Chapter 3: On a run

1089 Words
Elsa’s POV The snow stung my face like needles as I stumbled blindly through the storm, my breath tearing raggedly from my lungs. I could barely see more than a few feet ahead, but I didn’t stop. I couldn’t stop. Every step I took away from Caleb, from his lies, from the way his eyes had turned cold when he chose someone else, every step was survival. The icy wind howled through the trees, lifting my hair and lashing it across my cheeks. The snowdrifts pulled at my boots, slowing me, dragging me down like the memories that kept replaying in my head. Caleb’s words so soft once, so sweet rang hollow now, replaced with the cruel finality of rejection. I never should have trusted him. The tears had started without my permission, hot against the freezing air. I swiped them away with the back of my hand, furious with myself. He wasn’t worth this. He wasn’t worth a single tear, yet my heart felt as if it had been ripped from my chest. I pressed a hand against my ribs as though I could hold myself together. The mate bond was supposed to be sacred, unbreakable, the thread that bound two souls together forever. And yet Caleb had cast me aside as if I were nothing. My legs trembled from exhaustion, the cold burrowing deeper into my bones. I didn’t even know where I was heading only away. Away from Moonstone Pack. Away from the hollow gazes of those who pitied me. Away from the whispers that I was the girl who wasn’t enough. A light appeared through the curtain of snow two piercing beams cutting across the storm. At first, I thought my mind was playing tricks on me. Then the hum of an engine grew louder, closer. Headlights. A car. I staggered toward the road just as a sleek black vehicle emerged from the white blur, its tires crunching over the frozen ground. Desperation gave me strength I didn’t know I had left. I threw myself into the lane, waving frantically. The car screeched to a halt. For a heartbeat, I stood frozen in the glow of its lights, heart hammering like a wild drum. The driver lowered his window, his expression startled. Before he could speak, I yanked the rear door open and all but fell inside, collapsing against the leather seat. The warmth hit me instantly, shocking after the brutal cold. My lungs burned as I gasped for air. “Drive,” a voice commanded. Deep. Cold. Uncompromising. The sound made me lift my head. He was there in the back seat, not two feet away. A man unlike any I had ever seen tall, broad-shouldered, his presence filling the space as if the car itself bowed to him. His dark coat was dusted with snow, his hair tousled yet deliberate, his sharp eyes trained on me with an intensity that made my wolf, Rema, stir uneasily. Not Caleb’s easy charm. Not his practiced smiles. This man radiated something else danger, authority, the kind of command that needed no words. The driver glanced in the mirror, uncertain. The man didn’t break eye contact with me. “I said drive. Take her out of this territory.” The car lurched forward, tires spinning briefly before catching the icy road. I sat frozen, shivering though the air inside was warm. For a while, I couldn’t stop the sobs that slipped out. The storm outside blurred with the storm inside me, grief pouring through every crack in my chest. I pressed a fist against my lips, trying to quiet myself, but the sound still came broken, fragile, humiliating. The man said nothing. He didn’t offer comfort, didn’t look away either. He simply sat there, as if weighing me in silence. At some point, the tears slowed. I forced myself to breathe, to find some piece of strength left in me. My chest still hurt, but I straightened, lifting my chin despite the tremor in it. Caleb doesn’t deserve my tears. I had lost enough already. I refused to lose my pride too. Wiping my cheeks with the back of my hand, I dared to meet the stranger’s gaze. His eyes were sharp, glinting like steel under moonlight. There was no pity in them only a cool assessment, as though I were a puzzle he intended to solve. “I’m sorry,” I whispered, my voice rough. “I shouldn’t have forced myself into your car. I just… I had nowhere else to go.” The silence stretched before I added quickly, “Please, just drop me at the next junction. I’ll be fine from there.” One dark brow lifted, as though he found my words amusing or perhaps pathetic. He leaned forward slightly, his presence pressing against me though he hadn’t moved closer. “Will you?” His voice was low, carrying weight that seemed to settle in my bones. I swallowed hard. “Yes.” His gaze sharpened, pinning me where I sat. “No, you won’t. Not unless you decide what you’re running toward, not just what you’re running from.” The car slowed, tires crunching over snow as we approached a crossroads. My pulse quickened. This was it my chance to get out, to disappear again. The man studied me for a long moment, then leaned back, his words precise, deliberate. “If you want revenge, survive. If you want freedom, fight.” The car rolled to a stop. The driver glanced back nervously, but the man gave a small nod. My door unlocked with a quiet click. My heart pounded. Part of me wanted to beg him to take me farther, anywhere but here. Another part, the stronger part, whispered that this was the test. That the stranger had just handed me a weapon not in steel, but in words. I pushed the door open, the cold biting at me instantly. For a moment, I hesitated, glancing back at him. He was still watching, expression unreadable, a shadow carved from stone. Then I stepped out. The storm swallowed me once more as the car pulled away, taillights fading into the snow until there was nothing left but darkness and the echo of his voice in my ears. Survive. Fight. I wrapped my arms around myself, standing at the edge of the road, and for the first time since Caleb’s betrayal, I felt something spark inside me. Not despair. Not grief. Something fiercer. Maybe I was broken. But I wasn’t done. Not yet.
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