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Collision course

ผู้เขียน: Bunnyfeets
last update ปรับปรุงล่าสุด: 2025-06-04 16:04:53

The days that followed blurred into a repetitive loop of cleaning, healing, and avoiding Ryker.

I kept my head down, hands busy scrubbing the massive house from end to end. I found comfort in routines—changing sheets, dusting old paintings, sorting through Emma’s endless kitchen orders. But I could still feel his eyes on me.

Always watching.

Always there.

He wasn’t like Will, whose soft eyes made your pulse slow, or like Eric, whose friendly teasing made you feel human again. No—Ryker's presence was pressure. A force. Like gravity.

On the fourth day, it started with a summons.

No knock. No explanation. Just Will finding me mid-dishwashing.

"Alpha wants to see you. Now."

I wiped my hands and followed him through the hallways, heart thumping. The last time Ryker summoned me, I ended up half-dead on the forest floor.

Eric gave me a reassuring nudge at the door.

“Don’t worry. He’s not in full beast mode today,” he smirked.

That did absolutely nothing to calm me.

I knocked once, soft and hesitant.

"Come in," came Ryker’s familiar grunt.

He was standing by the window, arms folded, jaw clenched. His dark hair was damp, as always, and his scent—wood smoke and danger—hit me like a punch.

"You took your sweet time," he said, not turning around.

I stepped in, quiet. "You called."

He finally turned. Those icy eyes pinned me down like daggers. “There’s a rogue problem at the southern border. I’m taking a scouting team. You’re coming.”

I blinked. “What?”

“You heard me. You shifted. That means you fight.”

“I—I don’t know how to fight,” I admitted, shame lacing every word.

“Then you’ll learn,” he snapped. “You don’t get to be a stray in this pack. You pull your weight, or you get dragged down.”

I didn’t answer. What could I say? That the idea of another shift made me want to scream? That the bruises on my wrist were still healing from a fall? That I hadn’t slept through a full night since I arrived?

He must have sensed my hesitation, because his next words were quieter.

“I won’t let you die out there.”

A beat.

Then he turned away, signaling dismissal.

“I’ll be ready,” I whispered.

By nightfall, we were on the move.

Six of us: Ryker leading, Eric beside him, two lean warriors I hadn’t met, Will trailing at the rear, and me—barely holding it together.

“Stay close,” Will murmured as we shifted under the full moon.

The pain still bit, but it was manageable now. My wolf form was smaller, silver-gray, cautious in every step. I kept low and quiet, senses tingling with every rustle in the trees.

Ryker led like a ghost—fluid, precise, lethal.

He didn’t speak. He didn’t need to.

Hours passed in silence. Tension crackled in the air, thick with anticipation. We were being watched. I could feel it.

Then it happened.

A blur from the trees.

A snarl.

An ambush.

Everything exploded.

Fur, teeth, screams, shadows colliding midair. Ryker launched at the biggest rogue—a bear-sized black beast with red-rimmed eyes. Eric was a flash of brown, darting between opponents. Will guarded the rear with calm brutality, fending off two rogues with calculated bites.

I froze.

I couldn't move.

I was prey again.

A snarl to my right. One rogue broke through the line and came straight for me.

My instincts screamed, move, but my legs wouldn’t listen.

Then—he was there.

Ryker.

He slammed into the rogue midair, crushing it into the forest floor. Snapping jaws, blood, a guttural growl.

He turned to me, eyes glowing.

"Fight or die, Trixie!"

Something in me snapped.

I shifted back—bare skin meeting cold earth—and grabbed the nearest weapon I saw: a fallen branch.

I swung.

Once. Twice. The rogue lunged again, and this time, I dodged. Instinct finally kicked in. I wasn’t fast, but I was desperate. I slammed the branch down on its snout. It yelped and staggered back.

Eric joined in seconds later, finishing it with a clean slash.

"Good swing," he grinned through blood-stained teeth.

