Chapter 326: Elena, Come With Me Now
Chapter 326 of "Mated To The Crippled Alpha" begins with intriguing events: The location I sent Lewis was close to the beach. He must have guessed there... Donât miss it!
The location I sent Lewis was close to the beach. He must have guessed there would be a night market nearby. He probably came with nothing but hope in his chest one slim chance that fate would push me into his arms.I had warned him not to move blindly. But to Lewis, even a tiny opening was worth bleeding for.
And somehow... it worked.
The moment Yael walked off toward a candy apple vendor, I didnât think. I just moved. My body chose Lewis before my mind could even catch up.
I ran to him.
He pulled me behind a thick tree, out of the lights, out of the crowd, and wrapped me in his arms so tight it felt like he was trying to fuse me back into his ribs. Like if he held me hard enough, I couldnât be taken again.
I clung to him, breathing him in like air. His scent was familiar, but there was smoke in it now sharp and bitter.
Heâd been smoking.
He never did that around me before.
I swallowed the lump in my throat and forced my voice low. "Carl... donât worry. Iâm fine. Iâm really fine."
His hands tightened like he didnât believe me.
"Elena," he rasped, voice rough like it had been scraped raw. "Come with me."
His eyes were bloodshot.
My heart sank.
Has he slept at all since I disappeared?
Guilt hit me so hard I almost shook. I held his face for a second, thumb brushing his cheek, then I whispered, "Iâm sorry, but I canât leave yet. Whitney is still in their hands."
His face changed instantly. The tenderness pulled back, replaced by that hard calm he wore when he was ready to tear through anyone who stood in his way.
"Elena," he said, jaw tight, "I donât care about anyone elseâs life but yours. Not even your sisterâs. If helping her puts you in danger, I wonât allow it. You have to come with me."
His voice dropped lower, rougher. "Do you know what these days have been like for me?"
Panic rose in my chest, hot and desperate.
Because I wanted to go.
I wanted to run with him, disappear, breathe again. But Whitneyâs face flashed in my mind pale, empty, still trying to help me even before she knew who I was. A good soul trapped in a cage that wasnât hers.
"There wonât be a better chance than now, Carl," I whispered. "Trust me."
His grip tightened on my wrist. "Elena, stop being stubborn."
He tried to pull me.
So I stood on my toes and kissed him.
Fast. Soft. A hit of warmth meant to calm the storm inside him.
But it wasnât enough.
If I left right now, Yael would punish Whitney for it. Maybe not kill her but hurt her in ways that would keep her alive and broken. That was worse. Whitney had already survived twenty years of pain.
I couldnât hand her another day of it.
I pressed my forehead to Lewisâs and breathed, "Carl... please. Help me. Help Whitney. Please."
His breath came out heavy. His eyes dropped to the charm at my neck, the Stone of Duality, hanging like a promise and a threat all at once.
His mouth tightened.
Then, finally, he gave in.
He slid something cold into my palm a small dagger, dark and solid, like it had weight beyond metal. "Protect yourself," he said. "And stay in touch."
My fingers curled around it.
It wasnât just a weapon.
I could feel it in my bones this was also his way of holding onto me when he couldnât hold my hand. A silent leash. A tracker. A promise: Iâm not far.
He kissed me then hard, fierce, like hunger, like anger, like relief. When he pulled back, his voice was low and steady.
"Donât be afraid. Iâm here."
And then he vanished into the crowd like heâd never been there at all.
I held the dagger tight, breathing through the tremble in my hands.
Yaelâs plan was already crawling closer, hour by hour. He thought the stone on my neck mattered. He thought he was about to trade lives like it was business.
He didnât know the real stone was gone.
His whole plan was built on air.
"Elena, what are you thinking?"
Yaelâs voice snapped me back.
He was standing in front of me again, holding out a candy apple like we were just two normal people on a normal night. Relief loosened my chest when I realized he hadnât noticed anything.
I forced my face into something soft, something sad.
"I was just thinking..." I said quietly, "if Whitney has even eaten one of these in all these years. She used to love them. The night we got separated, she had one in her hand, but..."
My eyes were already a little red. The sadness looked real because it was real.
Yael studied me for a long second, then his expression softened in that unsettling way like he was proud of my pain.
"Elena," he said gently, "do you know why I like you? Because thereâs no one as pure as you."
He pressed the candy apple into my hand and pinched my cheek like I was a pet. "Take it. Iâll get more."
He walked off again.
And I knew Lewis hadnât gone far.
I didnât turn fully, but I caught him in the corner of my vision tall, still, watching from the shadows like a silent guardian. People saw a crowd. They saw masks and noise and bright lights.
They didnât see the danger standing right behind me.
Lewisâs hands were clenched so tight his knuckles looked pale.
It must have taken everything in him not to grab me and run.
The worst kind of distance isnât life and death.
Itâs standing close enough to touch... and still having to pretend you donât know each other.
I barely moved my lips. "Carl... donât do anything reckless."
His fists loosened slowly.
His mouth formed two words I felt more than I saw.
Be careful.
I nodded once and turned away fast before my face betrayed me.
Yael came back carrying a whole rack of candy apples, smiling like a boy who hadnât ever done anything wrong.
"Elena," he said brightly, "I bought enough for you and Whitney."
I froze for half a second.
His smile was so clean it almost made me sick. If I hadnât already tasted death, I might have believed he was harmless.
"You must be hungry," he added. "Let me take you somewhere nice to eat."
Lewis trailed us at a safe distance.
Just knowing he was there made my chest ache. It was like a quiet hum under my skin, steadying me.
For a few moments, I kept imagining it me running back, Lewis lifting me, disappearing into the night. No guilt. No responsibility. No Whitney. Just freedom.
But reality always came back like cold water.
Whitneyâs pale face haunted me.
If I had been the one who fell into the river that day, the pain wouldâve been mine. But it wasnât.
She carried it. Every day. For twenty years.
I abandoned her once.
I wasnât doing it again.
I forced myself to look away and stop searching the crowd for Lewis.
Carl... Iâm sorry.
Yael didnât notice the war in my chest. If he noticed anything, he blamed it on Whitney.
He loaded the rack into the trunk, humming to himself. But it was too long to fit. So he pulled out a heavy cleaver and started hacking at the wood like it was nothing.
Thwack. Thwack.
The sound made my stomach twist. My mind painted pictures I didnât want wood turning to bone, laughter turning to screams.
When he turned to me, my fear must have shown, because his eyes narrowed slightly.
Then he smiled again.
"Elena," he said, calm as ever, "youâre such a good girl. Iâd never hurt you. Get in the car."
My legs felt weak.
He tilted his head. "Want me to carry you?"
I jolted and scrambled into the passenger seat so fast my skirt tangled under me. I slammed the door closed like it could protect me.
My hands hovered over the handle anyway, trembling.
In the side mirror, I saw him again.
Lewis.
Right behind me.
If I opened the door and ran, he would take me.
My fingers shook over the latch, caught between love and duty, safety and sacrifice
and my chest felt like it might split in two.