Zora stepped out of the midnight fog like a question no one wanted to answer. Moonlight traced the curve of her cheekbone as if trying to read the history written there: centuries of exile, a handful of broken promises, and a hunger that was as much for meaning as for blood. The cobblestones remembered her steps; the city did not. It was easier that way. She slipped between shuttered storefronts, a silhouette that did not quite belong to any era. Streetlights hissed and guttered, and a ragged alleycat hissed back as if recognizing kin.
She kept to the margins—cheap cafés that never closed, clipped conversations about ghosts that missed the only real one in the room. People told stories about monsters to feel safer; Zora listened for truth. A child's laugh spilled from a window; for a moment the hunger receded and something like regret warmed her. She let it.
On the rooftop, Zora watched the city breathe and thought of the ledger in her pocket: a ledger of names she’d saved, names she’d taken, names she’d sworn to protect. Tonight’s page was a blank. The hunt would begin at dusk. She lit a cigarette with hands that trembled not from age but from restraint, and smiled at the way smoke dissolved into the night—temporary, beautiful, and utterly human.
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