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17kNovel > Goddess Of The Underworld > Wolf v 164

Wolf v 164

    <b>Chapter </b><b>164 </b>


    <b>Envy </b>


    My arms still ached from holding Elliot, from feeling his magic surge through <b>me</b><b>, </b>from watching him do the impossible. My son. My miracle. But I knew, looking at the blood, the bruises<b>, </b>the pale


    faces around me, we couldn’t stay here any longer.


    “We should probably get Elliot back home to his other family first,” I said, my voice steady<b>, </b>though my chest clenched at the thought of letting him go.


    Mchi stepped forward, his Lycan still rumbling under his skin, his eyes sharp but soft when theynded on Elliot. “We’ll take him,” he said. “Julius, Arztec, and I will go back with him so you can get the pup checked. That’s where you need to be now.”


    Arztec made a face, somewhere between a grimace and a joke. “Not exactly keen on traveling by a hell portal, but… alright. I’ll do it. Someone’s got to keep this kid in line anyway.”


    Elliot grinned, wide and mischievous, even with exhaustion stamped across his face. “Good luck.”


    I swallowed augh, leaning down to kiss his forehead. He smelled like smoke and magic, like my baby and not–my–baby all at once. He held out the crystal then, small fingers wrapped tight around its glow.


    “Maybe you should take this with you,” he said, his voice wobbly but earnest. “In case you need it


    again.”


    I curled his fingers back over it. “No,” I whispered. “It’s clearly in the right hands with you. You keep it safe. That’s your piece of me, always.”


    His chin trembled as he nodded, and I pressed one more kiss to his temple before watching Mchi gather him close. Julius and Arztec nked them, three towers of strength around the boy who had just saved us all. My heart splintered as they walked toward the portal Xavier opened, but I forced myself to stay still. Letting go was moreplicated than any battle.


    Zion’s voice cut across the quiet. “We’ll take Felix back to our pack.” He and Theo were already bracing the man between them, his face lined and ashen, his body shaking.


    Felix looked at me once, that same soft smile that had raised me, hidden me, lied for me, and loved me all the same. I nodded back because there were no words left.


    “Quick travel,” Xavier said, his voice sharp as he ripped open another dark seam in <b>the </b><b>air</b>.


    I turned to my mates, my hand instinctively finding the swell of my stomach. “If anyone <b>is </b><b>touching </b>my baby with one of those wand things, with all that technology,” I said firmly, “then it’s <b>going </b><b>to </b><b>be </b>Sharlene. We’re going to Tris too.”


    The four of them nodded without hesitation, stepping in close, ready to move with me. Because <b>that </b>was what we did. We fought. We bled. And then we picked each other up and went where we needed to go.


    Aleisha’s voice rang out behind us, hoarse but steady. “I’ming too. I’m not missing out on seeing my little niece or nephew!”


    I turned to see her, pale but standing, Tommy’s hand on her elbow as if he wasn’t sure she could manage the weight yet. He didn’t look thrilled about the idea, but I saw it in his eyes, the same stubborn fire I’d seen in battle. He would follow her anywhere, even straight into hell.


    “It’s a girl.” Haiden said crossing his arms.


    “Maybe.” I said quietly.


    “Well hopefully we can find out right now.” Mum threw in with a warm smile. Dad looked torn and protective, his wolf still pacing hot and restless under his skin, but when Mum set her jaw, he gave in. They’d go to the ends of the earth for her, for all of us.


    “Fine,” he muttered, voice thick. “But I’m not letting you out of my sight.”


    “Wouldn’t dream of it,” Mum replied, her tone sharper than her body allowed. She clung to his arm, and the sight made my chest ache. Even broken, bleeding, we still chose each other.


    One by one, we gathered close. My mates braced around me. Zion and Theo bent together with Felix between them, carrying his weight as gently as they could. Tommy’s hand never left Aleisha’s back. Dad and Mum leaned into each other.


    Xavier opened the portal, and the ck–red seam split wide, the smell of smoke and iron bleeding through. We stepped. The battlefield blinked away, and wended in the Tris infirmary in one shudder of air and light.


    Sharlene was there, behind her desk, chopsticks halfway to her mouth. The cup of instant noodles in her hand wobbled. She blinked at us–bloodied, bruised, half–dead and fully alive–and nearly dropped her dinner.


    “What in the actual hell?” she sputtered, wide–eyed. “You can’t just-” She stopped, her gaze catching on me, on my belly, and then flicking to the group behind me, battered and wrecked. “Oh gods. What did you people do?”


    I let out a breath, shaky but sure. “We survived. Now you’re going to make sure my baby did too.”


    Sharlene set her noodles down like they were suddenly offensive. “Right. Okay. Triage, then scan.


    Let’s move.”


    The room smelled faintly of antiseptic and something sweeter,vender maybe, a trick Sharlene always used to soften the sharp edges of the clinic. Machines hummed low, steady, the kind of sound that reminded you of hospitals but somehow felt safer here. My people filled the space, my mates close at my sides, and even Felix propped up in the bed, pale but refusing to be anywhere else.


    The nurses moved quickly, efficient hands checking vitals, swabbing blood, stitching cuts. They got Felix settled despite his grumbling protests, then checked over Theo with Zion still glued to his side. Bandages wrapped. Needles pressed. The quiet hum of care filled the air. But then Sharlene turned, gloves already on, eyes flicking to my belly. The rest of the room hushed in an instant.


    “Alright,” she said, voice calm but firm. “Let’s check how this little pup is doing.”


    Iy back, heart hammering harder than it had ever in battle. Xavier slid his hand into mine, grounding me. Noah hovered close, his thumb rubbing circles against the back of my other hand. Haiden’s jaw was tight, like he was ready to break the machine if it didn’t say what we wanted. Levi kept his eyes on Sharlene, cataloguing every move she made like he could read the oue before it came. The cold gel made me flinch, but it was nothingpared to the storm inside me. Sharlene pressed the wand to my skin, moving with practised ease, her eyes scanning the monitor. The silence was unbearable. Every second stretched, every shadow on the screen could have been something.


    “Come on, little one,” I whispered, my voice cracking. “Show us you’re still here.”
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