Chapter 26
Elara’s POV
“You really think I need protection?” I turned to Jory, arching an eyebrow as he cracked his knuckles like he was ready to
take on a bear.
“Just saying, if something lunges at us, I’d rather be the one getting mauled,” he said, puffing his chest a little. “Gamma or not, you shouldn’t have to get your hands dirty.”
Vessa laughed so hard she nearly choked. “Oh Jory, our Gamma would probably save your sorry ass before you even know what hit you.”
“I’m serious,” he insisted. “If anything happens, I stand in front.”
I shook my head with a faint smile, adjusting the strap of my crossbow pack. “No one’s dying today. We’re not here to play heroes. Just focus, both of you.”
From behind me, Vessa made a face. “Great. And just when I thought we’d get through the morning without drama–look who’s struttin‘ over in heels.”
I didn’t even have to turn. The stiletto clicks on stone were enough.
Miela.
Dressed like she was headed to a garden party, not a wilderness competition, she wobbled across the gravel with a basket hooked delicately on one arm.
“Seriously?” I muttered.
“Good morning everyone!” Miela called out with an exaggerated sweetness that made my molars ache. “I heard you’re all competing today, so I made some snacks to boost your energy.”
She opened the basket like she was revealing treasure. Chocolate muffins, greasy fries, mini pizzas… even a lemon meringue
tart.
Jeff and Steven hesitated near the basket, hungry eyes battling better judgment.
“I made everything myself,” she added proudly, casting a sugar–syrup smile at Thorne. “Figured it’s what a good future Luna
would do.”
Oh, here we go again.
“Did you seriously pack sugar bombs for a warrior competition?” Vessa scoffed, peering into the basket. “Where’s the protein? The fiber? You trying to give us a mid–run coma?”
Miela blinked, caught off guard. “I–just wanted to help…”
“You skipped nutrition class too?” Vessa raised a brow. “Remind me–how did you graduate again?”
That struck a nerve.
Miela’s smile faltered. She fumbled to close the basket, muttering something about bringing different snacks next time.
“Don’t worry about it,” I said, pulling a box of protein bars from my pack. “These might not be homemade, but they won’t kill your stamina.”
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Chapter 26
In seconds, everyone gathered around me. Bars vanished from the box like wildfire.
And Micla?
She stood there clutching her basket like a used rag.
I caught her gaze flick toward Thorne, searching for sympathy. But he wasn’t looking at her. He was looking at me. Quietly. Smiling.
That probably stung worse than Vessa’s jab.
“Attention, all teams!” Myles’s voice rang out across the field. “Get ready!”
I stuffed the empty bar wrapper in my pocket and tightened my gloves. Jory and Vessa were already in position.
“Let’s win this,” I said, my voice low and steady.
“GO!”
And just like that, we ran.
Branches whipped past my face as the forest swallowed us whole. Our team didn’t rush forward like the others–we moved with purpose. Calculated. We weren’t after speed. We were after the win.
The air grew thick with moss and mist as we slipped deeper into the woods.
“This forest gives me the creeps,” Vessa muttered, stepping over a fallen branch. “Smells like moldy secrets.”
I stayed quiet. I knew this place too well.
They used to throw me out here, you know. Corla and Ruvan. When I was still too small to lift a pan, they’d shove me into these woods as punishment. I’d scream until my throat went raw–but no one ever came. Sometimes I wondered if they hoped the wild things would finish me off.
But I didn’t die.
I learned.
Now, the woods didn’t frighten me. They knew me. I belonged here more than Miela ever would.
“Hey,” I said suddenly, glancing over my shoulder at Vessa. “What happened with you and Cael the other night?”
Vessa blinked, caught off guard. “That was fast.”
“Well?”
She hesitated, then sighed. “We kissed.”
“What?!” I stopped mid–step, nearly slipping on wet moss. “And you didn’t tell me?”
“Because it wasn’t a thing,” she said with a bitter shrug. “It didn’t mean anything to him.”
“That jerk-
“Let’s talk about it later,” she cut in, nodding toward Jory who was emerging from the brush with a deer draped over his shoulders like a scarf.
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