Seraphina's Revenge: A Rebirth In The Apocalypse Novel

Chapter 548: The Road To Hell



Chapter 548: The Road To Hell

Zubair noticed the road first because the truck stopped fighting him.

The steering loosened under his hands. The suspension stopped correcting for cracks that should have been there. The constant vibration that lived in the wheel eased until he realized he hadn’t adjusted his grip in over a minute.

That was wrong.

Roads like this never got easier on their own and that made his hands tighten.

A smooth road in a world like this didn’t mean safety. It meant something had changed ahead of them. It meant the land had been cleared or claimed or stripped of obstacles by something that didn’t care whether humans survived the process.

But he didn’t say anything yet. He just drove and watched.

Sera sat behind him, still in Aerenyx’s arms since he had still refused to let her go. She was functional, she was present, and she was still carrying damage she wasn’t supposed to carry.

Zubair could deal with enemies. He could deal with politics. He could deal with blood and fire and the kind of violence that didn’t leave room for regret.

He didn’t like dealing with rules that stopped working.

The road ahead rolled between trees and broken brush, the kind of overgrowth that usually crept into the asphalt like it wanted to reclaim everything humans had built. The last time they had been out here, thorns had scraped the underside of the truck and branches had snagged the mirror like hands trying to hold them back.

Now, the brambles were retreating.

The worst part was that Zubair didn’t imagine it. He watched it happen.

A wall of thorns that had been leaning toward the road shifted away as they approached, not snapping back like something startled, but pulling inward like it had been trained. The tips of the thorns angled down, folding into their own mass, hiding the sharp parts from the open air.

A tumbleweed rolled toward the road and then veered, drifting in a wide arc as if there was an invisible line it refused to cross.

Zubair slowed down even more. Not because he wanted to but because his instincts told him that when prey cleared a path for you, it wasn’t because you were welcome. It was because the wrong thing was coming and you were just caught in the way.

Psycho noticed the speed change and leaned forward slightly, eyes bright with restless interest. "Why are we crawling," he asked, sounding offended by the concept of patience.

Zubair kept his eyes on the road. "Because it’s too quiet," he replied.

Psycho laughed softly. "Quiet is good. Quiet means you’re not making a mess."

"That’s not what quiet means," Zubair said, and his voice stayed flat because he didn’t want to feed the tension. "After all, the road to Hell is paved with good intentions." He waved his hand forward to the road fixing itself. "And these are good intentions."

Aerenyx shifted behind him. Zubair didn’t need to look to know he’d repositioned Sera automatically, keeping her weight supported as the truck dipped through a shallow curve. The movement was careful, controlled, protective in a way Aerenyx would deny if anyone called it that.

Sera didn’t speak, but Zubair could feel her awareness in the back seat like heat through glass. Awake. Listening. Not interfering.

That was almost worse.

If she’d been unconscious, he could blame the road’s behavior on the fact that they were exposed and limping. He could tell himself the world was simply reacting to weakness.

But she was awake now.

And the road was smoothing itself out like it had been waiting for her to open her eyes.

Zubair’s jaw tightened as another patch of broken asphalt corrected itself under their tires. The pothole didn’t vanish in a flash of magic. It wasn’t dramatic. The edges simply settled. Loose stone shifted and packed down, leveling the dip until the suspension didn’t have to work.

The truck rolled over it as if it had never been there.

Zubair did not like that.

He didn’t like anything that changed the environment without visible cause.

He’d spent his entire life learning the difference between real safety and manufactured safety. He knew what it looked like when someone wanted you to feel comfortable so you would stop scanning.

He knew the shape of traps.

"Do you see that," he said quietly, not to Sera, not to Psycho, but to the only other man in the truck whose mind ran on structure.

Aerenyx’s answer came without delay. "Yes."

"What is it," Psycho asked, sounding irritated that they were having a conversation without him.

Zubair didn’t look back. "The brush is pulling away from the road."

Psycho made a pleased noise. "Oh," he said. "So it’s finally learning."

