Teen Wolf: Second Howl
Chapter 53 53 Return
I am 15 chapters ahead on my patreón, check it out if you are interested.
https://www.patréon.com/emperordragon
________________________________________
Lucas's Perspective.
The car moved with an almost eerie silence, gliding along the road with barely a whisper from the tires. That subtle quietness alone was enough to tell me this wasn't just any ordinary luxury vehicle. On the surface, it might've looked like an unremarkable black-on-black executive sedan—polished meticulously until it gleamed as if untouched by a single speck of dust. The interior was a study in opulence, with leather seats so supple and expensive that I was certain they cost more than my entire car. But beneath all that obvious elegance lurked something far more formidable: unyielding steel, reinforced glass, and layers of security measures that spoke of serious protection.
This wasn't just a pretty car for cruising around town. No, this was a bulletproof fortress on wheels, with an armored undercarriage designed to withstand more than just potholes, tires that, even if punctured, would keep rolling without faltering. Earlier, when I'd leaned forward out of a mix of curiosity and caution, I'd caught the faint outline of hidden compartments cleverly integrated into the car's design. Whoever Susan had bought this car from was not one to cut corners or skimp on safety.
In the backseat beside me, Susan sat with an unnerving calmness. Her hands rested perfectly folded on her lap, fingers interlaced, like she was poised for a high-society luncheon instead of navigating this complicated reunion. Here we were: mother and son, though I struggled to even call her that, draped in the suffocating air of something more gothic than maternal. Like characters in a dark family saga, we were on a collision course with a past that seemed as shadowy and vast as the forest outside the windows.
Calling her "Mother" or anything close to that didn't feel right. Not yet. Maybe not ever.
Up front, the driver was a statue of focus and precision. I studied him without turning my head: mid-fifties, hair streaked with salt-and-pepper and neatly trimmed, sunglasses concealing his eyes like a furtive secret. His posture was rigid, every muscle taut as if primed to respond instantly to any threat. No doubt, this guy was no ordinary chauffeur. He carried the air of a man who could take you down seventeen different ways with nothing more than a pencil and a rubber band. Special Forces, maybe? Or some kind of elite security detail?
I moved back against the plush leather seat, letting my weight settle as the world outside blurred by in streaks of green. Towering trees—a mix of ancient oaks and redwoods—flew past the tinted windows, transforming the road into a tunnel of leaves and shadows.
Beacon Hills.
The name echoed relentlessly in my mind, like a melody from a song I was sure I'd heard somewhere, but whose exact tune slipped through my grasp. There was something about "Beacon Hills" that triggered a deep memory within me. Even if I couldn't remember ever being here before, something in my bones responded—a restless unease mingled with an odd sense of familiarity.
"Almost there," Susan murmured quietly by my side, her voice steady.
I didn't respond. I was still trying to get a grip on the fact that this—this—was my life now. Just a few days, I had an apartment I called home, complete freedom to walk my own path, and a quiet, if occasionally chaotic, existence punctuated by hunts and the familiar sting of Emily's sarcasm. Now, here I was—in the back of this armored vehicle—with a woman who had abandoned me when I was a baby, now scrambling to reclaim me as though I were some lost heir to a forgotten throne.
And maybe, in a way, I was.
I'd done my research. Deep, thorough digging.
The Lockwoods weren't just any family. They were the royalty of Beacon Hills—one of the original founding families. Old East Coast blue bloods, transplanted west during the 1800s, when fortunes were made—and lost—on an unforgiving California land boom. Mines, railroads, the sprawling timber business, and later on, lucrative contracts for private infrastructure and sprawling real estate investments: their grasp on the region was both tight and subtle.
They didn't merely reside in Beacon Hills: They shaped it. Owned half of it. Quietly funded the rest.
And the crown jewel of their legacy was the Lockwood Estate—their ancestral home that hadn't seen a tenant other than the family since its construction. An imposing manor ensconced on the edge of the town, surrounded by ancient trees that stretched to the sky like silent sentinels. The estate was so thoroughly hidden among the forest it was as if it had grown from the very soil, watching over the land and all its secrets.
The road curved suddenly, threading us deeper into a dense grove of towering oaks and redwoods until, like a long-hidden specter lifting a veil of mist, the Lockwood Estate appeared ahead.
The mansion stood grand and silent behind iron gates rusted just enough to hint at their age, bordered by thick stone walls that could hold off more than just trespassers. Massive columns supported an enormous front porch, and ivy climbed like a patient conqueror along the stone façade, trying — and failing — to reclaim the house for the wild. The windows were tall and shadowed, dark like the eyes of some ancient watcher, hinting at the stories buried in the worn floorboards and hidden corners.
The car slowed as the gravel driveway crunched beneath the tires, and I exhaled slowly, steadying myself.
This sprawling, brooding estate, hidden in the shadows of towering trees, was going to be my home. At least, for the next few years.