A girl marked. A mother running out of time. A Huntsman who owns the woods.
Red was raised on rules that sound like superstition until they start coming true: stay on the path, do not answer voices in the trees, and never trust a stranger who knows your name. When her grandmother vanishes and the forest begins returning trophies, Red and her mother, Mara, realize the old stories were not meant to entertain. They were meant to warn.
The village calls him a protector. The Huntsman keeps the wolves "contained," keeps order with polite authority, and keeps records no one is allowed to read. But behind his fences are hooks, tags, and careful systems designed for one purpose: control. The moment Red steps off the path, she becomes part of his inventory.
What follows is a relentless descent into folk horror where the forest is not neutral, the town is complicit, and survival depends on learning the real meaning of obedience.
The Huntsman's Pen is a brutal, atmospheric reimagining of a familiar tale, sharpened into a story about captivity, inheritance, and the violence hiding inside "safety."