Chapter 8 Chapter 8 — Caught Between Instinct and Choice
Ayla's POV
I felt them before I saw them.
Their presence pushed through the trees ahead of them—dominant, heavy, impossible to ignore. I pressed myself against the rough bark of the old birch and stayed completely still.
"That's interesting," I thought. "I always used to quiver under Kael's aura."
"Because you're their equal now," Tala said, quiet satisfaction threading through her voice. "Welcome to the big leagues, darling."
My breath slowed as I listened. The forest had gone quieter the moment they entered it—that particular stillness that meant everything around me was paying attention.
"They stopped," I thought, surprised. "Why would they stop? That's not like them at all."
"Because they're not complete idiots," Tala replied. "Just close."
My heart pounded harder. They were far too close for my liking. The forest suddenly felt smaller, tighter, like it was closing in around me—their presence pressing in from every direction at once. Suffocating me.
A branch snapped somewhere ahead. Soft. Controlled. Not careless.
"That was intentional," I said, narrowing my eyes. "They usually move in silence."
"They're tracking you," Tala replied. "And announcing it. Very dramatic. Typical Alpha behavior."
"They're not rushing," I noted, my voice steadier than I felt.
"No," Tala said. "They're hunting smart. Shocking, I know."
That made it worse somehow. I felt like prey, and the feeling was insulting enough to make my fingers curl harder into the bark until it hurt.
I should have already been gone.
"Too late for that," Tala said. "The bond is basically a homing signal. You could cross three territories and they'd still find you. Might as well have worn a neon sign."
A cold certainty settled in my chest. Running wasn't going to solve anything. Not while I was still in their territory. Not while the bond hummed between us like something that had already decided the outcome regardless of what I wanted.
"Step out."
Kael's voice cut through the trees, and my heart slammed hard against my ribs.
"He sounds different from your memories," Tala said. "Maybe he grew a conscience overnight. I wouldn't bet on it though."
"Still commanding," I thought back. Always commanding.
"Come out, Ayla," he called again.
My name. My actual name—not stray and not mute. It stirred something in my chest that I didn't want stirred, and I pressed myself closer to the trunk to steady my breathing.
"They know it's you," Tala said quietly. "You can't hide from them. Not here. Believe me, I'd give you points for effort, though."
I knew that. I closed my eyes briefly.
Memories moved through me without permission—laughter and cruelty and years of being looked straight through like I wasn't worth the effort of seeing. Cold words. Cold eyes. A life spent making myself as small and invisible as possible just to survive being in the same spaces as them.
"I'm not going out there," I decided. "I'm not walking out to them."
"You're not afraid of them," Tala said. "Not anymore. You're afraid of what happens if you actually stand your ground. Which is an entirely different problem."
"I am terrified," I argued.
"No," she said calmly. "You're afraid of what happens if you don't run. There's a difference."
"I don't want the bond," I said flatly.
"That's not entirely your choice," she replied. "Annoying, I know. Take it up with the Moon Goddess."
"It is my choice," I insisted. "I walked away last night. I can do it again."
"You can try," she said, her sarcasm softening just slightly. "But the bond doesn't negotiate. It doesn't care about your feelings or your opinion. It just is."
"Then what am I supposed to do?" I asked, frustration rising.
"Face it," Tala said simply. "Preferably with more style than last time."
The words settled and left a bitter taste in my mouth.
I peeked past the edge of the trunk.
They were closer than I'd expected.
Kael at the front—always the front. His jaw was set and tense, but his eyes weren't cold the way I was used to. They looked almost worried.
Ryker stood on his right. He was too tense, his hands clenched at his sides and body coiled tight, like he was losing a battle with himself and knew it.
Soren is to Kael's left, quiet and almost relaxed. Watching everything. Missing nothing.
I pulled back quickly before any of them could spot me.
"They're right there," I whispered, panic flickering through me. "They're right there."
"I know," Tala said. "Shall I start humming something dramatic? The Jaws theme, perhaps?"
"They're not leaving," I said.
"No," she replied. "They came for you. They're not going anywhere."
I swallowed hard.
"I don't trust them," I said. That was the one thing I was absolutely certain of. Years of torment had a way of making that decision very easy.
"You don't have to," Tala said. "But you can't ignore them either. Not forever."
"I can try," I thought stubbornly.
"You can," she agreed. "But I promise, that's only going to end badly. I'll be right here watching it go badly, though. I support your right to make questionable life choices."
I looked one more time—really looked.
Kael's jaw is tight, but his eyes are uncertain.
Ryker fighting himself.
Soren waited with the patience of someone who had always been willing to let things come to him.
"I don't know how to face them," I admitted honestly.
"Then don't face them as the girl they remember," Tala said. "That girl is gone. You're not a doormat anymore. You're at least a rug with attitude now."
Something settled inside me at that.
"Face them as who you are now," she continued. "Show them you won't accept what they gave you before. I'll heckle from the sidelines if needed."
I almost smiled.
"They hurt me," I said.
"I know," Tala said, and for once there was no sharpness in it. "And you don't have to forgive that. Not today. Not ever if you don't want to. I'll even hold a grudge on your behalf. I'm excellent at grudges."
"I won't forget it," I said.
"You shouldn't," she replied. "I endorse the full grudge package. But don't let it make you run either. Running gives them power over you. Standing still takes it back."
Something shifted inside me—slow and certain and quiet.
"I won't run," I said.
"Good," Tala said. "Now go. Try not to trip on the way out."
I pulled in a slow breath. Then another. Their scents seeped in through the cold air, and somehow my heart began to calm.
And I stepped out from behind the tree.
The cold air hit me immediately, and so did their gazes.
All three of them locked onto me at once, and the bond pulled taut between us—sharp, undeniable, and deeply inconvenient.
Nobody moved for a moment.
I stood my ground and held their eyes, anger simmering steadily just beneath the surface. Not the quiet buried kind I'd spent years swallowing. Something steadier than that. Something that didn't flinch.
"They can feel your anger," Tala said, something satisfied in her voice. "About time."
My heart stuttered, but I didn't step back. Didn't run. Just stood there in the cold and let them look—really look—for what felt like the first time.
Kael's gaze locked onto mine.
Ryker went completely still.
Soren watched with that quiet intensity he carried everywhere.
And for the first time in as long as I could remember, none of them looked through me.
They were looking straight at me—like I was something worth seeing.
