Chapter Fourteen #3
A slender figure darted between trees at the edge of the clearing—too small to be one of Victor's men, moving with the distinctive quick gait of a fox shifter.
My enhanced vision caught a flash of his face in the moonlight.
Young. Barely more than a teenager. Wearing an MC prospect cut that hung too large on his narrow shoulders.
What the hell was he doing here?
The kid was moving parallel to the fight, clearly trying to circle behind Bear's position—perhaps thinking he could help, maybe prove himself worthy of full membership.
Instead, he was running directly into the path of Victor's communications specialist, who had separated from the main group during the initial attack.
I tensed, ready to signal a warning, but it was already too late. The operator's head snapped up, spotting the prospect's movement. In three swift strides, he closed the distance between them, grabbing the young shifter before he could react.
The knife appeared at the prospect's throat, steel gleaming dully in the moonlight. The operator dragged him into the clearing, using the kid's body as a shield while backing toward the tree line.
"Drop your weapons!" he shouted, his voice carrying across the suddenly silent battlefield. "Drop them now or the kid dies!"
The night went still. Bear and Gunner had emerged from their positions, weapons trained on the operator, but unable to fire without risking the prospect's life. Rooster appeared at the edge of the clearing, his face tight with restrained fury.
"Let him go," Bear growled, his massive frame tensed to spring despite the impossible distance between them. "He's just a kid. He's not part of this."
The operator's laugh was hollow. "He made himself part of it when he followed you out here.
" The knife pressed tighter against the prospect's throat, drawing a thin line of blood.
The kid's eyes were wide with terror, his body trembling against his captor's grip.
"Now drop the weapons or I start cutting deeper. "
From my hidden position, I assessed the situation with the cold clarity survival had taught me. The angles were wrong. Bear couldn't get a clean shot. Gunner was too far to the left. Rooster was unarmed, having lost his weapon in the close-quarters fight.
And I was safe. Hidden. Unnoticed.
I could stay that way. Could let this play out, document another tragedy in my notebook, and disappear before dawn. It's what I'd done five times before. It's how I'd stayed alive for fifteen years while others died.
Run. Hide. Survive. The mantra that had kept me breathing when everyone else stopped.
The prospect whimpered as the knife drew another bead of blood. His eyes—green with golden flecks, the eyes of a young fox shifter—darted frantically between the MC members, silently pleading for help.
"Five seconds," the operator announced, his voice steady despite the chaotic situation. Professional. Trained. Dangerous. "Four. Three..."
My hand moved to my chest, touching the spot where Rooster's palm had rested in the garden. The place where my heart had spoken when my voice couldn't. Run. Hide. Survive.
But not this time.
I closed my eyes, surrendering to the change I'd been fighting every day of my life.
My bones cracked and reformed, muscles stretching and compressing, skin yielding to fur in a cascade of agony that rivaled anything I had ever felt before.
The transformation was faster than I expected—my body responding to the urgent need with primal efficiency.
When I opened my eyes again, the world had shifted into the sharper, scent-driven perspective of my lynx form.
Every sound magnified, every movement crystallized into potential threat or prey.
The operator's heartbeat was a thunder in my ears, his sweat-fear-determination scent a beacon in the night.
I launched from the underbrush without warning, my lynx body a tawny blur of muscle and purpose. The operator had just enough time to register the movement before I was on him, my weight hitting his chest as my claws found purchase in tactical fabric and the flesh beneath.
The knife clattered to the ground as I drove him backward, my teeth bared inches from his throat.
His training abandoned him in the face of primal fear—the ancient terror of prey caught by predator.
He screamed, the sound cutting through the night as my claws dug deeper, pinning him to the forest floor.
Part of me—the wild part, the part that had been caged for too long—wanted to tear into his exposed throat. To taste the hot copper of his life and end the threat permanently. But the human part, the part that had placed Rooster's hand over my heart, held back.
I wasn't a killer. Even now, even after everything, I wasn't that.
The remaining members of Victor's team fled at the sight of their comrade pinned beneath my snarling form, abandoning their mission in the face of unexpected resistance.
Bear moved quickly to secure the operator, pressing his shotgun against the man's temple while Gunner checked the prospect for serious injuries.
"Holy shit," the kid whispered, his hand pressed against his bleeding neck. "That was..."
"That was Liam," Rooster finished for him, approaching slowly.
I backed away from the captured operator, my lynx form vibrating with unspent adrenaline.
For fifteen years, I'd hidden this part of myself, knowing I was different in ways no one ever explained to me.
Now I stood exposed in the moonlight, my true nature revealed to these men who had somehow become important to me.
Rooster knelt a few feet away, his hands open at his sides in a gesture of peace. "You okay, baby boy?" he asked softly.
The gentleness in his voice, the familiar nickname that had become something precious between us—it reached past the lynx's defensive instincts to the human heart beneath. I felt the change coming again, my body responding to the emotional pull rather than physical need.
The shift back to human form was smoother, the pain dulled by familiarity. I knelt naked in the moonlight, my human skin prickling with the cool night air. Rooster shrugged out of his jacket immediately, draping it around my shoulders with careful hands that never lingered too long.
"You saved him," Rooster said quietly, nodding toward the prospect who was still staring at me with wide, awestruck eyes. "You could have stayed hidden, safe, but you didn't."
I looked up at him, at Bear securing the prisoner, at Gunner helping the injured prospect. At this makeshift family that had somehow become mine in the span of days rather than the years most relationships required.
Something shifted inside me—a wall crumbling, a door opening after fifteen years locked tight. My throat worked, muscles long unused suddenly remembering their purpose. The sound built from somewhere deep in my chest, rising through my throat like magma through stone.
When I opened my mouth, what emerged wasn't words, but something more primal—a roar that contained fifteen years of silence, of rage, of loneliness and fear and finally, finally belonging.
The sound echoed through the trees, causing leaves to tremble and birds to take startled flight from their roosts.
The forest fell silent in its wake, as if the very air had been stunned by my reclamation of sound. Bear froze, his hands stilling on the zip ties he was using to secure the prisoner. Gunner looked up sharply, the prospect beside him shrinking back instinctively from the raw power in my cry.
Only Rooster moved, stepping closer until he stood directly before me. His eyes were wet in the moonlight, his expression a complex mixture of pride and wonder and something deeper I wasn't ready to name.
"Welcome home, Liam," he whispered, the words meant only for me despite the thunderous sound that had preceded them.
I didn't speak again. Couldn't yet. That single roar had emptied fifteen years of silence, leaving me drained and shaking. But it had been enough—enough to mark the ground beneath my feet as somewhere I would fight to defend rather than a temporary shelter to abandon at the first sign of danger.
For the first time since my parents had left me at that bus station, I had stopped running.