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Chapter 3: A Mother Forged in Fire

Kiera's POV

Five years Later

The rumble of my Harley echoed off the canyon walls as I pulled into the Steel Vultures compound, dust swirling behind my wheels. Five years had changed everything about me except the bike, though even the Blackfang had been repainted matte black and stripped of anything that might identify it as Darius's former prize.

"Mama!"

A blur of dark hair and skinny arms launched itself at me before I could fully dismount. Eli wrapped himself around my waist, his face pressed against my leather vest where the Ghost Rider patch sat above my heart. At four and a half, he was all legs and elbows, with Darius's dark eyes and my stubborn chin.

"Hey, little wolf," I murmured, ruffling his hair. The endearment slipped out sometimes, though I was careful never to use it around others. "Were you good for Aunt Sable?"

"He was perfect," Sable said, emerging from the garage with grease-stained hands and a fond smile. "Though he did try to 'fix' Big Mike's bike with his toy wrench."

I looked down at Eli's guilty expression. "We talked about this, buddy. Real tools only, and only with supervision."

"But Uncle Mike said it was making funny noises!" Eli protested. "I was helping!"

"That funny noise is called character," I said, lifting him up despite his protests that he was too big to be carried. "And Uncle Mike's bike has been making that sound since before you were born."

The Steel Vultures clubhouse felt more like home than Ironfang territory ever had. This place ran on loyalty freely given. Jack ruled with a firm but fair hand, and everyone had found their place in the family we'd built together.

"Ghost!" Tommy called from behind the bar as we walked inside. "Package came for you today. Left it in your room."

I nodded my thanks, settling Eli at a table with his coloring books. The other bikers treated him like a beloved nephew, indulging his endless questions and teaching him everything from poker to motorcycle maintenance. He was growing up surrounded by people who'd kill to protect him, even if they didn't know exactly what they were protecting him from.

That was the hardest part, the constant vigilance, the lies layered on top of lies. Eli thought his enhanced senses were normal, that every kid could smell emotions and hear heartbeats. I'd taught him to hide these abilities, to pretend he was just like any other human child. So far, it had worked.

"Mama, look!" Eli held up his crayon drawing, a motorcycle with a woman rider, her hair streaming behind her like a banner. "It's you being brave!"

My chest tightened. "It's beautiful, sweetheart."

"Uncle Jack says you're the bravest rider he knows. He says you can outrun anything."

If only that were true.

Later that evening, after Eli had fallen asleep curled between Sable and Big Mike during movie night, I finally made it to my room to check the package Tommy had mentioned. It was small, unmarked, with no return address. Inside was a burner phone and a single message: "They're moving north. Time to run again. - A friend."

My hands shook as I powered up the phone. No other messages, no missed calls. Just that warning and the crushing weight of everything it implied.

Five years. Five years of building a life, of letting myself believe we might actually be safe. Five years of Eli calling this place home, of the Steel Vultures becoming the family I'd never had with the pack.

I deleted the message and turned off the phone, but I couldn't delete the fear it had awakened. We'd have to leave soon. Tonight, maybe. Disappear into the wind like we had so many times before, though never for this long.

The thought of telling Eli made my stomach churn. He'd started kindergarten last month, had made friends for the first time in his life. He loved his uncles and aunts, loved the freedom of the open road, loved the bedtime stories I told him about brave riders and mechanical dragons.

How could I explain that we had to run again? That the monsters in my past had finally caught our scent?

I found myself walking to his room, needing to see him sleep-soft and safe. Eli had kicked off his covers, sprawled across the twin bed like he was trying to claim every inch of space. His dark hair stuck up at odd angles, and there was still a smudge of chocolate on his cheek from dessert.

He looked so much like Darius it sometimes took my breath away. The same strong jaw, the same thick eyelashes, the same way of frowning in his sleep like he was solving complex problems in his dreams. But his mouth was mine, and so was his stubborn streak.

"You're thinking too loud, Mama."

