Chapter 2: The Alpha's Blizzard

1127 Words
My lungs were burning completely raw, but I didn't dare slow down. Carrying Martha was like hauling a sack of dead weight, but my suppressed dragon strength kept my legs pumping like hydraulic pistons. I wasn't just running blindly. Even through the blinding pain, my architect's brain was rapidly deconstructing the structural geometry of the forest. I analyzed the blind spots in the canopy, stepped only on load-bearing root systems that wouldn't snap, and deliberately forced us through the natural sulfur vents of the ravine. I was actively coding a dead end into our physical trail, desperately hoping to exploit the sensory lag of a blood-crazed predator.Every instinct I possessed—every ancient, draconic survival mechanism—was screaming at me to turn around and fight. But it wasn't just the fear of the blood-crazed Alpha that was making my hands shake. It was the pull. A bizarre, electric tether had abruptly snapped into existence the moment that overwhelming scent of winter pine hit me. It was hooking directly into my sternum, dragging me backward. The dragon inside me didn't just want to fight him; it wanted to submit and conquer him all at once. Mate. The word ghosted through my mind, toxic and impossible. "No," I hissed through gritted teeth, tasting copper. "No, no, no. I am a glitch. I don't get a mate." Especially not a Lycan. The very species that had turned my family into ash. The iron collar flared, sensing the chaotic spike in my emotional state. It tightened like a vice, sending a paralyzing jolt down my spine to force the dragon back into submission. I stumbled, my knee slamming hard into a jagged rock, but I forced myself up before gravity could fully claim me. "Sereia..." Martha groaned, her eyelids fluttering. "Put... put me down. You run." "Shut up, Martha. We're almost to the barrier," I gasped, lying through my teeth. We were at least two miles from the Fringe settlement’s dilapidated iron fences. The wind shifted again, and this time, it felt like getting hit by a freight train of solid ice. He was gaining on us. Fast. The oppressive aura of the Alpha wasn't just a scent anymore; it was a physical weight crushing the forest around us. The temperature plummeted. Frost actually began to crystallize on the damp ferns as I bolted past them. He was bringing a literal blizzard with him. I forced my energy down, wrapping my aura as tightly around my core as possible. I needed to be a ghost. A shadow. Nothing. Suddenly, a massive, earth-shattering howl ripped through the canopy, so close my eardrums vibrated. It wasn't the mindless, rabid roar of a Rogue. It was a command. An absolute, vibrating decree of dominance that forced every lesser creature within a ten-mile radius to their bellies. Mine. The word wasn't spoken; it was projected straight into my skull. My vision whited out for a microsecond. The dragon roared in response, thrashing so violently against its cage that the collar began to emit a faint, high-pitched whine, burning the skin of my neck black. "Hold on, Martha!" I choked out, desperately throwing myself down a steep, muddy embankment just as a massive, silver-furred blur crashed through the treeline where we had been standing seconds ago. I slid into the thick, thorny underbrush of the ravine, burying Martha beneath my cloak and clamping a hand over her mouth. I held my own breath until my chest screamed. Up on the ridge, the beast paused. Through the tangle of thorns, I saw him. He was a nightmare of muscle and moonlight. His fur was pristine white, but heavily saturated with the thick, blackish-red blood of the Rogues he’d just slaughtered. He stood on two legs—half-shifted, a hulking Lycanthrope of impossible proportions. His eyes. They were glowing a hypnotic, violent crimson. He was sweeping the tree line, chest expanding as he pulled in lungfuls of air, searching for that specific spark of ozone. He let out a low, rumbling growl that rattled the stones beneath my boots. He was frustrated. The mud and the ravine's natural sulfur vents were masking my scent. For an agonizing, endless minute, he just stood there, a god of c*****e waiting for his prey to breathe. Then, deliberately, he turned his massive head. He didn't look at the ravine. He looked straight toward the plumes of gray smoke rising in the distance. The Fringe settlement. He dropped back onto all fours, the ground shaking as he launched himself forward, clearing a thirty-foot gap in a single, terrifying bound. He was heading straight for my home. *** Xander's POV *** The spark was gone. I tore through the underbrush, my claws shredding century-old oaks into splinters, but the intoxicating scent of thunderstorms and ancient fire had vanished, swallowed by the stench of sulfur and rot. My sensory grid was heavily overloaded. The violent transition from a psychotic, mindless blood-frenzy to the cosmic, electrifying shock of a Mate bond had temporarily crashed my internal systems. My brain was struggling to process the impossible data. That agonizing, three-minute lag was all she needed. She had exploited my temporary blindness. The beast inside my mind was thrashing in absolute agony. I had finally found it. After decades of numbing emptiness... And she had run from me. The rejection felt like a physical blade twisting in my gut. Why did she run? Was she terrified of the blood on my hands? Did she not feel the absolute, cosmic gravity pulling us together? I stopped, my massive chest heaving as the feral red haze slowly began to recede, replaced by a cold, obsessive clarity. She had tried to hide her scent. She had masked the ozone with the smell of a filthy human. My crimson eyes narrowed, focusing on the distant, pathetic smoke rising from the edge of my territory. The Fringe. The dumping ground for human slaves and outcasts. Why would my Mate—a creature who smelled of such impossible, terrifying power—be heading toward the human slums? It didn't matter. I didn't care if she was hiding in a palace or a pigsty. I didn't care if I had to tear the entire settlement apart with my bare hands to find her. She belonged to me. I let out a low, vibrating snarl, my human consciousness slowly regaining control of the shift. The bones snapped and reformed, the white fur melting into pale, scarred skin. I stood n***d in the freezing wind, the blood of my enemies drying on my chest. "You can't hide from me," I whispered into the silent forest, my voice dark and absolute. "I'm coming."
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