2. Rune #2

Phoenix traffic parted before him like water, though whether from his aggressive driving or some unconscious recognition of predatory authority, he couldn't say.

The urban sprawl gave way to desert highway, then to the winding canyon roads that led to his sanctuary—the one place on earth where he could drop the carefully constructed facade of civilized businessman and simply exist.

His mansion materialized from the red rock landscape like something carved from the canyon itself.

Centuries of careful construction had created a fortress that appeared deceptively modest from the outside—a sprawling structure that seemed to grow organically from the desert floor.

Only someone with dragon senses would detect the reinforced steel framework beneath the exterior or the sophisticated security systems that monitored every approach.

The garage door closed behind him with a whisper of hydraulics, sealing him away from the world of quarterly reports and clan politics.

Rune abandoned the car without ceremony, his long strides carrying him through corridors lined with artifacts that predated human civilization—pieces of his hoard that served as both decoration and reminder of what he truly was beneath the expensive suits.

His private chambers occupied the eastern wing, where floor-to-ceiling windows offered an unobstructed view of the canyon that stretched toward the Grand Canyon proper.

The space reflected his dual nature: sleek modern furniture positioned beside ancient dragon relics, cutting-edge technology integrated seamlessly with stone walls that had witnessed centuries of his kind's history.

But today, none of it mattered. Today, he needed to fly.

Rune stripped with efficient movements, letting the trappings of human civilization fall away piece by piece.

The tailored jacket hit the floor first, followed by the silk shirt that had cost thousands.

By the time he reached the French doors that opened onto his private terrace, he was naked and already feeling the familiar burn of transformation building beneath his skin.

The terrace jutted out over empty air, a platform designed specifically for what came next. No railings marred the clean lines—a dragon had no need for such human safety measures. Rune stepped to the edge of the stone platform, and then the shift took him as he leaped.

Bone elongated with sounds like breaking timber.

Muscle mass exploded outward, human limitations dissolving as his true form claimed dominance.

Obsidian scales erupted across expanding flesh, each one catching the afternoon sunlight like polished armor.

His wingspan stretched wide enough to cast shadows across the canyon floor below, membrane between bone joints translucent enough to glow gold when backlit.

This was what he truly was—not a businessman, not a clan leader burdened with expectations, but a creature of fire and fury and absolute dominance. His dragon form was magnificent in its terrible beauty, a predator that had ruled skies when humans still cowered in caves.

Rune caught the thermal updrafts that rose from sun-heated stone, letting them carry him higher as he began his patrol. The canyon spread beneath him like a three-dimensional map of his territory—every cave, every hidden spring, and every secret passage memorized through centuries of flight.

Everything appeared exactly as it should.

The imposing "No Trespassing" signs posted at strategic intervals had done their job, keeping casual hikers and thrill-seeking tourists away from areas where they might stumble across evidence of dragon habitation.

The few authorized researchers who occasionally received permits to work in the region knew better than to venture beyond their designated sites.

His security measures had proven effective over the decades.

The occasional trespasser received hefty fines and escorts off the property, but nothing that couldn't be handled through legal channels.

No one had discovered the hidden entrance to the town where most of his clan lived away from human civilization, or the carefully concealed landing platforms carved into seemingly inaccessible cliff faces.

Rune banked into a lazy spiral, letting the canyon air fill his lungs and the desert sun warm his scales.

For these precious moments, he could exist without the weight of responsibility, without the constant pressure to be more than he was willing to become.

No boardrooms, no clan meetings, no lectures about biological imperatives—just the primal satisfaction of flight and territory and—

Lightning suddenly struck him from within.

Something that blazed through his nervous system like molten metal poured directly into his veins. His dragon form convulsed in midair, his massive wings faltering as every instinct he possessed suddenly roared in unified harmony.

MINE.

The word exploded through his consciousness with the force of a nuclear detonation, carrying with it a certainty that bypassed rational thought entirely. Recognition flooded his system, ancient magic activating pathways he'd spent centuries trying to sever.

No. Impossible.

But even as denial crashed through his human mind, his dragon was already singing with triumphant satisfaction. Somewhere, someone had found what should not exist. Somewhere, a claim marker he'd failed to locate had just been activated by the touch of his destined mate.

Rune's roar of fury echoed off the canyon walls, the sound carrying enough raw power to send smaller creatures scurrying for cover.

Three centuries of methodical searching, of tracking down every ancestral claim marker, the pieces of binding magic his ancestors had scattered across the territory. He'd been so careful, so thorough—

But not thorough enough.

The burning sensation of recognition continued to pulse through his veins, each wave stronger than the last. His fated mate had found the claim marker.

His fated mate was here, in his territory, probably wondering what the hell had just happened to the innocuous-looking artifact they'd just uncovered.

Instead of the joy that should have accompanied such a momentous discovery, Rune felt only the cold grip of impending doom. His carefully constructed life was about to implode, and there wasn't a damn thing he could do to stop it.

But his dragon had never been happier.

The contradiction tore at him as he wheeled through the air, torn between his desperate need for control and his dragon's absolute satisfaction at finally locating their other half.

Three centuries of successful independence, of proving that he could lead without the weakness of emotional dependence—all of it about to crumble because he'd missed one goddamn marker.

I have to fix this. I have to stop this before—

Before what? Before the bond could fully establish itself? Before his mate realized what they'd stumbled into? Before his entire existence shifted around someone else's presence like a planet finding its sun?

Rune angled back toward his mansion, his powerful wingbeats carrying him home with desperate urgency. He needed to think, needed to plan, needed to find some way to contain this disaster before it could consume everything he'd built.

But deep in his chest, his dragon was already purring with contentment, and that terrified him more than any enemy he'd ever faced.

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