My lungs burned. My body shook. But I was still standing.

When the dust settled, four rogues lay dead. One escaped. The others limped away, broken.

I collapsed to my knees, shaking uncontrollably.

Ryker stood over me.

"You disobeyed orders," he said.

I looked up, barely able to breathe. "I froze."

"You broke formation. You could’ve gotten yourself—and others—killed."

Tears pricked at my eyes. “I’m sorry.”

But then he did something unexpected.

He crouched.

Lowered his voice.

“But you didn’t die. You fought.”

That was the first time he touched me—his hand cupping the back of my neck, firm and grounding.

“You’re not useless, Trixie. Stop acting like it.”

Back at the pack house, Will patched up what he could. I had a long scratch along my thigh, a sprained shoulder, and half a dozen bruises. Nothing broken.

“You did good,” he said softly.

I nodded, numb.

But my mind was still with Ryker—his eyes, the rage, the unexpected gentleness.

Why did his opinion matter so damn much?

The collision happened two nights later.

I was walking down the hallway after midnight, heading to the kitchen for water. A nightmare had torn me out of sleep, chest tight with phantom pain.

Ryker’s door was slightly open.

I didn’t mean to look.

But I did.

He was standing shirtless by the window, his back lined with scars I hadn’t noticed before. Old, brutal, ragged. His body was strength—but it was also pain.

“Come in,” he said without turning.

I froze. “I—I didn’t mean to—”

“I said come in.”

I obeyed.

He finally turned, meeting my wide eyes with something unreadable in his.

“I know the look you had when that rogue came for you.”

“What look?”

“The look of someone who thought dying was easier than fighting.”

Silence.

He stepped closer. My breath hitched.

“I’ve seen it before,” he murmured. “In warriors. In survivors.”

“In myself.”

The vulnerability in his voice shocked me more than anything.

“I’m not a warrior,” I whispered.

“No. But you’re not weak either.”

He reached for me again, just like in the forest. His fingers brushed my cheek, then slid to the back of my neck again. That same grounding pressure.

“Why do you care?” I asked before I could stop myself.

His jaw clenched. “Because I know what it’s like to be alone in a place that’s supposed to protect you.”

My heart stuttered.

And then—without thinking—I reached up and touched one of the old scars on his shoulder. He flinched. Not from pain. From surprise.

“Who did this?” I asked.

He didn’t answer right away.

“When I was sixteen, I challenged my father for dominance. He didn’t take it well.”

I looked up into his eyes.

And for the first time, I didn’t see the monster everyone feared.

I saw a boy who had been broken and rebuilt into something unbreakable.

“I’m not trying to scare you, Trixie,” he said, voice low.

“Then what are you doing?”

He didn’t answer.

Instead, he leaned in—his forehead brushing mine, breath mingling.

It wasn’t a kiss. Not yet.

But it was a collision.

Of breath.

Of souls.

Of wounds trying to heal in the same rhythm.

And just like that, I knew—

This man would either ruin me…

Or save me.

Possibly both.

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  • SILVER IN THE SHADOWS   War and Love

    Silas moved through the ridge‑line forest like a shadow, boots silent on the frosted pines. Dawn’s thinning light cast steel‑blue shadows across his face, each breath a plume of cold air and rage that burned hotter.He stopped at a ,ruined cairn,the place he and his wife had first met, and later bound by love. He knelt, fingertips tracing lichen‑crusted stones. The memory came sharp: her laughter, fierce and warm, the promise they’d made to protect their daughters—together.She’d kept it. The daughters survived. But only one walked freely now.A low snap of a twig jolted him upright. Heart thundered. His hand tightened on his dagger. No threat—just wind straining through broken branches. Yet his mind roared:Trixie—alive, defiant.Trisha—alive, loyal.His wife—dead, because she shielded Trixie from the rogue attack that should have claimed both.Anger flared, sharper than the morning frost.Trixie lives. She shouldn’t have. He pressed the dagger’s flat edge into his palm, the sting st

