
by Alijah Dorsey
Malik graves is 22 years old, a disciplined engineer by day and something far more dangerous by night. Born with the ability to transform into a massive black-furred wolf, Malik isn't cursed, possessed, or chosen. He's simply powerful. Outside the transformation, he's already superhuman stronger, faster, harder to break. When the wolf emerges, that power deepens, evolves, and demands control. But the wolf isn't a separate entity. It's him. As Malik learns to unlock abilities hidden within the transformation sonic force, living shadow, regeneration that slows his aging he's forced to confront a world that doesn't fear monsters nearly as much as it fears independence. Government agencies watch from a distance. Corporations try to turn him into a symbol. Imitators attempt to weaponize his image. And when violence is used to force a narrative, Malik must decide what kind of presence he wants to be. Black Howl is a grounded, character-driven superhero side story about discipline over instinct, power without permission, and the cost of staying human when the world want ownership. This is not a story about saving the world. It's about refusing to belong to it.
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