Epilogue
ALEXANDRIA
The mountain air in late spring carries a specific, intoxicating magic.
It smells of melting snow, ancient pine sap, and the raw, wet earth finally waking from its frozen slumber.
I inhale deeply, letting the crisp oxygen fill my lungs and ground my soul as I lean against the rough-hewn cedar railing of the deck wrapping around the back of Tristan’s loft.
Below, the Broken Halos compound is a low-frequency hum of working engines and grit. The rhythmic rumble of a V-twin engine echoes off the granite cliffs—Austin heading into town, probably to annoy a deputy.
In the distance, the sharp, metallic clang of a hammer striking an anvil rings out like a heartbeat. Blake is already at the forge, shaping steel with the same relentless intensity Tristan uses to protect this land.
My life used to be a series of sterile rooms, fluorescent lights, and endless spreadsheets. I was a nomad of the academic world, drifting from one university grant to the next, untethered and fundamentally alone. I didn't realize I was just lost.
Now, I am anchored.
I shift my weight, and a familiar phantom ache throbs deep in my right leg.
The deep, internal ache where the bone knit itself back together—the permanent mark of the mountain that Tristan’s brothers call my "Gunnar Iron"—acts as a biological barometer.
It predicts the change in pressure long before the clouds gather over the summit. Rain is coming.
Heavy, calloused palms settle on my hips, and the world suddenly feels right again.
Tristan moves like a shadow, a silent predator who has traded his solitude for the weight of my heart.
His chest presses against my back, a solid, immovable wall of heat and granite muscle that absorbs the slight tremors in my body.
He rests his chin on the top of my head, his dark, rugged beard scratching against my scalp in a way that makes my toes curl.
He pulls me backward, tucking my hips into the cradle of his thighs until I am perfectly molded against him.
"You're favoring the right side again, Alexandria," he rumbles. The sound isn't just a voice; it’s a low-frequency vibration that travels through my spine and settles in my marrow.
"I'm just standing still, Tristan," I murmur, though I lean into him, letting his strength carry me.
"I saw you through the glass," he says, his tone brooking no argument. "The way you shifted when the wind picked up. Don't lie to the man who tracked your scent through a mountain deluge and a mudslide."
The Road Captain catches everything. Every shift in the wind, every microscopic grimace of pain, every shallow intake of breath. He has spent months studying me with the same singular focus he uses to map the wilderness. To Tristan, I am the most important terrain he has ever navigated.
"It’s just the humidity," I say, leaning my head back against his shoulder. My hands, small and pale, cover his—massive, scarred maps of a violent history—splayed wide over my stomach. I breathe him in, the scent of sandalwood and leather mixing with my own scent—the wildflower musk he’s been obsessed with since the day he found me.
"There’s a storm front coming in over the eastern ridge. My internal barometer is going off."
He grunts, a sound thick with a jagged, protective edge. I know that sound. He hates that he cannot fight the barometric pressure or shoot the humidity out of the air. He wants to kill anything that causes me even a second of discomfort.
His thumbs begin to rub slow, heavy circles over my hip bones, his touch possessing a terrifying gentleness. "Come back inside, Allie. I’ll work the ache out of you."
"I have work to do, too," I tease, though my body is already softening under his hands. "The mapping of the marten den sites and their localized migration through the eastern ridge needs finalizing before the town council meeting on Tuesday. If we don’t prove their habitat extends into the development sector, Ramirez’s lawyers might find a loophole to appeal the injunction. "
"Chase handles the council," Tristan says, his voice final, a decree from a king. "You did the legendary work. You saved the habitat. You saved the mountain. Now, you let our lawyer bark at the suits while I take care of what’s mine."
He turns me in his arms with effortless power.
He steadies me, his grip tightening on my waist until I’m forced to look up into that face—the face that haunted my fever dreams in the Vault.
He is towering, broad-shouldered, and beautiful in a way that hurts to look at.
The scar running through his left eyebrow gives him a perpetual, lethal scowl, but his eyes—those mossy, river-depth eyes—burn with a focused hunger that makes my breath hitch.
"I’m healed, Tristan," I whisper, reaching up to brush a stray lock of dark hair from his forehead. "The physical therapy is over. I can walk. I can hike. I’m not the broken bird you found in the scree anymore."
