Elena’s POV
The trailer door slamd behind with a force that rattled the thin walls. My hands were shaking as I paced the narrow living room, my feet wearing a path in the already threadbare carpet. Every emotion crashed through like waves against rocks - anger, betrayal, hurt, frustration. They all twisted together until I couldn’t tell where one feeling ended and another began.
My mind was a storm of half-ford thoughts, but when the distant sound of music and laughter drifted from the packhouse, one thing beca crystal clear. I couldn’t stay here and watch this celebration. I couldn’t pretend everything was normal when my world had just shattered.
I stord into the bedroom and yanked open the closet door so hard it bounced off the wall. My hands grabbed at clothes, shoving them into the old duffle bag I’d pulled from under the bed. T-shirts, jeans, the few nice dresses I owned - everything went in without care for wrinkles or organization. This wasn’t about being neat. This was about survival.
In the bathroom, I swept toiletries off the counter and into the bag. My toothbrush, shampoo, the cheap makeup I rarely used - all of it disappeared into the growing pile. My reflection caught my eye in the cracked mirror, and I barely recognized the wild-eyed girl staring back at .
When I walked back into the living room, Jett was standing there like he’d materialized out of thin air. My body tensed, ready for a fight.
"Don’t you dare try and talk out of this," I snapped, clutching the duffle bag like a lifeline.
His expression was serious, more serious than I’d ever seen him. "I know that Alpha Marcus spent the night here last night." The words hung heavy in the air between us. "I’ll report it stolen to the Alpha in a few hours."
He held out his car keys, the tal glinting in the dim light.
I stared at him, confused. "You’re helping ?"
"Yeah."
The simple word hit harder than any long speech could have. After everything that had happened, after all the pack politics and loyalty demands, Jett was choosing .
"What about my mother?" The question escaped before I could stop it.
"It would be best if she doesn’t know where you are. So the Alpha can’t take it out on her."
My heart clenched. "I want her to co with ."
Jett shook his head slowly. "She’s never going to leave. Not while your father is buried here."
The truth of his words cut deep because I knew he was right. Every evening after work, mom made the sa pilgrimage. She thought I didn’t notice, but I did. The fresh flowers that appeared at dad’s grave like clockwork, the way she ca ho with dirt under her fingernails and tears in her eyes. She was tethered to this place by grief and love, chains I couldn’t break.
I rembered the phone Damien had given , still tucked away in my pocket. Moving quickly, I went to mom’s room and slipped it under her pillow where only she would find it. It wasn’t much, but it was a lifeline - a way for us to stay connected when everything else fell apart.
My hands shook as I scribbled a note on the back of an old receipt. The words ca out rushed and desperate: "Don’t worry about . I’m getting out of here and I’m going to make sothing of myself." I knew those words would resonate with her, would give her the strength to let go even if it broke her heart.
By the ti I finished writing, Jett had already left. I looked out the window and saw his car parked directly in front of the trailer, keys dangling from my fingers like a promise of freedom.
I threw my bag into the back seat and slid behind the wheel. The engine turned over on the first try, and I took that as a good sign. As I pulled away from the only ho I’d ever known, I didn’t look back. I couldn’t afford to.
The main street stretched before , leading to the highway and whatever lay beyond. Usually, a warrior stood guard at this exit, checking who ca and went. But tonight, the post was empty. Maybe it was fate, or maybe everyone was too distracted by the party to care about one girl leaving. Either way, I wasn’t about to question my luck.
I pressed down on the accelerator and felt the pack territory disappear behind . Mile after mile of highway unrolled like a ribbon, each one taking further from Marcus, from the pack, from everything that had defined my life up until now.
Hours passed in a blur of headlights and road signs. My hands gripped the steering wheel so tightly my knuckles went white, but I didn’t slow down. Distance was safety, and safety was all I had left.
When enough ti had passed that I knew Jett would have reported the car stolen, I started looking for the right spot. The highway had grown quiet and dark, with nothing but woods stretching out on either side.
I pulled over onto the shoulder and sat for a mont, listening to the engine tick as it cooled. This was it - the point of no return.
I stepped out into the cool night air and walked into the tree line until I found what I was looking for: a thick, sturdy branch that would do what I needed it to do. Back at the car, I wedged it against the gas pedal, shifted into gear, and jumped clear as the vehicle lurched forward.
The crash was louder than I’d expected. tal scread against bark as the car slamd into an old oak tree, the front end crumpling like paper. But it wasn’t enough just to stage an accident - it had to look real.
I pulled out the small army knife from my bag and drew it across my palm. The cut was shallow but sufficient, blood welling up dark in the moonlight. I let it drip onto the steering wheel, sared so across the seat, and painted the door handle red.
Standing back to survey my work, I nodded. It looked like soone had been hurt, maybe badly enough that they’d wandered off into the woods, disoriented and bleeding.
Let them think I was dead. Let them think I was lost. It would buy the ti I needed to disappear completely.
With my bag slung over my shoulder, I turned my back on the wreckage and started walking into the darkness, toward whatever future was waiting for .
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