Chapter 43 Elara

Elara

The desert spun with chaos—dust clouds rising, engines snarling, Hydra tightening the noose. Beckett’s rifle was nearly dry, my pistol heavy and hot in my hand. Every breath tore at my lungs. Every step felt like the last we had left.

“Beckett—” I started, voice ragged.

“Don’t stop,” he cut me off, dragging me behind a jagged slab of rock as bullets shredded the sand where we’d been seconds before. His jaw was set like stone, eyes blazing with the kind of resolve that made my chest ache. He’d die here before he let Hydra take me.

And maybe that was what broke me—

The realization that he meant it.

Engines roared closer. Trucks boxed us in. Shouts rose in Hydra’s tongue, sharp, certain. A spotlight swept over the rocks, locking us in its blinding white circle.

No way out.

Beckett raised his rifle anyway, teeth bared, body angled in front of mine. “When I tell you—”

A new roar split the air. Not Hydra. Lower, heavier, familiar.

The first explosion ripped through the lead truck, fire chewing the dawn apart. Shouts turned to screams. Gunfire erupted—not from Hydra’s line, but from the ridge above. Precise. Lethal.

I froze.

The emblem I’d seen on Beckett’s teammates’ shoulders blazed clear in the sunlight as men spilled over the ridge, rifles cutting down Hydra with brutal efficiency.

The Golden Team.

River’s voice reached us, carrying over the chaos like a blade through smoke. Cyclone’s drone buzzed overhead, targeting Hydra positions. Oliver and Gage pushed forward with suppressing fire, corralling the enemy into the open.

Beckett didn’t hesitate. He grabbed my hand, yanking me upright. “Move!”

We sprinted as Hydra’s lines collapsed, the Golden Team slicing through them like they’d been born for this desert. Beckett fired his last rounds into the stragglers, his movements perfectly in sync with his brothers.

I stumbled once, heat and exhaustion dragging me down. Beckett’s arm locked around my waist, hauling me with him until Oliver broke from cover, reaching us with his rifle still smoking.

“You always pick the scenic routes, Beckett?” Oliver said, slapping him on the back. “You two okay?”

“We are now. Shut up and keep shooting,” Beckett growled, shoving me behind the cover of their line.

The last truck exploded in a fireball that shook the ground. Dust and silence swallowed the ravine.

Hydra was down. For now.

Beckett turned to me, chest heaving, rifle hanging uselessly from its strap. His hand cupped the back of my neck, steadying me, grounding me. We made it, but that was a close one.”

“You’re safe,” he said, his voice raw.

For the first time, I almost believed him. “Let’s get the hell out of here,” Oliver said, as we started walking. We climbed inside the trucks and made our way out of the desert and back to the city. Where we needed to stop and plan our next step?

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