Chapter 130 The Choice
Alexander was still talking.
Aria stopped listening.
Not because she had drifted. Not because his voice had faded.
Because she had finished the calculation he did not know she was running, and the answer had settled into place with a clarity that made the rest of his words irrelevant.
“You’re hesitating,” Alexander said smoothly. “That surprises me. I expected more decisiveness from you.”
She did not look at him.
She could not give him what he wanted.
Not because of pride. Not because of strategy.
Because if she handed over her gift and walked out of here diminished and breathing, Kane would never forgive himself for it.
She felt his heartbeat through the bond. Labored. Skipping every third beat. Failing in a rhythm that was starting to fall apart.
And because there was another way.
She had known it for the last ninety seconds.
She had been refusing to look at it directly, because looking at it meant accepting what it would cost.
Now she looked.
The mate bond was a channel.
She had always used it partially, carefully, the way you open a valve by degrees when you are not sure what pressure waits behind it. She had let Kane in by increments. Given through it in controlled amounts. Never everything.
Everything meant no reserve.
Everything meant nothing left to retreat into.
And everything might not leave enough behind to keep her standing afterward.
She understood that.
She moved anyway.
Kane was half conscious, braced on one arm. His eyes flickered when she reached him.
“Aria,” he rasped. “No. Don’t.”
She slid an arm around his waist and pulled him upright, his back against her chest. He was heavier than he should have been. Or maybe she was already lighter.
“What are you doing?” Alexander asked. The patience had left his voice.
She pressed both palms flat against Kane’s sternum.
His skin was cold.
Under her hands, his heart stuttered.
The black energy moved inside him like something deliberate, tracing his veins toward the center.
“Stop,” Alexander said sharply. He stood.
Kane’s hands came up weakly, gripping her wrists. “You can’t,” he breathed. “It’ll drain you.”
“I know,” she said quietly.
She closed her eyes.
She had accepted the bond in pieces. Said yes and meant it, but kept the hinge within reach. Not from distrust. From survival. From years of knowing that what you open yourself to fully can empty you completely.
She let go of the hinge.
The bond opened.
It was not silver light the way she had used it in combat. Not shaped. Not directed.
It was everything.
Her life force moved through her hands and into him without restraint. No management. No filtering. Just release.
Kane gasped, a raw sound torn from somewhere deep.
“Aria,” he said, and there was fear in it now. “Close it. Close it.”
She could not.
The current surged.
She felt it travel through him. Felt it collide with the black energy at his core.
The resistance was immediate. Cold. Intentional.
She gave more.
Not with force. With volume.
The black energy fractured where the light touched it. Not explosively. In splinters. Cracks spreading outward from each point of contact.
Alexander crossed the room.
“No,” he said.
His hand clamped around her arm.
The surge that answered the contact was not controlled. Silver flared outward in a violent arc and threw him back three feet. He struck the edge of the table and caught himself, silver burns searing across his palm.
He hissed something under his breath, a word she did not recognize. A working.
The pressure inside Kane spiked.
She tasted iron.
“Aria,” Kane said again, stronger now. “Look at me.”
She did not open her eyes.
The black energy resisted, recoiled, reformed.
She poured more of herself into the channel.
Her pulse accelerated, then thinned. A ringing started in her ears. Heat drained from her limbs, replaced by a spreading cold that made her fingers numb.
Still she did not stop.
The fractures widened.
The cold thing inside him began to dissolve at the edges, not dramatically, not all at once, but with inevitability. Ice meeting a shift in temperature.
Kane’s heartbeat stuttered.
Then it caught.
The skipped rhythm evened out beneath her palms. Weak but steady. Damaged but no longer collapsing.
The black energy broke.
She felt the exact moment through the bond. A snapping release. A recoil that did not reform.
And then she felt Kane.
Not just his body. Him.
Returning from the edge of something that did not have a name.
His hands tightened over hers.
“Aria.”
His voice was intact.
It was his.
Relief hit her with a force that nearly stole her breath.
Her legs gave out.
The silver vanished.
Not dimmed. Not reduced.
Gone.
She reached for the place inside her that always answered and found nothing. Not exhaustion. Not depletion.
Absence.
A hollow space where something had been.
Her vision blurred at the edges. The room tilted. A cold sweat broke across her skin and she shivered once, sharply.
She was still breathing.
She cataloged that distantly.
Still here.
Barely.
Kane turned, catching her before she hit the floor. He lowered with her, pulling her against him.
“Stay with me,” he said urgently. “Aria, look at me.”
She forced her eyes open.
His heartbeat was steady against her cheek.
“I’m here,” she whispered. Her voice felt like it belonged to someone else.
From the corridor, the reinforced door exploded inward with a crack like a gunshot.
Marcus entered first, three wolves behind him, fanning out instinctively.
He took in the room in a single sweep.
Kane on the floor, holding her.
Alexander at the table, silver burns striping his hands.
“What happened?” Marcus demanded.
“She broke it,” Kane said without looking away from Alexander.
Alexander straightened slowly.
There was something on his face that was not anger.
It was calculation collapsing. Years of construction unraveling in real time.
“You reckless girl,” he said quietly to Aria. “Do you have any idea what you’ve done?”
“She saved me,” Kane replied.
The black energy began to gather again at Alexander’s palms. Slower this time. Thinner.
The wolves shifted forward.
Marcus’s voice dropped. “Try it.”
Kane rose carefully, lifting Aria with him as if she weighed nothing. He positioned himself between her and Alexander.
“Don’t,” Kane said.
He did not raise his voice.
He did not need to.
Alexander looked at him.
Then at Aria, pale in his arms.
Then at the four wolves blocking every exit.
He glanced down at his hands, at the darkness struggling to form.
For a moment, the room held its breath.
Then the black dissolved.