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Revenge to the Alpha Mate - Chapter 236

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  3. Revenge to the Alpha Mate
  4. Chapter 236 - Chapter 236: Chapter 236
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Chapter 236: Chapter 236
Lily’s Perspective

The chaotic glow of emergency lights and the rising black smudge of smoke on the interstate grew smaller and smaller in the distance, finally swallowed by the rolling horizon. Xavier guided the SUV down an exit ramp, turning onto a narrow country road lined with overgrown weeds and sprawling oak trees. The world went abruptly quiet, the silence filled only by the steady shush of tires on asphalt and the subdued breathing of the five of us.

Silence settled over the cabin like a heavy, damp blanket.

My knuckles ached, bone-white from gripping the steering wheel. The order to turn around and retreat had come from my mouth, but each word had felt like a barbed hook being dragged from my throat.

I knew it was right… we’d had no real choice. I was the leader of this team. The safety of everyone in this vehicle, the very survival of our entire pack, rested on my shoulders.

But goddamn, it felt like shit. It felt like leaving a comrade on the battlefield and walking away, even if that comrade had become a monster. The tight line of Jacob’s jaw, the fragile light in Celena’s eyes, and the small, stubborn, foolish hope for Brett that still lived in a dark corner of my own heart—all of it twisted my stomach into hard, painful knots.

The deep thrum of helicopter rotors approached from above, flying low. I glanced at the sky in the rearview mirror. Two police-marked choppers, like giant metal dragonflies, skimmed the treetops, flying with grim purpose toward the chaos we’d just left behind. Their red and blue lights strobed against the twilight grey-blue sky, cold and official. They didn’t spare a glance for our nondescript SUV. Their target was the bigger mess, the battlefield that had spiraled out of control.

It confirmed everything Ethan had said. This had truly blown up, big enough to warrant air support. Leaving was the right call. We had to vanish.

We drove in heavy silence for several more minutes, winding further down back roads, away from the main arteries, away from everything. Isolated ranches and farmhouses began to dot the landscape, smoke curling peacefully from chimneys—a world of such normal calm it felt alien. That very peace only made the silence inside our vehicle feel deafening.

It was Celena who finally broke it.

Her voice was soft, a little raw, but remarkably clear and calm as it came from the back seat.

“We should go home.”

I caught her eye in the rearview mirror. She had lifted her head from Jacob’s shoulder, sitting up straight. Tear tracks still marked her cheeks, but her gaze was no longer distant. It was focused on the peaceful fields rushing past the window. She reached over and gently covered Jacob’s clenched fist with her hand.

“It was the right choice,” she continued, speaking more to herself, to all of us. “Jacob was right. Lily, you were right. We did what we could. I… I think I’m letting it go.”

There was the faintest tremor in her voice when she said “letting it go,” but it steadied quickly.

My throat tightened. What was I supposed to say? Offer some empty platitude about Brett understanding? Or simply agree and try to force this chapter closed? Looking at her profile in the mirror, the careful mask of composure she wore, I knew the truth as well as I knew my own reflection. Her ‘letting go’ was like pressing a white-hot blade into your own chest and holding your breath so you wouldn’t scream. It was the same for me.

We all knew, rationally, that the thing that could throw men like ragdolls, dodge bullets, and rip through chain-link fences was not Brett. Brett had been a skilled hunter, a warm older brother, but he had been human. That thing up there was a monster wearing his skin.

But, damn it all, reason was one thing. There was always that dark, tenacious little corner of the heart that whispered: What if? What if some shred of Brett’s consciousness was still trapped deep inside that shell, watching it all, screaming in silent agony? What if by walking away, we were snuffing out his last, faint hope of rescue?

That tiny, stupid hope was a poison thorn lodged in the heart of everyone who knew. Including me.

Just as the suffocating silence threatened to reclaim the cabin, my phone buzzed again. The specific vibration pattern told me who it was instantly. Ethan.

I answered, putting it on speaker. They all needed to hear this. We all needed the authority of his voice to cement the necessity of our retreat.

“Lily.” Ethan’s voice came through the speaker, carrying the slight fuzz of distance and an undertone of unmasked fatigue. But beneath the weariness, the warmth and concern that were for me alone—his wife, his mate, his Alpha, Aurora’s father—came through clearly. Just hearing it loosened the tight coil of my nerves by one tiny degree.

“Ethan,” I replied, fighting to keep my own voice level. “We’ve disengaged as ordered. On back roads now, well clear of the engagement zone. All present and accounted for.” The quick report was habit, and a way to reassure him.

