<h4>Chapter 1134: Chapter 1134</h4>
Jude didn’t rise at first. His breath stayed caught in his throat as he stared at the watchersign above. The word Hurt bled slowly down the stone like it had been etched into flesh instead of rock. The lines shimmered deep red, not the enchanted blue of watcherscript, not the golden light of their rituals. This was something older. Angrier.
Sophie crouched beside him, hand firm on his back. "She’s wounded."
Emma exhaled behind them. "Good."
"No," Rose said quietly. "It means she’s not gone. And now she’s bleeding."
The women gathered around the base of the cliff as the sky began to shift, sunset giving way to that eerie, violet hour that made everything on the ind blur. The trees whispered like they were murmuring to each other, passing secrets through leaves.
Susan stepped forward, her fingers brushing one of the bleeding lines. She pulled her hand back sharply, staring at her skin. "It’s real," she said. "Not just markings. Whatever she is... she’s alive now."
"Or dying," Zoey offered.
Lucy narrowed her eyes. "Can something like her die?"
Sophie rose slowly, helping Jude to his feet. His shirt stuck to the ash lines still glowing on his chest, watcherscript faint but unbroken.
"She’s not dead," he said. "She’s hurt. And that makes her dangerous."
Natalie moved closer, her bare feet whispering over the mossy ground. "So now what? We keep hunting her? Or wait until she heals and tries again?"
Ste crossed her arms, the firelight from their torches flickering over her face. "She’s reacting now. Not in control. We’ve never had that before."
Scarlet walked to the base of the watchersign. Her face, pale from thest encounter, looked sharper now, more focused. "Maybe this is the first time we’ve ever truly fought her instead of just resisting."
Jude nodded. "That’s what scared her."
Sophie nced at him. "Or hurt her."
Silence spread through them again, not heavy this time, but thoughtful. Reflective. La ran her fingers along her corbone, eyes unfocused.
"She used me," she murmured. "Twisted what I felt for Rose. Made it more. Made it hers."
Rose looked at her gently. "You weren’t weak. She used our love as a door."
La’s throat bobbed as she swallowed. "I still want you. That hasn’t changed."
"It shouldn’t," Rose whispered, touching her cheek. "That’s the difference. What we choose, that’s ours. What she forces isn’t."
And with that, they kissed.
Soft, grounding.
Not hungry like before.
Not Elyara’s shadow.
Just them.
When they returned to camp, the mood was quiet but different from before. No one reached for their weapons. No one stared at the woods with suspicion. Instead, there was a raw intimacy between them, a closeness born from surviving something none of them could quite exin.
Sophie sat with Jude on the stone circle, her fingers resting on his thigh, their bodies warm from the fading sun. Around them, the others slowly settled, Zoey resting her head in Emma’sp, Ste leaning into Natalie’s side, Lucy curled beside Susan, Grace whispering something into Scarlet’s ear.
They didn’t talk about watchersigns or rituals.
Instead, they talked about favorite touches. First kisses. The way someone’s fingers had trailed along their hip during a storm. The way someone else’s breath had warmed their chest during sleep.
Desire, but rooted in memory, not enchantment.
It made Jude’s chest ache with something human. Real.
Later that night, Rose came to him.
She stood at the edge of the firelight, her hair wild from the wind, eyes shadowed with reflection.
He rose and met her halfway.
"I keep wondering," she said. "How much of me is still hers?"
"She tried to take all of you," he replied. "But you fought."
"I didn’t fight until it was toote."
"You’re still here."
She stepped closer. Her fingers slid under his shirt, tracing the faint watcherscript still on his chest. "Do you think she’lle back through me again?"
Jude looked into her eyes. "I think you’re stronger now. We all are."
Rose kissed him slowly. Her lips are soft, deliberate. Not iming, not seducing. Just being.
And he kissed her back, with his hands at her waist, his body answering her body in the quiet rhythm of forgiveness.
When they pulled apart, Sophie was there.
She stepped forward without a word, kissed Rose first, then Jude, her hand finding his shoulder, the other wrapping around Rose’s back.
The three of them stood in the firelight, heartbeats syncing.
Their clothes fell away slowly, and they made love not like they were escaping something dark, but like they were returning to something true.
Touch grounded them.
Desire strengthened them.
The fire flickered.
And the ind watched.
Later, as theyy together beneath the stars, breath soft and spent, Jude stared at the canopy above.
"We’ll have to face her again."
Rose nodded. "Soon."
"But maybe this time," Sophie murmured, "we’ll be ready."
As sleep came, the wind returned, not sharp, not cruel.
Just a reminder.
A whisper in the trees.
And in the morning, when they woke and walked to the edge of the camp, the watcher sign above the cliff had changed again.
The blood had dried.
And a new word had appeared beneath it.
Wait.
The new word stared down at them from the cliffside, quiet but weighty: Wait. No blood, no glow, just etched deep, deliberate. Carved into the same rock where Elyara’s wound had bled the night before. It felt different. Less of a threat, more of amand. A pause. A breath drawn before another storm.
Jude stood with Rose and Sophie at the base of the cliff while the rest gathered behind them, quiet and watching. The forest wasn’t moving today, no wind, no twitch of branches or flutter of leaves. Even the river in the distance felt like it had slowed. The entire ind seemed suspended, waiting just like the word told them to.
"What do you think she’s waiting for?" Susan asked from Jude’s left.