Chapter 34
ZEKE'S POV
The surveillance footage from Theseus's territory showed nothing useful while I watched the grainy video for the tenth time that morning. The underground location we'd been so sure about had turned out to be an old storage facility that Theseus used for pack supplies, which explained the multiple heat signatures, including the smaller one that turned out to be boxes stacked in a way that mimicked a child's shape on thermal imaging.
"Another dead end," Marcus said from beside me, rubbing his tired eyes. "The team searched every inch of that facility and found nothing but old furniture and storage containers."
I slammed my fist on the desk hard enough to make the coffee cups rattle because we'd been so close, or at least we thought we had been. "What about Brock? Any sign of him?"
"He's completely off the grid," Marcus replied while pulling up tracking reports on his tablet. "We've monitored every known associate, checked surveillance at border crossings, even had teams watching his family members, but he's either very good at hiding or he had help disappearing."
"He had help," I said flatly while my wolf paced restlessly under my skin. "Someone with resources and planning capability helped him vanish, which means this is bigger than one rogue soldier acting alone."
"Theseus?" Marcus suggested, though his tone showed he wasn't convinced.
"Maybe, but we can't prove anything without more evidence," I admitted while hating how helpless that made me feel. "Every lead we chase turns into nothing while Golden is still out there somewhere, and we're no closer to finding him than we were three days ago."
My phone buzzed with a message from Finn reporting that the Range Rover investigation had also hit a wall because the vehicle had been found abandoned in a ravine two territories over, with the VIN number filed off and no forensic evidence inside. Whoever took Golden knew what they were doing, covering their tracks at every turn.
"We're missing something," I said while standing to pace the length of the command center. "There's a connection we're not seeing that ties all this together."
"Could it be related to the Brooke Pack?" Marcus asked while pulling up territorial maps. "The phone records showed calls to someone in their territory, even though Theseus denied any knowledge."
"It's possible, but without concrete evidence we can't accuse another Alpha of kidnapping without risking war," I said while the political reality of the situation made my chest tight. "We need something solid before we can move against anyone."
The door opened while Cecelia walked in carrying two cups of coffee. She looked as exhausted as I felt, with dark circles under her eyes that makeup couldn't quite hide. "Any updates?" she asked while handing me one of the cups.
"Nothing good," I admitted while taking the coffee gratefully. "Every lead is turning into a dead end while whoever took Golden is staying ahead of us."
Cecelia sank into a chair while her shoulders slumped forward. "So what do we do now?"
"We keep looking," I said, moving to stand beside her chair. "We review everything again, look for patterns we missed, follow up on even the smallest details until something breaks."
"That could take weeks," she said quietly while staring at her untouched coffee. "Golden doesn't have weeks if he's hurt or sick or scared."
The pain in her voice made my chest ache while the bond between us pulsed with shared anguish. I wanted to promise her we'd find him soon, but I'd learned not to make promises I couldn't guarantee I could keep.
My phone buzzed again with a message that made me frown. "Sarah wants to meet," I said while reading the text. "She says she found something in Layla's security footage that I need to see."
"Layla's footage?" Cecelia looked up with confusion. "Why are we looking at Layla's security footage?"
I'd forgotten that Cecelia hadn't been at the dinner last night when everything with Robert had come up. "Cameron mentioned an uncle who's been visiting him," I explained while already heading for the door. "Layla claims it's some old friend named Robert, but something about her story doesn't add up, so I had Marcus pull her security footage to verify."
"You think Layla's hiding something?" Cecelia stood to follow me while Marcus gathered his tablet.
"I know she's hiding something," I said while we walked through the pack house toward the security office. "The question is whether it's relevant to Golden's kidnapping or just some personal drama I don't have time for right now."
Sarah was waiting in the security office with footage already queued up on the main monitor. "I went through six months of recordings from Layla's residence," she said while gesturing to the screen. "This man appears seventeen times, always wearing a baseball cap and keeping his head down like he knows where the cameras are."
The footage showed a tall figure approaching Layla's front door while his face stayed carefully angled away from the camera. He'd knock, Layla would answer, then he'd slip inside while the door closed behind him. An hour or two later, he'd leave the same way with his face still hidden.
"Can we get any identifying features?" I asked while studying the man's build and movement patterns. "Height, weight, distinctive markers?"
