Chapter 77: What He Cannot Stop
Chapter 77: What He Cannot Stop
Chapter 77
Kael did not know how long he had been running. At some point, it stopped feeling like a choice. His body kept moving even when he tried to slow down, as if something inside him refused to let him stay still for too long. The ground passed beneath him in uneven bursts, each step heavier than it should have been, cracking the earth under the force of it. His breathing was wrong, too fast and too sharp, like it could not keep up with what was building inside him.
The storm had not settled since he lost control. If anything, it had grown worse, pressing against his chest until it felt like it might tear through him at any moment. He tried to stop once, forcing his claws into the ground, dragging them through the dirt to anchor himself. For a second, it worked. His body slowed just enough for him to pull in a breath. Then the storm pushed back, hard, surging through him and forcing him forward again. The resistance only made it worse, like it needed him to keep moving.
That was when he understood something he did not want to admit. He was not the one in control anymore.
He finally slowed when something unfamiliar entered his awareness. It was not loud or threatening. It was simply there. Kael stopped abruptly, his claws digging into the ground hard enough to fracture it beneath him. The storm reacted instantly, surging outward in sharp waves, distorting the air as if preparing to strike. Then he saw her.
She stood a short distance ahead, completely still, as if she had been there long before he arrived. There was nothing in her stance that suggested fear or urgency. She was not preparing to run. She was not preparing to fight. She was just watching him. That alone felt wrong. Everyone else had reacted. They had run or attacked the moment they sensed what he was becoming. She didn’t.
Kael’s chest tightened. "Move," he said, his voice rougher than he intended. "You need to leave." She did not move. She did not even look surprised. She only held his gaze, calm in a way that made something inside him shift uneasily. The storm surged again, reacting to her stillness like it did not understand it.
"Go," he said, more firmly this time.
She tilted her head slightly, studying him in a way that felt too focused, too deliberate, like she was seeing something he could not. That was enough. The storm broke through. Kael moved before he could stop himself, closing the distance in an instant. His claws came down with enough force to split the ground where she stood.
But they never reached her.They stopped just short. Close enough that he could feel the space between them tighten, the air bending under the pressure of everything he was holding back. Kael froze, his arm trembling as the storm pushed harder, trying to force the movement to finish. His eyes locked onto hers. She didn’t flinch.
"You’re not losing control," she said.
Her voice was quiet and steady, like she was stating something simple instead of standing in front of something that could kill her. Kael’s jaw tightened. "You don’t know what you’re talking about," he said, but something in him hesitated anyway. She didn’t look away. "You are," she continued. "You’re just not the one deciding anymore."
The words hit harder than they should have. The storm reacted immediately, surging through him in sharp, aggressive waves. Kael staggered slightly, his claws pressing deeper into the ground as he forced himself not to move forward again. "That’s not what this is," he said, but his voice had lost some of its certainty.
She watched him for another moment, calm and unreadable. "It is," she said. "You can feel it." Kael didn’t answer right away, because he could. That was the part he did not want to admit. This did not feel like his power anymore. It felt like something pushing, guiding, deciding when to move and when to stop.
"Stop talking," he said quietly.
The storm twisted in response. The power shifted again, not just unstable but deliberate. Kael felt it clearly, the part of it that was not his. He moved again, faster, closer, his claws driving forward only to stop again, even closer this time. His breath caught as the pressure between them built, the storm pressing down, demanding release.
"Why aren’t you moving?" he asked, his voice tight.
She met his gaze without hesitation. "Because you haven’t decided to hurt me."
The answer unsettled him more than anything else had. The storm pushed again, stronger this time, trying to force the final movement. His arm shifted, just enough to make the air crack between them. "Stop," he said, though he wasn’t sure if he was speaking to himself anymore. She didn’t react.
"You can feel it," she said softly. "This isn’t just you."
Kael’s chest tightened, because she was right. The realization settled deeper this time, heavier and impossible to ignore. His claws trembled, then slowly, he pulled back.
The storm surged violently in response, snapping against him like it was punishing the resistance. Kael stepped back anyway. Then another step. His breathing was uneven, his control fragile, but this time he did not let it drag him forward again.
"You shouldn’t be here," he said.
She studied him for a moment. "Neither should you."
The storm shifted again, not exploding, not calm, but slower. That was new. Kael felt it immediately. "What did you do?" he asked. "Nothing," she said. "That doesn’t just happen." She held his gaze. "It does when you stop fighting it the wrong way."
Kael frowned slightly. "That doesn’t make sense."
"It will."
The storm moved again, but it didn’t surge. It stayed, heavy and quiet, as if it was waiting. And for the first time since everything had started, Kael realized something that unsettled him more than losing control ever had.
It wasn’t just reacting anymore.It was listening."Who are you?" he asked.
She paused, then answered simply. "Mira." Kael watched her carefully. "Mira what?"
"Mira Riley."
The name felt ordinary. But nothing about this moment was. Kael took another step back, not because he was forced to, but because he chose to. "This isn’t safe," he said. "I know." "That’s not what I meant." "I know that too." He exhaled slowly, the storm still shifting at the edges but no longer tearing through him the same way.
"You should still leave."
Mira didn’t move. "Not yet."
The storm settled again, heavy and quiet, as if it was watching them both. And for the first time, Kael understood something he could not ignore.
This was not just about him anymore.
Far away, Ariana slowed.Something shifted around her, faint but enough to make her stop completely. She drew in a breath, her chest tightening as she tried to understand what she was feeling. It was not the bond. That was still gone. But this was connected to him. It was different and unfamiliar.And not alone.
Ariana’s eyes lifted slowly, her expression tightening as the realization settled in. Because for the first time since Kael disappeared... it felt like there was someone else standing beside him.
Ariana slowed without meaning to. The feeling didn’t fade. It sharpened instead, pulling tighter in her chest, not like something calling to her, but like something shifting just out of reach. Her fingers curled slightly as she focused on it, trying to understand what had changed. It wasn’t just Kael anymore. There was something else there, something steady where he wasn’t, something that didn’t feel like a threat but didn’t feel safe either.
Her breathing steadied as the realization settled deeper. He wasn’t alone. That was what felt wrong. Not because he had found someone, but because whatever was with him wasn’t being pushed away. It was staying. And Kael... Kael wasn’t fighting it the way he had been before.
Ariana lifted her head, her expression tightening with something sharper than fear. "Then I’m already too late," she said quietly. But she didn’t step back. If anything, her resolve settled further. Because whatever had found him first... she wasn’t going to let it be the one that kept him.
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