After my husband’s death, I moved into the old family house near the forest. The days were quiet, but at night the wind howled and strange sounds echoed from the trees. One stormy evening, four wolves appeared at my door, standing silently in the snow. They looked exhausted rather than threatening, so after a long hesitation, I let them inside to shelter from the cold.
The wolves behaved calmly, lying near the stove and walls without damaging anything. Through the night, I heard faint scratching but assumed they were simply restless. By morning, however, the house was eerily silent. The wolves were gone, the door still closed—but the hallway floor had been torn apart.
The wooden boards were ripped up, exposing freshly dug earth beneath. As I stared in shock, I noticed something buried under the floor: an old sack tied with rope. I untied it and found gold jewelry inside—chains, rings, brooches—darkened with age but unmistakably valuable.
Suddenly, I remembered family stories about my great-grandmother hiding gold in the house during World War II, treasure no one had ever found. Standing over the broken floorboards, I felt a chill. The most terrifying part wasn’t the destruction—it was the unsettling sense that the wolves had known exactly where to dig.