cross the border, steal some food, and bring it back.
If we didnât find a way to get more food, the human race would die of starvation.
We got a few suspicious looks from the guards as we headed back into camp. We just kept our heads down. Once we were back in the blockhouse where the beds were, we headed to our bunks.
Mostly families slept together. If you were on your own, you got lumped with either the males or the females. Depending on your gender. I guess my brother and I were lucky, we had each other.
I laid down on the bunk, and Jackson sat on the edge of the bed. He always did that, until I fell asleep.
âDo you think they know weâre virtually starving to death?â I whispered.
Jackson frowned, âWho?â
I hesitated, before I lowered my voice, âThe werewolves.â
Jackson shook his head and scowled.
âJust drop it, Ellie. You shouldnât even be talking about âem.â
I sighed and closed my eyes.
I knew Jackson only had my best interests at heart, but I was damned if I was going to starve to death, or die of some disease because my body wasnât strong enough to fight it off.
Sleep eventually came, but it didnât last long. The gnawing pains in my stomach due to lack of food woke me.
Everyone else was still sleeping, except for Jackson, who to my surprise wasnât in his bunk.
I thought of the chocolate bar we had shared earlier. Was he stealing food? How could he be so reckless? Then my thoughts turned to the border. If I was going to do this, it would have to be now.
Jackson would understand. There were fewer guards posted at night. I could slip across the border and slip back. Find a hiding place for the food. Then my brother and I could share it.
Desperate times called for desperate measures, and I was desperate. Everyone was. We were literally starving to death. I doubted everyone was, but we were the lowest in the human race.
The lower-level manual workers. We were disposable.
I swung my legs over the bed and quickly pulled my long dark hair into a ponytail. Then I grabbed a small backpack from under the bed before creeping out of the blockhouse.
My clothes were dark, so I was able to hide in the shadows. I was thankful for my hair color, as it blended in the dark. Only the moon lighting the way.
Iâd been plotting this for some time. I knew the guardsâ routine like the back of my hand. They always followed the same path, patrolling the campâs edges and the boundary.
I watched as one guard moved to the campâs far end, heading for the boundary.
I stayed hidden in the shadows until the boundary guard moved on to his next station.
Thankfully, the boundary wasnât a fence. It was just a line of painted rocks. Everyone knew not to cross that line. But tonight, I was going to break the rules. Tonight, I was going to find some food.
Crossing the boundary was simpler than Iâd anticipated. The guards probably didnât think anyone would dare to cross.
After all, most of the people in the blockhouse were kids, whoâd been taught from a young age.
The rules, the punishments, and most importantly, that the werewolves were monsters who feasted on babies.
We were all orphans. Parents had died from the fever, or from hunger. Some had been killed by the guards, just for trying to steal some extra food for their kids.
Our parents had succumbed to the fever. This had been my life for four years. Worked until I was on the brink of collapsing. Jackson was older than me, and stronger.
This was his last year here, then I would be alone. Jackson would be sent off for guard training, unless he went AWOL. I wondered if his nightly disappearances had something to do with that.
He didnât know that I knew he left at night, but I did. I just didnât know where he went.
The ground on the other side of the boundary was similar to ours, hard clay that was tough to dig into. I guessed it was mixed with concrete.
Once you were about a hundred yards in, the hard clay turned loamy, then you could see plants breaking through. Mostly weeds, but then it turned to lush grass.
I bent down and ran my fingers across it. Iâd never felt grass before. Iâd seen pictures when I was little, but never felt it, or smelled it. It had a unique scent.
I couldnât help but smile to myself. My father always used to lecture us, when he was alive. âThe grass is always greener on the other side,â he would say.
Meaning that we should be grateful for what we had. Truth was, the grass was nonexistent where we came from.
I moved deeper into the werewolf territory. Staying low, and as silent as I could be.
Jackson didnât know, but I had seen these so-called monsters. The last building we had cleared, I had found a book and a pair of binoculars.
Iâd tucked the binoculars in my jacket and was looking at the book. The guards didnât find the binoculars, but I got beaten later that day for taking an unscheduled break.
It had only been five minutes, but rules were rules. If theyâd found the binoculars, it would have been much worse.
Iâd used them a few days later, after work. The guards were at a different station, but it was still light.
Thatâs when I saw them. They were working in the fields. They didnât look any different from us, except they were taller, more muscular.
Why were we supposed to hate them? Were they really any different from us?
Thatâs when I decided I would cross. They had plenty of food, we had none. They didnât look like monsters, at least not from a distance.
There was no sign of them now, of course. Any sane person, werewolf or human, would be in bed at this hour.
I moved deeper into their territory, then I saw it in the distance: a structure. It looked like a barn. It was quite close to a pen filled with animals.
I quickly looked around; there was no sign of anyone, so I headed towards the structure.
I had been right in my assumption: it was a barn. I slid open the door, letting the moonlight filter inside.
I almost let out a cheer. I had hit the jackpot. There were bags of fruit and vegetables, also a box with what looked like stale bread. I grabbed an apple and bit into it.
Iâd never eaten an apple before, but Iâd seen a picture. The inside was brown and soft in places. It tasted good.
I grabbed handfuls and put them in my backpack, between finishing the apple that I had started. Then I grabbed some of the stale bread. It was hard, not soft like it should be, but it wasnât moldy.
I ate some. It wasnât as nice as the apple, but beggars couldnât be choosers.
The vegetables looked like carrots. Some were small, others misshapen. I bit into one. Nothing wrong with that. I put a few in my backpack, which was now full to the brim.
Hitching it on my back, I grabbed another apple and piece of bread, and headed for the door.
Thatâs when I heard it: a howl, followed by another.
I ran, my heart about to burst out of my chest. I headed back towards the boundary.
















