Zubair’s fingers flexed against the steering wheel. "Learning what."

"That she’s awake," Psycho replied simply, like it was obvious.

The words landed in Zubair’s chest hard enough to make him breathe a little shallower.

He hated that Psycho said it like a compliment. He hated that it made sense.

Sera had always been other. That wasn’t new. She had always been the thing that kept them alive when the world ended. She had always walked through danger like danger needed permission to touch her.

The men around her didn’t care what title the Fae tried to pin on her. Lost Daughter, queen, threat, heir. It was noise. Labels. Politics. The kind of words people used when they were trying to control something they didn’t understand.

To Zubair, she was simpler and harder than all of that.

She was the point.

Everything else was orbit.

Zubair glanced into the rearview mirror just long enough to catch the edge of her face. Her eyes were open, black and steady, her expression calm in the way it got when she wasn’t wasting energy. She looked tired in a way she would never admit, but she didn’t look scared.

And she wasn’t doing anything.

She didn’t lift a hand or issued a command. She didn’t even send out some type of power that she never knew she had. She was just sitting there, breathing, existing.

And the road was rearranging itself around her like that existence mattered more than the world’s normal rules.

Zubair’s creature stirred, not with hunger, not with rage, but with a cold kind of recognition.

This is not human land.

He didn’t say it out loud. Everyone in the truck already knew that. They had crossed into Seelie territory hours ago and the air had tasted different ever since, like the world had a tighter spine.

But it wasn’t the Seelie that worried him.

It was the fact that the territory itself was responding like it recognized a hierarchy.

And Sera was at the top of it.

Zubair focused back on the road and ran through options the way he always did when something didn’t make sense.

This wasn’t someone working from a distance to set up an ambush. This was the territory itself making a decision.

Zubair’s throat tightened as he realized what that decision probably was.

This isn’t welcome.

This is accommodation.

Accommodation meant expectation. It meant they were being guided. It meant someone wanted them to arrive intact.

He didn’t like arriving intact when he didn’t know who had arranged it.

Psycho shifted again, restless. "I don’t like this," he said, and that was rare enough to make Zubair’s attention flick toward him.

"You don’t like anything that doesn’t bleed," Zubair replied, trying to play down his own uneasiness.

Psycho bared his teeth in something that wasn’t a smile. "I don’t like when the world acts polite," he corrected. "It makes me suspicious."

Zubair almost agreed with him. Instead he said, "Stay ready."

Psycho’s eyes brightened. "Always."

Aerenyx’s voice came low from the back seat. "You are worried about a larger threat."

Zubair didn’t deny it. "If everything is clearing out of our way, it’s because something doesn’t want to be near us," he said. "Or because something wants us to keep moving."

"And which do you believe," Aerenyx asked.

Zubair exhaled through his nose. "Both."

Silence settled for a few seconds, not comfortable, but contained.

Sera finally spoke, her voice steady and quiet from behind him. "You’re thinking like a human soldier," she said.

Zubair’s grip tightened. "That’s because I am one."

"And it’s why you keep us alive," Sera replied.

The simple statement hit him harder than any praise ever could have. Not because it was emotional. Because it was fact. Because she saw him the way he saw her—necessary, not decorative.

Zubair kept his eyes forward. "You’re not doing this," he said, and it wasn’t a question.

Sera didn’t answer immediately. When she did, it was calm. "No."

That was all.

No explanation. No story. No attempt to make him feel better.

Just truth.

Zubair’s mind ran one step ahead as the trees thinned and the road widened in a way that felt too deliberate to be natural. The truck rolled forward without resistance, the engine steady, the tires humming smooth over ground that should have been broken.

He saw the faint line of a structures in the distance—too far to make out details, but enough to confirm they were approaching something built, something old.

Perdition was close.

Zubair’s shoulders stayed tight as he drove, every part of him braced for the moment the road stopped being kind.

Because kindness like this wasn’t a gift.

It was a message.

And the only question Zubair cared about was who had sent it—and what they expected Sera to do when she arrived.


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