“Good.” He sounded relieved, the satisfaction genuine. “Glad to hear you’re clear of that mess. Smart call.”

He paused, and his tone shifted, becoming lower, graver, as he began to relay the intelligence he’d gathered. “The situation on site… is bad. The firefight was intense, escalated way beyond projections. The National Guard has full operational control. At least four helicopters in the air, plus armored personnel carriers on the ground. They’ve cordoned off the entire area.”

My heart sank a little further. APCs? This was far beyond standard police response.

“But,” Ethan’s tone held a note of stark disbelief, “the target—the entity occupying Brett’s form—broke through. Under helicopter pursuit and ground vehicle containment, it breached the perimeter, crossed the river into the urban area on the other side, and then… vanished. Completely. No trace.”

Muffled gasps came from the cabin. Escaping that kind of firepower? And disappearing into a populated city? It sounded impossible, which only underlined the thing’s terrifying nature.

“The Hunters?” I asked, though I could guess.

“Effectively wiped out,” Ethan’s voice was cold. “Casualty count on site is far higher than what you encountered at the slaughterhouse. Looks like they threw everything they had at it and hit a wall. However, the silver lining: due to the chaos, police raided and completely dismantled that slaughterhouse compound you escaped from. Multiple arrests. A lot of Karl’s archives, experimental data… likely seized. For the foreseeable future, at least on the surface, Hunter operations in several surrounding states will be crippled, forced deeper underground. For our kind, the pressure should ease significantly.”

It was the only sliver of solace in this disaster. A major Hunter stronghold gone. A measure of vengeance for so many lost packmates. A respite for others. But the price was Brett… and a loose, incredibly dangerous unknown entity now at large.

“Understood,” I said quietly.

Ethan’s voice softened. “Lily, bring them home. Jacob, Celena, all of you. You’ve done enough. Now, come home.”

Home. The word felt both achingly distant and powerfully seductive. Safety. Warmth. The hearth. Soft couches. The sound of Aurora’s tiny voice calling ‘Mama’… My own homing instinct surged powerfully. Yes. It was time. The battle was over. The survivors needed to heal.

After the call ended, the quiet returned for a few heartbeats. This time, it was Jacob who broke it. He turned, his gaze finding Celena’s first, holding it with a tenderness and protectiveness so thick it was almost tangible. Then he looked at me, his eyes sweeping over Xavier and the others.

“Lily,” he said, his voice steady, carrying the calm of a decision made. “Ethan’s right. You all should go home. Xavier, Adrian, the twins… you’ve got mates waiting. Lily, you have Aurora.”

He squeezed Celena’s hand, their fingers interlacing. “Celena and I…” He hesitated, searching for the right words. “We want to do one last sweep. Not near the conflict zone, not violating the order. Just… check a few possible places, ask a few possible sources. For Celena’s peace. For mine. So there’s no regret left. We need a ‘period’ on this, whatever shape it takes.”

Celena leaned into him, silent, but her eyes said everything. This wasn’t a reckless impulse. It was a resolve forged in pain and hard thought. They were a single unit now, foreheads nearly touching, eyes locked. Beyond the fierce, almost palpable love between them was a shared determination—to find closure for this, for their lost brother, together. They were a whole, tighter than ever before.

Looking at them, every argument, every leaderly caution, died in my throat.

What could possibly stand against that kind of love?

When it was fused with duty, with a soul-deep need?

Nothing.

I’d walked that path myself. I understood.

I took a deep breath, pushing down the leader’s instinctive worry over an “unsanctioned op,” and the simpler, primal fear for their safety. I met Jacob’s eyes and nodded, my own voice surprisingly even.

“Granted. Do what you need to do. Check in. Regularly. Any sign of trouble, you abort and run. Understood?”

Jacob’s eyes brightened with gratitude for the understanding and trust. “Understood. Thank you, Lily.”

“Be careful, you romantic idiots,” Xavier grunted from the front, turning to shoot them a look that was more fond than annoyed.

Dave thumped the back of my seat. “Hey, bring back a souvenir from this ‘period’ hunt, will ya?”

The SUV slowed to a stop at the next lonely crossroads. Nothing but fields and a narrower dirt track leading off into wooded hills. Jacob and Celena climbed out, taking only light packs and their weapons. The setting sun cast their long, intertwined shadows across the asphalt.

The rest of us continued on, the vehicle carrying us toward “home.” In the rearview mirror, the two figures standing side-by-side grew smaller and smaller, until they were swallowed by the deepening dusk and the winding road behind.

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