implores her not to stop. She must escape; she cannot allow them to capture her again. Darting through the forest, her bar
epends on
to the water-it is her only route to freedom. Unversed in swimming, she clings desperately to a log that materialises in the tumultuous curre
head insists she must not give up and persevere. Her body is frozen and begins to go numb as a strange current runs through her skin filling her with heat
ls how she stops, everything is very dark. As best she can, she manages to kick to ste
ng legs do not support her. She falls again after making several attempts at the insistence of the voice in her head that tells her that they cannot stop, they have to hide in the fores
e she should go either, the dark night surrounds everything, only the noise of the falling waterfall and the wind blowing now reach her clouded senses. She i
lls back to the ground without strength and recovers her curl
ccess. A few footsteps stop next to her, she raises her head in terror. Four huge black furry paws are beside her. She looks up, unable to believe her eyes. A huge
eel the worst of pain. She is astonished, however, when the wolf, far from attacking, runs his tongue over her face, wiping away her tears and without further ad
, just warming her, she gets between his paws, and hugs him excited and happy. She doesn't know why the wolf is doing that
happily. It seems familiar to her and to have been between her paws before, but that's impossible she thinks
nded by snow and vegetation. Everything around her is dressed in white, it seems that it snowed very hard
prevented the air, rain and snow from damaging her further. She convinces herself that she dreamed of the wolf. Some noises in the fores
ot. She doesn't know why, she stands with great difficulty, heeding the voice in her head telling her to trust him. She struggles to
old is a torture as if they were daggers digging into her skin. She cries silently as she moves forward with great effort behind that huge wolf that does not know if
here's a cabin in t
s and is greeted by the warmth of the fireplace. She looks around looking for someone, but sees no one. She moves f
mth, she has no strength, she closes her eyes that have already stopped shedding te
who kidnapped her from school? Where are her parents? Why does this
r nose, inducing sleep. Why would anyone want to abduct her? She is merely the daughter of humble confectionery shop workers, who must be fraught with desperation, realis
teeming with wild animals. The creatures pursuing her were bizarre, sometimes they walked on four legs, other times on
ting her every move-what could it be? And why could she suddenly perceive everything in the dark s
f the fire crackling in the hearth, oblivious to the fact that two red eyes have been fixed upon her. Unbeknown