this done fast.
I hurry toward the gate, my gaze constantly drifting higher along the fence in case a guard pops up and mistakes me for an undead. Panic makes anyone trigger happy.
The gate is made of solid metal with no windows, and I knock on it, then instantly feel stupid. I doubt anyone can hear it, so I call out, “Hello!”
Again nothing.
Have the guards all gone to the other side? Which is a good thing, right? So I press down on the handle of the door, which of course doesn’t open. I frantically glance around for a solution, for anything, when I find an oversized fallen branch as thick as my leg.
Looking back up, I see there are still no guards on the stone posts along the metal fence.
Desperately, I lunge toward the branch and haul it closer. There’s a wooden platform over the gate entrance where I saw the soldiers stand guard earlier, so I need to get up there.
With quivering arms, I lift one end of my new ladder and carry it closer, then drop it up against the wall. It comes to about chest height. It needs to be higher, so I leave it there and rush to the other end.
I might end up pulling a muscle, but I don’t care right now. I crouch down and lift the thick branch and shove it forward, inching forward with my steps. The tip slides up against the wall until it hits the lip of the fence across the top. Rain pelts down, stray leaves thrown into me, and this timber is unsteady as hell. But I have to make it work.
Searching around me, I find several rocks about the size of a huddled fox, and I collect one. Tucking it at the base of the branch to keep it wedged in, I’m partly terrified of my contraption.
But the wood is thick enough and damn heavy, so I put my foot on it, bouncing it. Suddenly, the tip slips sideways from the pressure, making a scratching sound against the metal. Hell, this is going to fail miserably. Stepping back, I take in a deep breath, shake my arms, and just run. No overthinking this.
My first step is solid, my balance strong, and I press forward, my arms jutted out on either side of me in my crazed climb.
The branch suddenly dips out from under me, throwing me sideways and to the ground. I swallow my scream as my stomach lurches and I hit the ground hard with my hip and shoulder. Muddy water splashes me, and I groan from the dull ache pulsing down my back.
Sonofabitch.
Getting back up, I study the branch, which is wedged in where the door and frame marry. At least it’s held in place. Up on my feet, I try again and again, and by the fourth time, bruised and battered from falling, I’m burning up with fury that this damn thing won’t work.
I rush at it once more, reaching halfway up, farther than I’d achieved previously when the flex in the branch starts to bend from my weight. Adrenaline driven, on my next step, I throw myself forward and madly snatch the top of the fence. Gasping for air, I dangle from there for a few moments.
My entire body shakes, muscles screaming with pain.
I need to get over the damn thing, I have to. I lever one leg up against the branch and push myself up. Then I throw a leg over the top of the lofty fence, straining to pull my body to follow, my heart pounding from exhaustion. I roll onto the wooden platform and lie there for two seconds to just breathe because I can’t believe I made it. I want to laugh at the craziness I’ve just gone through, but that will have to wait.
Getting back up, I find I’m definitely alone. Finally, something is going right for me.
Several howls come from much farther away, and from my vantage point over the tops of the trees, the whole territory comes into view. The land sloping downward to the castle-like structure, the pack members running down to the front gate, the houses where pack members live.
Hurrying, I rush toward the wooden ladder leaning against the platform and scurry down. At the base, I search for anyone, but it’s quiet.
So I slip right into the cluster of trees and sprint to the castle, my feet slapping the wet ground with each hurried step.
There’s movement to my right, and before I even look