He looks down at my leg, then back up to my face, his expression turning to stone. "You’re mine. Every inch of that skin, every bone I helped knit back together. When you hurt, I feel it in my own fucking chest. And I fix it."
"You can't fix the weather, Road Captain."
"I can keep you so warm you forget the world exists until the storm passes."
The intensity in his gaze is a physical weight. It’s the same look he gave me when the mercenaries were at the gates—the look of a man who would gladly walk through fire to ensure I never felt a chill.
"Breakfast first, Road Captain," I remind him, trying to maintain some semblance of order, though my pulse is hammering a frantic rhythm in the hollow of my throat. "I need coffee. You were gone before the sun was even up."
"Perimeter check," he says simply.
He checks the perimeter three times every night.
He has personally tracked the remnants of Ramirez’s mercenary crew across three state lines until he was certain no one remained to threaten me.
The corporate interests have retreated into the shadows, buried under the weight of the environmental scandal I broke. We won the war.
But Tristan Gunnar never stops hunting. He is the sentinel at my gate, the dragon guarding his most precious hoard.
"The perimeter is clear, Tristan," I say, tracing the hard, stubbled line of his jaw. "We’re safe. You brought me home."
He captures my hand, pressing a hard, lingering kiss to the center of my palm. "You are home, Alexandria."
Before I can protest, he scoops me up. One massive arm hooks under my knees, the other wraps around my back, and suddenly the deck disappears.
"Tristan! Put me down! I have legs that work!"
"Faster this way," he mutters, his boots heavy and rhythmic on the floorboards as he carries me back into the loft.
The space has been transformed. It’s no longer just a masculine lair of grease, gun oil, and solitude.
My books—thick volumes on wildlife biology and environmental law—stack neatly on the reclaimed wood shelves he built for me.
My satellite uplink and high-end monitors sit near the window where the light is best. I am still the 'Marten Girl' to the town, but in this loft, I am a Road Captain’s Queen.
My scopes and cameras stand in the corner next to his tactical gear and leather cuts. Two worlds, once miles apart, have been welded together by blood and obsession.
He bypasses the kitchenette entirely and heads for the massive, custom-built bed. He lays me down with a sense of heavy ownership, his eyes never leaving mine.
"I thought you said breakfast," I say, sinking into the dark, soft quilts that still smell like him—cedar, pine, and man.
"Dessert first," he growls.
He looms over me, a giant blocking out the morning sun, before kneeling at the foot of the bed.
His large hands encompass my right calf, his skin rough against mine.
He treats the limb with a level of reverence that makes my eyes sting with sudden, happy tears.
To the rest of the world, it’s a healed injury.
To Tristan, this leg is the catalyst that changed his entire universe.
It is the reason he isn't alone anymore.
He rolls the hem of my leggings up, exposing the pale skin of my shin where the bone has finally settled. He lowers his head, pressing his hot, firm mouth against the skin over the break.
My fingers grip the sheets, my back arching. "Tristan..."
"Does it hurt today?" he asks against my skin, his breath a warm caress.
"No. It’s just... tight. The humidity makes the muscle pull where the break was deepest."
He produces a small jar of organic salve from the bedside table—something he researched and bought because he heard it helped with deep tissue recovery. He warms the cream in his palms, the scent of menthol filling the air, and begins to massage my leg.
This is his worship.
His thumbs dig deep, finding the hidden knots in my calf and the tension behind my knee with surgical precision.
He works with a silent, intense concentration that borders on the holy.
I watch him, my chest swelling with a love so big it feels like it might burst. This is the man who tracks enemies through the dark to slit their throats, yet he rubs warmth back into my muscles with the patience of a saint.
The sensation is exquisite. The dull ache recedes, replaced by a spreading, tingly heat that radiates up to my core. He looks up, his eyes dark pools of intent. "Better?"
"So much better," I breathe.
"Good." He caps the jar and stands, his massive frame towering over the bed. "Now, get dressed. Pack a bag. Warm clothes. We’re leaving the compound for the day."
"Where are we going?"
"The ridge. Past the tree line," he says, his voice taking on a rougher, more territorial edge. "My grandfather built a small cabin up there, tucked into the granite. Nobody goes up there but me. Not Logan, not the prospects. No one."
"Why now?"