"He's approximately six foot one, maybe 190 pounds, moves like someone with combat training," Sarah said while pulling up enhanced images. "But his face is never clear enough for facial recognition software to get a match."
"What about his vehicle?" Marcus moved closer to the screen. "Does he drive here or walk?"
"Parks two blocks away at a public lot, then walks," Sarah replied while switching to different camera angles. "Always the same lot, always parks in a spot that's out of range of their cameras."
"Professional," I muttered while my suspicion grew. "This isn't some casual friend dropping by. This is someone actively avoiding identification."
"There's more," Sarah said while pulling up the most recent footage. "This visit was two days ago, the day before Golden was taken."
The timestamp showed the mysterious Robert arriving at Layla's house while staying for three hours before leaving. "What were they doing for three hours?" I asked while anger built in my chest.
Chapter 35
ZEKE'S pov
Cameron was at school during this visit," Sarah said while checking her notes. "So it was just Layla and Robert alone in the house for that entire time."
Cecelia made a sound beside me while I felt her tension spike through the bond. "Do you think he's involved in the kidnapping?" she asked while her voice came out tight.
"I don't know, but the timing is suspicious," I said while pulling out my phone. "Layla claimed Robert just drops by to see Cameron, but if he was there when Cameron was at school, that story falls apart."
I called Layla, putting it on speaker so everyone could hear. She answered on the third ring, sounding annoyed. "What now, Zeke? I already told you everything about Robert last night."
"Funny, because the security footage shows him at your house two days ago for three hours while Cameron was at school," I said while keeping my voice calm despite the fury underneath. "Want to explain what kind of uncle visits when the kid isn't even home?"
The silence on the other end lasted too long while I could practically hear Layla scrambling for an explanation. "He stopped by to drop something off," she finally said, her voice sounding strained. "We ended up talking and lost track of time."
"Drop what off?" I demanded.
"Just some things for Cameron — toys and books and stuff," Layla said quickly. "Is this really important right now when you should be focusing on finding Golden?"
"Everything is important right now because I don't know who I can trust," I snapped while my patience ran out. "Robert is going to come in for questioning, whether you help arrange it or I have my trackers hunt him down — your choice."
"I told you I don't have his contact information," Layla protested while I could hear panic creeping into her tone. "He just shows up randomly, so I can't exactly schedule a meeting."
"Then I guess we'll do this the hard way," I said while ending the call before she could argue further. "Sarah, I want facial recognition run against every database we have access to using whatever features you can pull from that footage. Marcus, coordinate with neighboring packs to see if anyone recognizes the description or movement patterns."
"On it," they both said while already moving to their stations.
Cecelia touched my arm while her expression showed concern. "Do you really think Layla could be involved in Golden's kidnapping?"
"I don't know what to think anymore," I admitted while running my hand through my hair. "But I'm not ruling anyone out until we have solid answers."
We spent the rest of the day reviewing everything we had while looking for connections we might have missed. Financial records, phone logs, security footage, witness statements — everything got examined again while we searched for the pattern that would break this case open.
By midnight I was still in the command center with Cecelia while everyone else had gone home to rest. Papers covered every surface while my eyes burned from staring at screens for too many hours straight.
"We should stop for tonight," Cecelia said softly while standing to stretch. "We're not going to find anything useful when we're this exhausted."
"You go ahead," I said while pulling up another file. "I want to review the phone records one more time."
"Zeke," she moved to stand beside my chair while her hand rested on my shoulder. "You've been at this for nineteen hours straight. You need to rest."
"I can't rest while Golden is missing," I said while the words came out harsher than I intended. "Every second we waste is another second he's scared or hurt or worse."
"And you'll be useless to him if you collapse from exhaustion," Cecelia countered while her fingers squeezed my shoulder gently. "Take a break, sleep for a few hours, then come back fresh."
I wanted to argue, but my body was already shutting down whether I wanted it to or not. "Fine," I said while closing the laptop. "But just a few hours, then we start again."
We walked back to my quarters in silence while the pack house was dark and quiet around us. Cecelia followed me inside instead of going to her own room, which made something warm bloom in my chest despite the circumstances.
"I'll take the couch," she said while moving toward the living area.
"Don't be ridiculous. The bed is big enough for both of us," I said while heading toward the bedroom. "We're both adults, and we're too tired for anything except sleep."