  • SILVER IN THE SHADOWS   Alpha's Choice

    Dawn’s fragile light seeped through frost‑etched windows. Inside Ryker’s hidden cabin, warmth curled around two bodies tangled in aftermath slow breaths, flushed skin, the fragile promise of a future unspoken.Trixie awoke first. Ryker’s arm draped over her waist, protective and still. Everything felt sacred until a hard rap shattered the morning hush.Ryker was upright in an instant, muscles coiled. Trixie mirrored him, heart pounding.Three authoritative knocks -signaling danger and dread.He motioned her down, then moved to the door, blade in hand. Silas, he thought. The Ridge Alpha. Trixie’s father. The memory crashed in banishment, betrayal, death.He opened the door: three figures framed in pale light two enforcers, and Silas, regal and cold.Silas’s voice was cutting: “Ryker. I expected courtesy from the usurper of my daughter’s bed.”Ryker stepped forward. “I’m not your pawn.”Silas’s eyes flicked past Ryker to Trixie’s doorway. “I know what went on last night and why.”He turn

  • SILVER IN THE SHADOWS   Entangled

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    It started with mornings.Not grand declarations or sudden confessions. Just the soft ritual of shared space: Ryker making coffee in the den’s kitchen while Trixie hovered nearby, half-awake, hair pulled into a messy knot. She never used to be a morning person. Now she had reasons to be.It had been three weeks since that first kiss by the fire.They hadn’t rushed anything since. They hadn’t needed to. There were no ticking clocks in Ryker’s presence, no expectations masquerading as affection. He didn’t reach for more than she offered, and she stopped bracing for the moment someone would.Instead, they learned each other in the in-betweens.Ryker discovered that Trixie liked honey in her tea, not sugar, and that she sometimes reread old books just to visit the parts that hurt in the right way. Trixie learned that Ryker hummed when he cooked—low, thoughtful tunes with no words—and that he took his eggs scrambled, not because he preferred them that way, but because his brother used to a

  • SILVER IN THE SHADOWS   First Kiss

    The forest was alive tonight.Silver light dripped through the trees, dappling the earth in pale ribbons as paws pounded soft dirt and breath steamed in the cool air. The pack ran as one—fluid, silent, sure.And this time, Trixie was among them.Not stumbling. Not trailing.Running.Her lungs burned, but in a good way. A strong way. Her body moved with rhythm now, not rebellion—her limbs no longer strangers to the pull of wolf instinct. The first run had left her pale and gasping, crumpled before the river bend, unconscious in Ryker’s arms before she’d even crossed the halfway mark.She’d woken later to the heat of his worry—his scent thick with fear, regret, and something softer that he hadn’t dared name yet.But tonight, she was upright.She was still running.And she was being watched.She felt him behind her long before she saw him—Ryker, pacing her like a shadow. Not pressing her. Not pushing. Just… there. A presence like a second heartbeat. Protective. Quietly proud.They reache

  • SILVER IN THE SHADOWS   The measure of enough

    The clinic was quiet at this hour—late enough that even the most stubborn patients had gone home, early enough that the night shift hadn’t started drifting in with sleepy complaints and bloodshot eyes. Only one light was on, casting a warm glow through the frosted glass window.Will was still here, of course. He always was.Trixie lingered in the doorway, one hand gripping the edge of the frame like it might anchor her to something. She hadn’t knocked. She didn’t need to. Will had heard her coming the second her feet hit the porch.He didn’t look up immediately. Just kept wiping down his instruments, methodical and calm.“I wondered when you’d show up,” he said gently.Trixie’s throat tightened. “How?”Will finally looked at her, his pale eyes impossibly kind. “Because I know you.”That did her in.She stepped into the room, closing the door behind her, and the moment it latched, her shoulders dropped like she’d been holding herself together with wire and willpower.Will said nothing

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