His voice was sleep-rough, eyes still closed. Another one of those abilities I'd taught him to hide, the way he could sense my emotional state, feel when my wolf was agitated even though his own hadn't emerged yet.

"Sorry, little one. Go back to sleep."

"Are we leaving again? Will we come back as usual?" he asked, rolling over to look at me with those too-perceptive eyes.

The question hit me like a physical blow. "What makes you ask that?"

"You get the same smell when we have to leave. Like metal and sad." He sat up, suddenly wide awake. "I don't want to leave Uncle Jack and Aunt Sable."

"Sometimes we have to do things we don't want to do," I said carefully. "Sometimes staying in one place too long isn't safe."

"Because of the bad men you used to know?"

I'd kept the details vague, told him only that there were people from my old life who might want to hurt us. He accepted it the way children accepted all the incomprehensible rules adults imposed on their world.

"Something like that."

Eli was quiet for a long moment, processing this with the seriousness that made him seem older than his years. Finally, he reached out and took my hand.

"It's okay, Mama. As long as we're together, I'm not scared."

The trust in his voice almost broke me. This child had never known a stable home, spent his entire life hiding whenever I sense danger and returning again, when the scents fade, and yet he faced each upheaval with the same quiet courage that kept me going.

"You're braver than me, you know that?" I whispered.

He grinned, showing the gap where his front tooth used to be. "Uncle Jack says I get it from you."

Later, long after Eli had fallen back asleep, I found myself on the roof of the clubhouse, staring up at the full moon I'd learned to fear. My wolf paced restlessly beneath my skin, calling to the silver light that had once felt like home.

I hadn't shifted in over two years, too terrified that letting my wolf free would somehow signal our location to the pack. The suppression was slowly killing me, I knew that. But Eli's safety was worth any sacrifice.

The sound of boots on the metal ladder made me turn. Sable's purple-streaked head appeared, followed by the rest of her as she climbed onto the roof.

"Couldn't sleep either?" she asked, settling beside me.

"Something like that."

We sat in comfortable silence, two women who understood what it meant to reinvent yourself completely. Sable had never told me what she was running from, and I'd never told her about the wolf that lived under my skin, but we recognized each other as survivors.

"You know we'd follow you anywhere, right?" she said finally. "All of us. If you needed to disappear tomorrow, we'd make it happen."

The offer was tempting, so tempting it hurt. But I couldn't drag these people into my war. They'd already given me and Eli more than we deserved.

"I know," I said. "But some fights you have to face alone."

"Bullshit." Sable's voice was fierce. "Family fights together. That's what family means."

Before I could respond, a smaller voice piped up from behind us.

"Mama? I can't sleep,"

Eli had somehow climbed the ladder without either of us hearing, another sign that his supernatural abilities were growing stronger. He padded across the roof in his dinosaur pajamas, completely unafraid of the height.

"Come here, troublemaker," I said, opening my arms. He settled between Sable and me, warm and solid and utterly trusting.

"The moon's really bright tonight," he observed, tilting his head back to study it.

"It is," I agreed, fighting the urge to howl.

"Mama?" His voice was smaller now, uncertain. "Who was my father?"

The question I'd been dreading for months hit like a punch to the gut. Sable tensed beside me, probably sensing the shift in my emotional state.

"Why do you ask, sweetheart?"

"Tommy's son came to visit last week, and he talked about his dad. All the kids at school have dads. I was just wondering..."

I chose my words carefully, hating every lie I was about to tell. "He was just a rider who didn't stay. Some people aren't made for staying in one place."

"Like us?"

"No, baby. We move because we have to. He moved because he wanted to."

Eli nodded solemnly, accepting this explanation like he accepted everything else I told him. But in my heart, I knew the past was catching up. The phone downstairs seemed to burn with its warning, and I could almost feel Darius's presence like a storm on the horizon.

Soon, I would have to decide whether to keep running or finally turn and fight. And this time, I wouldn't just be protecting myself.

I had everything to lose, which meant I had everything to fight for.

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