She hesitated while I could feel her uncertainty through the bond. "Zeke, I don't think that's a good idea."
"Why not?" I turned to face her while keeping my expression neutral. "We used to share a bed for six months during our marriage. This isn't any different."
"It's completely different, and you know it," she said while wrapping her arms around herself. "We have history and feelings and a bond that's trying to rebuild itself, which makes sharing a bed complicated."
"Or it makes it simple because we both need rest and comfort, and there's no reason we can't provide that for each other," I countered while moving closer. "I'm not asking for anything except to not be alone tonight. Can you understand that?"
Her expression softened while she nodded slowly. "Okay, but just sleeping. Nothing else."
"Just sleeping," I agreed while leading her to the bedroom.
We changed in separate rooms while I gave her one of my shirts to sleep in, since she hadn't brought anything with her. When she emerged from the bathroom wearing my shirt that hung to her knees, something possessive stirred in my chest that I tried to ignore.
We got into bed on opposite sides while maintaining careful distance between us. The silence felt heavy while neither of us seemed able to relax despite our exhaustion.
"Do you know what the worst part was?" Cecelia said suddenly, her voice coming out small in the darkness. "Not the betrayal — not even faking my death to escape. It was that I had started to love you. I was finally happy after months of feeling like an obligation, and then you told me you wanted to be free to be with Layla."
Chapter 36
ZEKE'S POV
The words hit me like physical blows while guilt crashed over me in waves. "Cecelia," I started, but she cut me off.
"I was pregnant, Zeke," she continued while I felt her pain through the bond. "I found out the day before you ended things. I was going to tell you that night at dinner, but then you said you'd made a mistake choosing me and that you wanted to dissolve our marriage, and I just couldn't tell you about the baby after that."
My breath caught while my mind struggled to process what she'd just admitted. "You were pregnant when you faked your death?"
"Three months along," she confirmed while her voice broke. "I spent those three months falling in love with you and planning our future and imagining telling you about the baby, then it all fell apart because you still loved someone else more than you could ever love me."
I moved without thinking while pulling her against my chest and holding her tight while she shook with silent sobs. "I'm so sorry," I whispered into her hair while my own throat went tight. "I'm sorry for being too blind and too scared to see what I had until it was gone."
She stiffened initially but then slowly relaxed against me while her fingers clutched my shirt. "I hate that I still care about you," she said while her tears soaked through the fabric. "I hate that being near you makes me hope for things I know will just hurt me again."
"Then let me prove I'm different now," I said while pulling back just enough to see her face in the dim light from the window. "Let me prove that I learned from my mistakes and that I'll choose you every single time if you give me another chance."
Her eyes searched mine while the bond between us suddenly flared to life, stronger than it had been since before the rejection. The sensation made us both gasp while warmth spread through my chest that felt like coming home after years lost in the cold.
"The bond," Cecelia breathed while her hand pressed over her heart. "It's stronger."
"I feel it too," I confirmed while covering her hand with mine. "It's rebuilding itself because we're meant to be together. We always were meant to be together."
She stared at me for a long moment while emotions played across her face too fast to track. Then she leaned in, pressing her lips to mine in a kiss that was gentle and searching and full of hope despite everything we'd been through.
I kissed her back while pouring three years of regret and longing into it because this woman had always been mine, even when I'd been too stupid to claim her. The bond sang between us while rebuilding itself piece by piece through the physical connection.
When we broke apart we were both breathing hard while staring at each other with wonder. "We should sleep," Cecelia whispered, though she made no move to pull away.
"We should," I agreed while still holding her close.
We settled back down, this time with no distance between us. Cecelia's head rested on my chest while my arm wrapped around her waist, keeping her close. The bond hummed contentedly while finally satisfied that we were where we belonged.
I was just starting to drift off when I heard footsteps in the hallway outside, followed by a knock on the door.
"Alpha," Marcus's voice called urgently. "We have a situation."
I was out of bed immediately while Cecelia sat up looking alarmed. "What kind of situation?" I called while pulling on pants.
"Package arrived for Cecelia," Marcus said through the door. "Security flagged it as suspicious, so we didn't deliver it to her quarters."
Cecelia and I exchanged looks while I opened the door to find Marcus holding a small box.
"What's in it?" I asked while my wolf was already on high alert.
"We haven't opened it yet because we wanted you here first," Marcus said while his expression was grim. "But it's addressed specifically to Cecelia with no return address or postage, which means it was hand delivered."
