Sera did not slow down. She didn’t look back.
Her boots whispered across the frozen flats, Luci tucked against her ribs like a secret, and the night seed to make room for her.
It was like the snow knew her rhythm. Like the ice bent to her weight. Alexei felt the distance stretching between them and laughed.
"Catch if you can," she had said.
He would.
He lengthened his stride, each step faster than the last.
His body should have fought him. He should have felt his lungs burning, muscles protesting, boots sliding...but none of that ca.
Instead, the air ran smoother, the ground steadier. The faster he went, the more right it felt.
Psycho’s voice purred in his skull, pleased. Now you understand. This is not running. This is rembering.
The world blurred, but his vision did not.
Blackness parted for him like a curtain. He saw the gloss of wind-hardened ice before his boots found it. He saw the shift of snowdrifts in the distance, where the surface dipped shallow over hidden cracks.
He even saw the tiny paw prints left by so scavenger before the last storm—prints already turning brittle with frost.
He saw everything.
Sera darted left, and he mirrored the motion without thinking. His hip dropped, his boot angled, his center adjusted so precisely that it felt less like reflex and more like choreography written into his bones. He didn’t slip. He didn’t stumble. He just moved.
This is freedom, Psycho whispered. This is the leash breaking in your chest. You were never ant to shuffle in the dark. You were ant to cut through it like a blade.
Alexei laughed aloud this ti, the sound torn from his throat without permission. The cold caught it and carried it forward, as though even the night wanted to hear.
Sera glanced back. Her hair stread pale against the dark, her profile lit faintly by the reflection of the ice. She did not smile, but her eyes narrowed in approval before she looked forward again. That was all the permission he needed.
He pressed harder. His boots struck and lifted, struck and lifted, and the world could not keep up with him. The city shrank behind them, the leaning tower sulked farther away, until all that existed was her ahead of him and the path between.
He gained.
One stride. Two. Three.
He ca close enough to feel the disturbance her body left in the air, close enough to hear the dire wolf’s small huffs against her chest. The pup slled warm, alive, the scent cutting like honey through the frozen air.
And then she spun.
It was not a stumble or a pause—it was a dancer’s turn on the ice, smooth and perfect. She faced him in an instant, her weight balanced, her boots catching without sliding. Her laughter cut the night like a blade.
The sound stopped him harder than any wall could have.
It wasn’t mocking. It wasn’t warning. It was sharp, bright, alive. He felt it slam into his ribs and lodge there. He knew he would carry that laugh in his chest like a heartbeat that didn’t belong to him.
She didn’t speak. She didn’t have to.
Alexei realized then that he was obsessed. Not in the careless way a man might be with a woman’s face or her body. This was deeper, bone-deep, marrow-deep. It was like his heart had left his chest and was running ahead of him in hers, and the only way to keep living was to chase it.
He wanted to fall to his knees. He wanted to throw himself into the abyss she had nad and see what ca out the other side.
Instead, he grinned, sharp and wide, and lunged forward again.
Sera’s eyes glead. She shifted Luci to one arm and raised her chin. "Better," she called. Her voice carried, steady and strong.
And then she was gone again, a blur of movent slicing through the dark.
Alexei followed.
This ti he didn’t hold back.
He let Psycho lean through him, not as a puppeteer, but as a partner.
The creature inside didn’t drag him—it lifted him. His lungs opened wider. His legs churned faster. His body stopped feeling like separate parts and fused into one motion, seamless and perfect.
He was free.
The leash wasn’t just slipping. It was gone.
See? Psycho crooned. There is nothing to fear in us. You thought being human was the only way to live. But this? This is living. You were born for this. You were built to run.
The flats blurred. He could have sprinted across them forever. His muscles did not tire. His feet did not ache. Even the cold couldn’t touch him. It licked at his skin like an old friend, a reminder, not a threat.
And still, he kept her in sight.
Sera was faster than anything human, but she wasn’t trying to lose him. She wanted him to chase. She wanted to test him. She wanted to see if he would break.
He wouldn’t.
He would prove it with every stride.
Snow whirled as the wind caught their movent, a ghost of a storm trying and failing to catch them. The sound of their boots hamred against the ice, a rhythm so sharp it felt like the world’s oldest drum.
Sera slowed just enough for him to catch her shoulder. He nearly crashed into her but shifted, weight rolling, balance clean. For a heartbeat they were side by side, her eyes locked on his.
She didn’t smile.
But her pupils widened, and that was better than any smile.
It was acknowledgnt.
It was belonging.
It was a promise.
Alexei’s chest ached, but not from the run. From her. From this. From the realization that he would follow her anywhere, through any abyss, into any hunt. Not because he was leashed. Because she had shown him the leash didn’t matter.
They moved together a few strides longer, matched, even, whole. The world blurred around them. Psycho was silent for once, humming instead of speaking, satisfied.
And then Sera broke off again, veering sharp to the right. The pup wriggled in excitent, his ears pricked, nose twitching.
He had caught sothing.
Sera’s eyes flicked to Alexei.
"Ready for so fun?"
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