14 Chapter 14 No Choice Left
“No.” The word escaped my lips like a prayer, desperate and broken.
“Don’t move,” he commanded. “I’m closer than you think.”
The deep rumble of a powerful engine pulling into the parking lot below. Gravel crunched and scattered under heavy tires.
The line went dead.
There never had been.
Time crawled by with agonizing slowness. Then I heard it.
This creature speaking to me couldn’t be the man I had lived with for three years. The Julian I knew was proud and sometimes harsh, but never cruel. Never evil. Yet there was no deception in his voice now, only cold fury and
absolute resolve.
My father was all I had left. The only family that mattered. If something happened to him because of me, I would never survive it.
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“I had reasons,” I managed to choke out, my voice cracking under the weight of emotion. “You can’t do this. This isn’t who you are. Please.”
I gave him the motel name and room number, each word feeling like another nail in my coffin.
Before I could even process what was happening, he spoke words that sent my world crashing down around me.
The sound that ripped from my throat was barely human. This was my fault. Every bit of this nightmare was because of my choices. I thought leaving would protect everyone I loved, but instead I had painted a target on the most important person in my world.
“You have to come back, sweetheart,” he sobbed, each word tearing at my soul. “He’s going to hurt me. He said… he said he’ll kill me if you don’t come
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home.”
14 Chapter 14 No Choice Left
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“Reasons?” His tone could have frozen fire itself. “Do you honestly think I care about your reasons after what you put me through? After the shame you brought on both our families?”
How had I been so blind? I had trusted this man with my safety, if not my heart. How had I missed this darkness lurking beneath his surface?
“Since you seem to think I’m bluffing,” he cut me off, his voice dropping to a whisper that made my skin crawl, “maybe you should hear this from someone else.”
There wasn’t anything in existence I wouldn’t sacrifice for my father’s safety.
The voice that came through the speaker made my blood freeze in my veins. This was not who I expected. This was the last person I wanted to hear from.
One car door slammed shut with finality.
The doorknob began to turn with mechanical precision.
Seraphina’s POV
Silence stretched between us like a blade. I wiped the tears from my cheeks with shaking hands, even though he couldn’t see my breakdown. My breath came in ragged gasps as the reality of my situation crashed over me.
“Please,” I begged, tears streaming down my face as I spoke to Julian. “Let him go. You know he had nothing to do with this. He’s innocent in all of this. Please, I’m begging you.”
Against every rational thought, I lifted the phone to my ear.
The stale air in this rundown motel room clung to my skin like a second layer of despair. I perched on the edge of a bed that had seen better decades, its springs groaning under even my slight frame. Yellowed wallpaper peeled at the corners, and the window refused to shut completely, letting in a constant draft that made the thin curtains flutter. This was supposed to be my sanctuary, my escape from everything that had gone wrong. But safety was
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14 Chapter 14 No Choice Left
“Seraphina?” My father’s voice was broken, strangled with tears and terror. He sounded like a man who had stared death in the face and seen his own reflection.
The shrill ring of my phone shattered the oppressive silence.
Then another.
I prayed he would understand, would see the logic in what I had done.
“Why?” The question tore from my chest like a physical wound. “Why do you need me back? We were both trapped in this arrangement. I gave you freedom to find someone you actually love. I know how much your parents’ approval means to you. I thought I was doing the right thing for both of us.”
The accusation hit me like a physical blow. I knew my actions had consequences, but I never imagined they would lead to this. The man on the other end of the line sounded like a stranger wearing Julian’s voice.
“Unfortunately,” Julian’s voice returned, cold as winter stone, “that’s not how this works. You have exactly ten seconds to decide. If this call ends, I make the choice for you. And you won’t like my decision.”
“I’ll do it,” I whispered, the words tasting like poison. “I’ll do whatever you want. Just don’t hurt him. Please.”
“Hello?”
My hands trembled as I stared at the device. I had been so careful, so sure that taking it was the right choice despite my father’s protests. Now that terrible instinct in my chest, the one that had kept me alive this long, screamed that answering would change everything. But what if someone needed help? What if there was an emergency?
I looked around this pathetic excuse for a room that was supposed to represent my freedom. Peeling paint, stained carpet, the constant drip of a broken faucet. I had run through the forest for hours after leaving my father’s cabin, my wolf form crashing through undergrowth in blind panic. This tiny human town was supposed to be my invisibility cloak, my chance to
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