We moved to the living area while Marcus set the box on the coffee table. It was small — maybe six inches square — wrapped in plain brown paper. Cecelia knelt beside it while her hands shook as she reached for the wrapping.
"Wait," I said while grabbing gloves from a nearby drawer. "Let me open it in case there's evidence we need to preserve."
I carefully removed the paper, revealing a plain cardboard box. The lid lifted easily while inside was tissue paper wrapped around something small. My stomach dropped while I unwrapped the tissue because I already knew what I was going to find.
A small red shoe, worn and dirty, exactly Golden's size.
Cecelia made a sound like all the air had been punched from her lungs while she grabbed the shoe with shaking hands. "This is his," she whispered while tears streamed down her face. "This is Golden's shoe — he was wearing these the day he was taken."
Tucked beneath the shoe was a note written in block letters. I picked it up with gloved hands while reading aloud:
"Stop looking, or he pays the price."
The message was clear, the threat unmistakable. Whoever had Golden was watching us, which meant they knew about our investigation and were warning us to back off or face consequences.
Cecelia clutched the shoe to her chest while her whole body shook with sobs. "They have him," she cried while rocking back and forth. "They have my baby, and they're threatening to hurt him if we keep searching."
I knelt beside her while pulling her against me because there was nothing I could say that would make this better. The bond ached with her pain while my own fury built until my wolf demanded blood for whoever had done this.
"We're going to find him," I promised while knowing the words were hollow without action to back them up. "I don't care what threats they make — we're going to bring Golden home."
But even as I said it, I knew the situation had just gotten infinitely more complicated, because now whoever had Golden was actively monitoring us, which meant our investigation had just become exponentially more dangerous.
Chapter 37
Cecelia's POV
I couldn't stop staring at the small red shoe in my hands while my vision blurred with tears that wouldn't stop falling. Golden had been wearing these shoes the morning he disappeared because they were his favorites with the little race cars on the sides that lit up when he walked. He'd begged me to buy them two months ago even though they were too expensive for our budget but I'd given in because his smile when he wore them made every sacrifice worth it.
Now one of those shoes sat in my lap covered in dirt while whoever had my son was using it to threaten us into backing off. The note's words kept replaying in my head over and over until I thought I might scream from the helplessness crushing my chest.
"Cecelia," Zeke's voice broke through my spiral while his hand squeezed my shoulder gently. "I need you to breathe for me, can you do that?"
I realized I'd been holding my breath while my lungs burned for air. I gasped while trying to fill them but it felt like breathing through a straw because panic had locked my chest tight. "I can't," I managed to choke out while more tears fell. "I can't breathe, I can't think, I can't do this anymore."
"Yes you can," Zeke said firmly while moving to kneel in front of me so we were eye level. "You're the strongest person I know which means you can get through this because Golden needs you to stay strong for him."
"They're going to hurt him," I sobbed while clutching the shoe tighter. "The note says if we keep looking they'll hurt him which means we have to stop but if we stop we'll never find him and I don't know what to do."
"We're not stopping," Zeke said while his voice dropped into that Alpha tone that demanded obedience. "This threat is meant to scare us into giving up but I won't let fear dictate our actions when my son's life is at stake."
"Our son," I corrected automatically while looking up at him through my tears. "He's our son Zeke, not just yours."
Something shifted in his expression while warmth flooded through the bond between us. "Our son," he agreed quietly. "And we're going to find him together no matter what threats they make or how scared we are because that's what parents do for their children."
Marcus cleared his throat from where he stood near the door while his face showed the same grim determination I saw in Zeke's eyes. "We need to analyze everything about this package," he said while pulling out evidence bags. "How it was delivered, when it arrived, if anyone saw who dropped it off."
"Security footage," Zeke said while standing though his hand stayed on my shoulder. "Pull all cameras from the past six hours focusing on the main entrance and any service entrances someone could have used to deliver this without being seen."
"Already on it," Marcus replied while typing rapidly on his phone. "I'll have the team review everything and flag anyone suspicious."
I forced myself to set Golden's shoe carefully on the coffee table while my fingers didn't want to release it because holding something he'd worn made him feel closer somehow. The tissue paper it had been wrapped in sat beside it along with the note that promised violence if we didn't comply.
