I must have fallen asleep again.
When I opened my eyes, gray morning light shone through the cheap motel curtains. The neon sign was dark. The rain had stopped.
And I was alone.
Panic shot through me. I sat up too fast, pain exploding in my chest. The bond pulled tight, screaming that something was wrong.
The bathroom door opened.
Kael stood there, shirtless, fresh bandages on his shoulder. Steam curled from behind him.
He looked like a god in human form.
"You're awake."
"Where's Ryker?" The words came out sharper than I intended.
Kael's jaw tightened. "Getting supplies. Food. Water."
I hated how disappointed I felt. Eighteen years alone, and I couldn't breathe without them now. The bond. It had to be the bond.
"He'll be back," Kael added. "He wouldn't leave you. Neither of us would."
I stared at him. The most feared executioner on the continent, standing in a motel room with peeling wallpaper, telling me he wouldn't leave.
"Why?"
Kael moved closer. "Because you're ours." He sat on the edge of the bed. "My wolf recognized you the second I caught your scent. I've waited centuries for something I didn't know I was missing, and now that I've found it—" He stopped. "I'll burn the world before I let it go."
The door opened.
Ryker walked in with a plastic bag. He took one look at us—Kael on the bed, me with tears blurring my vision, and his expression went cold.
"Am I interrupting?"
"Yes," Kael growled.
"No," I said quickly.
Ryker set the bag on the table. "The town is small. No pack presence but I saw out-of-state plates. Could be scouts."
Kael was on his feet instantly. "How many?"
"Hard to tell. If the Council knows we're here—"
"They don't. We masked our scents and left no trail."
"The Council doesn't need a trail." Ryker's voice was quiet. "They have seers, blood magic. They have their ways of finding things that want to stay hidden."
"Then we can't stay here," I said.
Both of them looked at me.
"If they can find us through magic, sitting here is just waiting to die."
Kael's shadows flickered. "She's not wrong."
Ryker nodded. "We move at nightfall. Somewhere deeper."
Kael winced, his hand going to his shoulder.
"Your wound—" I was off the bed, crossing to him, pulling the bandage back. The skin was angry, swollen, black veins spreading.
Ryker was there in an instant. "The silver, it’s still in him. Not enough to kill, but enough to poison."
"Then take it out."
"We did. Whatever's left is too deep. His body has to push it out. But it's slow."
Kael's jaw clenched. "I've survived worse."
"Not while running from the Council." Ryker replied.
"Then we don't run. We fight."
“Have you lost it, what happens to Elara if we fight?”
The argument was cut short by a sound.
Howling.
Ryker moved to the window. His face went pale. "It's them."
"How many?"
"Dozens. They’ve surrounded the motel."
Kael grabbed his jacket. "Back exit. Now."
We ran. Through the bathroom, out the window, into the alley. Rain soaked me. My bare feet hit wet concrete.
Behind us, the motel room door exploded inward.
"GO!"
We ran. Alleys. Streets. Past dumpsters.
My lungs burned. My chest burned. The poison was spreading.
"Elara!" Ryker's hand caught mine, pulling me forward.
I stumbled but kept running. There’s no turning back now.
We burst onto a highway on-ramp. A semi-truck slowed for the curve.
"Now or never." Ryker grabbed me, leaped—
We landed hard in the open back, surrounded by boxes. Ryker shielded me. Kael landed a second later.
The truck rumbled on, carrying us away.
I lay there, gasping, bleeding from a dozen small cuts.
Kael crawled closer, his hand finding mine.
"We lost them," he breathed.
"For now," I said.
We lay there, tangled together in the back of a speeding truck. Fire and ice and the girl caught between.
Kael groaned, pressing his hand to his shoulder.
"Let me see." I pulled the bandage back.
The wound was worse. Black veins still spread. But something else moved under his skin. Tiny. Almost very invisible.
"What is that?" I whispered.
Ryker leaned closer. "Tracker magic."
My blood turned to ice. "What?"
"The silver blade. They coated it with something. Not just poison—a marker. They've been following us all along."
Kael's crimson eyes blazed. "We've been leading them straight to us."
The weight of it crashed down on me. Every step we'd taken, thinking we were escaping was just a joke. So all along, they were just waiting for us to lead the way.
"Can you remove it?"
Ryker shook his head slowly. "Not without killing him. It's bonded to his blood."
"Then what do we do?"
Kael's hand found mine. Squeezed.
"We stop running. We find whoever put this on me, and we make them take it off."
"Or die trying," Ryker added.
I looked at them. Two Alphas. Two mates. Both ready to die rather than surrender.
The bond hummed. Stronger now but different.
Like it was leading us somewhere.