Epilogue #2
I see it in the way she carries herself now, the difference between a creature contained and one that’s learned to contain itself. She earned her place. The brothers know it. Nobody had to say anything out loud.
In the kitchen, there’s the low sound of Sloane and Crave in conversation, not words I can make out, just the cadence of two people who have stopped performing at each other and started talking, the rhythm of a relationship that has gotten past the part where everything is deliberate and arrived somewhere quieter and more durable.
The compound breathes around me, ordinary, alive, and whole.
I stand in the gray pre-dusk, damp earth and motor oil settling into the air around me, the faint residue of Dragonfire still clinging to my skin. Then I go to the garage, pull my bike out into the yard, and ride.
And I keep riding, all through the night, and into the early hours of the morning.
The back roads out here don’t care what time it is.
They’re the same ribbon of black asphalt at two in the morning as they are at noon, edged by the same dark tree line, lit by the same occasional yellow of a passing marker.
I open the throttle on the long straight stretches and let the wind take everything, the dream, the cold, the pressure that won’t sit still behind my ribs, and for a while it works the way it always works, wind, engine, and forward momentum replacing thought with sensation.
Then something breaks the line of the road ahead.
A shape where there shouldn’t be one.
My focus snaps to it, instincts shifting fast, already recalibrating before I’ve fully registered what I’m seeing.
Dark metal.
Terrible angle.
Stillness where there should be movement.
A car.
Off the road on the left shoulder, nose buried in the ditch, the front crushed inward like it tried to keep going, but the ground refused. The engine block sits twisted beneath buckled metal. One headlight burns into the dirt, angled uselessly.
My grip tightens.
I’m already braking before the thought forms. Gravel snaps under my tires as I pull off onto the shoulder. The engine cuts with a metallic tick, sudden silence rushing in to replace it. For a moment, I sit there, helmet still on, hands locked around the grips, listening.
Something in my chest tightens.
I swing off the bike and yank the helmet free, the smell of hot oil and scorched rubber drifting up from the crumpled wreck as I cross the open ground. Each step feels deliberate, measured, the part of me that has seen too many battlefields.
The driver’s door is warped inward at the frame, the impact having twisted the whole side just enough to resist a clean pull. I try the handle anyway. It sticks. I shift my stance, brace a shoulder against the panel, and force it, metal protesting in a long, tearing groan before it finally gives.
Inside, a woman hangs forward across the steering wheel, her body folded into the shape of the crash.
Her face is turned toward the window, cheek pressed to cracked glass, a dark ribbon of blood tracking from her hairline along the curve of her jaw before dripping onto the seat below.
For a split second, my mind prepares for stillness.
Then I hear it.
Breath.
Thin, uneven, but there.
Her chest lifts in a broken rhythm that belongs to the unconscious, not the dead.
I lean in closer, the cold air in my lungs sharpening as relief and urgency collide, already moving before the next thought can catch up. Crouching between the door and the seat, reaching in to check her pulse at the throat.
It is steady.
Slow, but steady.
“Hey…” My voice comes out rougher than I intend, the smoke still in it. “Hey, you need to wake up.”
She doesn’t respond, and her lashes don’t so much as flicker.
My cell is already in my hand, the screen lighting my palm in a dull, sterile glow as I scroll to Hades’ name. He’s the one who knows who to call when things stop making sense—the one who understands what silence costs. My thumb hovers over the call icon.
The air shifts.
It happens between one breath and the next, the kind of change my body notices before my mind does.
The faint night chill collapses inward, replaced by a dense, invasive cold that settles against my skin with intent.
It slides under my collar, across the back of my neck, down my forearms where veins sit closest to the surface, and stays there, as if choosing its ground.
The warmth from the wreck, from the adrenaline still burning through me, vanishes in the space of a heartbeat that isn’t mine.
For a second, I am back inside the dream, the memory of frost-edged silence pressing at the edges of reality.
My shoulders draw back, spine lengthening as instinct forces me upright.
The cell phone remains lit in my hand, Hades’ name still waiting, but my attention has already moved elsewhere, into the dark that suddenly feels crowded.
The night above the road shifts.
At first, it’s subtle enough to doubt, a thinning of starlight, a distortion at the edge of vision where sky should remain constant.
Then the tree line darkens as though something has drawn a curtain across it, an absence that carries weight.
The horizon seems to fold inward on itself, color draining until only a depthless abyss remains, moving with a slow, deliberate certainty that does not belong to any storm I’ve ever known.
The air tightens around me. Sound dulls, and even the faint hum of cooling metal from the wreck falters, swallowed by the pressure of that advancing nothing.
It spreads without wind.
Without direction.
Just intent.
The shape of it reminds me of waking in the middle of the night with my chest hollowed out, the echo of a presence that never leaves cleanly. That same cold vacuum presses outward, expanding from an unseen origin above the trees and descending toward the road with patient inevitability.
I tilt my head back.
That’s when it surges.
Distance collapses as if space has decided to stop existing, the dark pouring forward in a soundless rush that devours the last traces of ordinary sky. The world dims not gradually but all at once, light extinguished in reverse, leaving only the oncoming abyss.
Heat answers before thought can.
Fire roars awake under my skin, ancient instinct wrenching control from reason.
It climbs my spine in molten waves, spilling through muscle and nerve until my shoulders burn with it.
The glow spreads along my arms in branching currents of red-gold, gathering at my hands with the promise of devastation.
My boots plant in broken gravel, and I hold my ground between the crushed wreck and the advancing dark, five centuries of survival and flame braced behind my ribs, waiting to see which of us reaches the other first.
The shadow hits the edge of the road and stops.
Hovers…
Watching me with those ancient, patient eyes that have no face, no form, nothing to aim a fist at, nothing to sink a flame into, only presence, vast, deliberate, and completely, utterly without fear.
And in the thundering quiet of a back road at two in the morning, with a bleeding woman unconscious in the seat behind me and the sky the color of a held breath, something settles into my gut with the slow, grinding certainty.
Whatever is coming has been watching us for a long time.
And it’s done being patient.
THE END