"The handwriting," I said while my voice came out steadier than I felt. "Can we analyze the handwriting to figure out who wrote this?"
"Good thinking," Zeke said while carefully bagging the note with gloved hands. "We'll send it to a specialist who can look at letter formation and writing patterns to build a profile."
"What about the shoe itself?" I asked while standing on shaky legs. "Could there be DNA or fingerprints or anything that tells us where Golden is being held?"
"We'll test everything," Marcus assured me while also bagging the shoe despite how much it hurt to watch it disappear into evidence. "Dirt composition can tell us about soil types and geographic locations while any trace materials might narrow down what kind of building or area he's in."
The clinical discussion helped ground me because it gave me something to focus on besides the crushing fear that threatened to drown me. "How long will the testing take?" I asked while wrapping my arms around myself.
"Expedited testing can be done in twenty four to forty eight hours," Marcus said while checking his notes. "I'll mark everything as priority so we get results as fast as possible."
"That's too long," I protested while new panic flared. "Golden could be hurt or moved or worse in that amount of time."
"It's the best we can do with the resources we have," Zeke said gently while pulling me against his side. "But we're not sitting idle while we wait because there are other leads we can follow up on."
"What leads?" I demanded while looking up at him. "Everything has been a dead end for days while whoever has Golden stays ahead of us."
"The delivery itself is a lead," Zeke pointed out while his arm tightened around my waist. "Someone had to physically bring this package here which means they were in our territory recently and might have left traces we can follow."
"Unless they hired a courier who had no idea what they were delivering," I said while defeat crept into my voice.
"Even then the courier would have information about who hired them," Marcus said while heading for the door. "I'll get teams on this immediately, we'll find out who delivered this package even if we have to question every delivery service in a hundred mile radius."
He left while closing the door behind him which left Zeke and me alone in the quiet apartment. I pulled away from him while moving to the window because I needed space to process everything without his presence overwhelming my senses.
"Talk to me," Zeke said from behind me while the bond pulsed with his concern. "Tell me what you're thinking because I can feel your emotions through the bond but I don't know what thoughts are causing them."
"I'm thinking that we're failing him," I said while staring out at the dark territory beyond the window. "Every day that passes is another day Golden is scared and alone calling for me while I can't reach him because we keep hitting walls."
"We're not failing him," Zeke moved to stand beside me while his reflection appeared in the window glass. "We're doing everything possible with the information we have."
"It's not enough," I said while my voice broke again. "Nothing we do is enough because he's still missing while we're standing here talking about testing and analysis like he's some case to solve instead of a three year old boy who needs his parents."
"You think I don't know that?" Zeke's voice rose slightly while his own frustration bled through. "You think I'm not going crazy knowing my son is out there somewhere while I can't protect him? Every second he's gone tears me apart but I can't let that stop me from doing what needs to be done to bring him home."
"I know," I whispered while fresh tears fell. "I know you're doing everything you can, I'm sorry for lashing out at you when none of this is your fault."
"It is my fault though," Zeke said quietly while his hand found mine in the darkness. "If I hadn't been so blind three years ago you never would have left which means Golden would have grown up here safe and protected instead of vulnerable in some fishing village where anyone could take him."
Chapter 38
Cecelia's pov
"You can't blame yourself for decisions I made," I protested while turning to face him. "I chose to fake my death, I chose to raise Golden alone, I chose to stay hidden instead of coming back which makes this just as much my fault as anyone's."
We stood there in the dim light from the window while both of us carried guilt for choices that had led to this moment. The bond between us ached with shared pain that neither of us knew how to fix.
"I'm scared," I admitted while the confession felt like weakness. "I'm terrified that we won't find him in time or that when we do find him he'll be hurt beyond what we can fix or that he'll hate me for not protecting him better."
"He could never hate you," Zeke said while pulling me into his arms. "You're his whole world Cecelia, everything he knows about love and safety and being cared for comes from you."
"Then where is that love now when he needs it most?" I sobbed against his chest while my hands fisted in his shirt. "Where is his mother when someone has taken him away from everything familiar?"
"You're here doing everything possible to get him back," Zeke said while his hand ran up and down my spine. "That's where his mother is, fighting with everything she has to bring him home."
I don't know how long we stood there holding each other while the night deepened outside. Eventually my tears slowed while exhaustion crept in to replace the panic though the fear never really left.
