(Aurelia's POV)
The rope bit into my wrists as the villagers shoved me forward down the dirt road.
My ninety-ninth escape. Caught again.
The sun was already low, painting the borderland scrub in flat amber. I kept my eyes down and my breathing steady, calculating. Tomorrow morning, Gareth would mark me. Less than twenty hours. My legs had given out twice in the past two days - I couldn't outrun them again. Not on foot.
Then a battered jeep rolled to a stop directly in front of us.
The window came down. The man behind the wheel had jet-black hair that fell past his jaw, and features so sharp they looked carved. He was completely, utterly out of place here - like something from a different world had taken a wrong turn and ended up on this crumbling dirt road.
He didn't even glance at me.
He pulled out a fold of cash and spoke to the nearest villager in clean, crisp Northern Standard - the kind of accent you only heard from wolves who'd grown up deep inside the inner territory. Not a trace of borderland slur in it.
The villagers stared at his money and understood almost nothing he said.
He was asking about fuel. Where could he buy some nearby.
I looked at his hands on the steering wheel. Then at the jeep. The back was loaded with gear - not enough supplies for the stretch of empty road ahead. He'd have to stop somewhere. He'd have to stay the night.
He has a car. He is the only way out.
I opened my mouth before I could think twice about it.
"Twenty kilometers east," I said, in the same clean Northern Standard he'd used. "Yellow house on the left side of the road. They sell fuel. It won't be cheap."
He turned his head.
For just a moment, he looked at me - really looked. A girl with her wrists bound behind her back, standing in the middle of a dirt road in the middle of nowhere, speaking to him in an accent that had no business being out here.
His expression didn't change. He held my gaze for exactly one second.
Then he turned back, rolled up the window, and drove away. Dust rose behind the jeep and swallowed the road whole.
I watched the taillights disappear and said a silent prayer.
Don't drive too fast.
The villagers dragged me back to the group. I didn't resist.
When they found an abandoned wooden cabin to shelter in for the night - feral wolves on the roads after dark, they said, too dangerous to keep moving - I didn't argue. When they tied me to a rotting tree trunk in the yard and left a woman to watch me, I sat still and ate every bite of the hard bread they gave me.
I needed every bit of strength I had left.
The woman watching me dozed off around midnight. I waited until her breathing went deep and even.
Then I worked the blade free from the inner lining of my belt.
The rope was thick. It took longer than I wanted. The blade slipped twice and opened cuts across my wrist - I felt the sting, felt the blood run down between my fingers, and kept cutting. When the last fiber snapped, I held perfectly still.
The woman turned over in her sleep.
I counted to five. Then I ran.
I didn't go toward the yellow house. Not yet.
I ran the opposite direction first, pushing through scrub and loose rock, putting distance between me and any trail they could follow. Only when I was sure I'd broken the scent line did I circle back, wide and slow, burning time I didn't have.
Six hours to the ceremony. Then five.
Then I heard shouting behind me - distant but closing. They'd found the cut rope.
I ran harder.
The terrain was brutal. I went down twice on loose shale, rolled, hit the ground hard enough to knock the breath out of me. Both times I got back up. I tilted my head back and read the stars for direction the way my mother had taught me, and I kept moving.
Chloe was quiet inside me - not absent, just still. She stretched her senses out into the dark, tracking the sounds behind us, feeding me the distance. Her strength moved under my skin like a current, far more than any borderland she-wolf should carry.
I kept it pressed down. Invisible. That was how I'd survived this long.
Two hours left when the yellow house finally appeared on the horizon.
My legs gave out on the last stretch. I went down hard on both knees in the dirt, chest heaving, lips cracked, throat burning. I looked up and scanned the road.
No jeep.
The last small flame of hope in my chest guttered.
Think. I forced myself to think. His supplies were low. The road ahead was days of empty nothing. He had no reason to skip this stop. He had every reason to rest here.
I got back up and started checking the yards.
I found the jeep in the far corner of a side lot, half-hidden behind a stack of old timber. My heart slammed once, hard, against my ribs.
I didn't let myself feel relief. Not yet.
I went over the wall, found the room the jeep was pointed toward, and worked the lock with my blade. It took forty seconds. The door swung open into darkness.
I tightened my grip on the blade and stepped inside.
Something hit me like a wall.
A hand locked around both my wrists and slammed me back against the wall, pinning me there. The grip was precise and crushing - trained, not just strong. I couldn't move at all.
"I'm not here to rob you," I said immediately. "I'm not armed - I mean, I have a blade, but I'm not going to use it. I just need to talk to you."
A pause.
Then the scrape of a lighter. A small flame rose between us, and the man's face appeared in the orange glow.
He recognized me. I could see it in the slight shift of his eyes - the girl from the road.
In the same moment, something changed in his expression. Just a flicker. He breathed in, and something moved across his face that I couldn't name - a faint tension, quickly buried.
The flame lit up my wrists. The rope marks. The cuts. The blood that hadn't fully dried.
He let go. Stepped back.
"What do you want." His voice was flat. "I don't involve myself in other people's problems."
The sky outside the small window was already turning grey at the edges.
I didn't waste words.
"I need you to take me with you when you leave," I said. "That's all. Just take me out of this place."
"No."
One word. No hesitation.
The blood drained from my face. Behind my eyes, I saw them - the she-wolves Gareth had marked before me. What happened to them afterward. The ones who stopped appearing in the settlement. The ones who were never spoken of again.
Survive. Any way you can. Chloe's voice, low and certain.
I closed my eyes. Took one breath.
My mother once told me that men went soft for vulnerability. I had never been soft in my life. But I could pretend.
I dropped my outer jacket. And then I stepped forward and wrapped both arms around his neck and pressed myself against him, and the tears that came were not entirely performance - they were years of it, everything I had swallowed down for so long, finally breaking through the seam.
"You're the only chance I have left," I whispered against his shoulder. "Please."
He went very still.
I felt it - the slight catch in his breath, the way his body locked up like those words had landed somewhere they weren't supposed to reach.
His hands came up. I braced for the push.
It didn't come.
His palms settled against my sides instead, and his fingers closed, slowly, around my waist.
I didn't understand what had shifted. I didn't know which word had done it, or why the moment I pressed close to him the air between us had changed into something I had no name for.
But I knew, with absolute certainty, that I had won.
(Author's POV)
That day, Caelan Blackthorn took Aurelia with him. He didn't touch her.
But the whole night through, Logan paced inside his blood and bones, and would not be still.