"You should try to sleep," Zeke murmured against my hair. "I know it seems impossible but your body needs rest."
"I can't sleep knowing Golden's shoe just arrived as a threat," I said while pulling back to look at him. "How am I supposed to close my eyes when whoever has him is watching us close enough to deliver packages?"
"I'll stay with you," Zeke offered while guiding me back toward the bedroom. "You don't have to be alone with this."
We got back into bed while this time there was no pretense of maintaining distance. I curled into Zeke's side while his arms wrapped around me holding me close. The bond hummed between us providing comfort even though nothing could really ease the ache of missing my son.
"Tell me something good about Golden," Zeke said after a while. "Something that makes you smile when you think about it."
I closed my eyes while searching through memories for something that didn't hurt quite so much. "He sings in the shower," I said while a small smile tugged at my mouth despite everything. "These made up songs about fish and boats and whatever else is in his head at the moment, completely off key but so enthusiastic that you can't help but laugh."
"Like his mother then," Zeke said while I could hear the smile in his voice. "You used to sing in the shower too."
"I did not," I protested weakly while the normalcy of this conversation felt surreal given the circumstances.
"You absolutely did," Zeke insisted while his chest moved with quiet laughter. "Every morning without fail, usually songs from whatever musical you'd been watching that week."
The memory of those mornings felt like it belonged to someone else's life while so much had changed since then. "That feels like a hundred years ago," I said while my smile faded. "Back when things were simpler even though they felt complicated at the time."
"We were both so young," Zeke agreed while his hand continued its soothing path along my back. "Trying to figure out how to be married when we barely knew each other."
"I knew you," I said quietly. "Maybe not everything but I knew the important parts, I knew you were kind even when you were trying to be distant and I knew you carried guilt that wasn't yours to carry."
"You saw through me from the beginning," Zeke said while something shifted in his tone. "I tried so hard to keep you at arm's length but you wouldn't let me hide behind duty or obligation."
"For all the good it did me," I said while old hurt crept into my voice. "You still chose Layla in the end."
"I chose wrong," Zeke said firmly while his arms tightened around me. "I chose fear over love and duty over happiness which cost me three years with you and our son."
The bond pulsed stronger between us while I felt his sincerity through the connection. "We can't change the past," I said while trying to keep my voice steady. "All we can do is focus on the present and getting Golden back safely."
"And after?" Zeke asked while his question hung in the air between us. "What happens after we find Golden and bring him home?"
I didn't know how to answer that because I hadn't let myself think about after. Everything had been focused on finding Golden while the future beyond that rescue felt impossible to imagine.
"I don't know," I admitted while my hand rested over his heart feeling the steady beat beneath my palm. "I guess we figure it out as we go."
"I want you to stay," Zeke said while his voice dropped lower. "Both of you, I want you to stay here where you belong instead of running away again."
"This isn't my home anymore," I protested though the words felt weak. "I built a life in Seacreek over three years, Golden has friends there and a routine he loves."
"Golden deserves to know his father," Zeke countered while shifting so he could see my face. "He deserves to grow up as part of this pack with all the protection and opportunities that come with being an Alpha's son."
"And what about what I deserve?" I asked while pulling back slightly. "Do I get a say in this or are you just making decisions about our future without consulting me like you did three years ago?"
Pain flashed across his face while the bond echoed with his regret. "You're right, I'm sorry," he said while releasing me though his hand stayed on my waist. "I'm not trying to dictate anything, I'm asking you to consider staying because I don't want to lose you again now that I finally have you back."
"You don't have me back," I said while the words came out sharper than I intended. "We kissed a few times and slept in the same bed but that doesn't erase three years or fix what broke between us."
"Then let me try to fix it," Zeke said while his thumb traced circles on my hip. "Give me a chance to prove I've changed and that I can be the mate and father you both deserve."
I wanted to argue while pointing out all the ways this could go wrong but exhaustion made it hard to think clearly. "Can we talk about this later?" I asked while settling back against his chest. "When Golden is safe and we're not operating on fear and adrenaline?"
"Later," Zeke agreed while his arms came back around me. "But I'm not giving up on us Cecelia, not this time."
I wanted to tell him there was no us anymore but the bond hummed contentedly between us while my body relaxed into his warmth despite my mind's protests. Maybe there could be an us again someday but right now all I could focus on was bringing my son home.
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