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Chapter no 47

Crave by Tracy Wolff

โ€ŒIโ€™ll Get You and Your Little Dog, Tooโ€Œ

I have no idea what to say to Flintโ€™s promise, which is probably a good thing, considering my throat is suddenly desert dry and I canโ€™t speak anyway.

Not because I want Flint to hit on meโ€”I donโ€™t. And not because Iโ€™m offended by his words, because Iโ€™m not. But because when I look into his laughing amber eyes, when I see his infectious smile, I can imagine that if Jaxon wasnโ€™t around, I would totally welcome any move this dragon chose to make.

But Jaxonย isย around, and sitting here with Flint just got a

million times more awkward.

I take a long sip of water to wet my throatโ€ฆand to stall as I try to figure out what to say to defuse the situation. But before I can come up with anything, Flintโ€™s phone buzzes with a series of texts messages.

He picks up the phone, glances at the messages. And his entire demeanor changes. โ€œSomethingโ€™s going down.โ€

Immediately, I think of Jaxon. โ€œWhat is it? Whatโ€™s happening?โ€

Flint doesnโ€™t answer, just scoops up his backpack and starts shoving things inside it. As he does, the note Amka sent him falls open and I canโ€™t help but read it:

โ€œThere are a thousand ways to get somewhere, but not all ways are the correct one.โ€

I donโ€™t have time to wonder about what it means because Flint scoops it up and then barks, โ€œCome on, letโ€™s go.โ€

I grab my purse and follow him, dread pooling in my stomach as I try to figure out what could possibly make him react like this. โ€œWhatโ€™s going on?โ€ I ask again.

โ€œI donโ€™t know yet. But the Order is on the move.โ€

โ€œOn the move? What does that mean?โ€ Iโ€™m all but running in an effort to keep up with Flintโ€™s long-legged strides.

โ€œIt means thereโ€™s going to be trouble.โ€ He bites the words out like they taste bad.

Not that I blame him. God knows, Iโ€™ve had more than enough of that in the last few days to last me a lifetime. โ€œWhat kind of trouble?โ€ Iโ€™m right behind him when he pushes the library doors open and starts booking it down the hall.

โ€œThatโ€™s what Iโ€™m trying to find out.โ€

I fumble my phone out of my pocket, determined to get an answer out of Jaxon. But by the time we get to the main passing area near the stairs, I donโ€™t have to. Because one level up is the Order, walking in grim, single-file silence.

Theyโ€™re moving fast, and though their backs are toward us, I can tell Flint is right. Thereโ€™s a problemโ€”a big one. Itโ€™s in their squared-off shoulders and the tenseness that runs through each and every one of them like a live wire.

I call to Jaxon, but heโ€™s either ignoring me or he doesnโ€™t hear me. Either way, itโ€™s another bad sign, considering he usually knows exactly whatโ€™s happening around him at all times.

Just the thought that heโ€™s in some kind of trouble has me rushing on the stairs right after Flint, determined to catch up with them before something terrible happens.

But Jaxon is moving swiftly, too, and we end up chasing him down one hall, past the physics lab and several classrooms. He pauses for a second at the door of a room I havenโ€™t been in yetโ€”I think itโ€™s one of the student loungesโ€” and I call his name again. Iโ€™m all the way at the other end of the long hall, so Iโ€™m not surprised he doesnโ€™t hear me.

Byron does, though. He turns his head and stares straight at me. Iโ€™m too far away to see his eyes clearly, but the look on his face is more than a little frightening as his eyes dart back and forth between Flint and me. Then he shakes his head at me in a quick back-and-forth motion.

Itโ€™s obvious he wants me to leave them alone, but thatโ€™s not going to happenโ€”at least not before I know whatโ€™s going on in there. So I just lay on the speed, determined to get to Jaxon before he doesโ€ฆwhatever it is he intends to do. I donโ€™t make it, and neither does Flint. Jaxon walks in the room, followed by the other five members of the Orderโ€”

including Byron, who doesnโ€™t look my way again.

Panic slams through me, and I run faster than I ever have before, ignoring the way my neck and arm hurt. Ignoring the way it makes me feel dizzy. Ignoring everything but the need I have to get to Jaxon, to make sure he doesnโ€™t do anything because of me that he canโ€™t take back.

I donโ€™t know how I know this is about me, but I do.

I hit the door just as Jaxon sends all the furniture in the room flying in every direction.

Next to me, Flint curses. But he doesnโ€™t move to interfere,

even when Jaxon sends a guy that Iโ€™m pretty sure is Cole flying next, slamming him against a turned-over table and an upended chair in the process.

My breath catches in my throat in a strangled scream. I knew he was powerful, knew he was dangerousโ€”everyone has been telling me so since I got hereโ€”but before now, I had no idea what that meant. But as Jaxon slams the guyโ€” and yeah, itโ€™s definitely Coleโ€”into the wall with a flick of his fingers, then has him dangling a dozen feet in the air using nothing but his mind, I begin to understand.

Still, no warning, no vampire lore, nothing anyone could have told me could prepare me for what comes next.

Several students rush himโ€”other shifters, I assume since Quinn and Marc are among themโ€”but just like in the cafeteria, Mekhi, Byron, and the others make a perimeter around him. The shifters donโ€™t seem to care, though, because they keep running straight at them in an effort to rescue the one Jaxon is still dangling about ten feet in the air. And thatโ€™s when all hell breaks loose, the five members of the Order in an all-out brawl with three or four times as many shifters.

Itโ€™s fast and brutal and terrifying to witness, some shifters

fighting as humans, others as wolves. Teeth and claws come out, raking down Lucaโ€™s back and Liamโ€™s arm as the vampires grab on to fur and send the wolves slamming to the ground. Jaxon must be the only one with telekinesis, though, because the Order is fighting the old-fashioned way

โ€”with fists and feet and what Iโ€™m pretty sure are fangs.

I turn to Flint, hoping heโ€™ll wade in, but heโ€™s just watching the fight with clenched fists and narrowed eyes.

Other students donโ€™t have his reticence, though, and they join the meleeโ€”more shifters and vampires squaring off against one another in a fight that will end I donโ€™t know how. But the ground is already littered with fur and blood. If someone doesnโ€™t stop this soon, people are going toย die.

Jaxon must have the same thought because he suddenly drops Cole. He hits the ground hard, falling on his ass before scrambling back to his feet. At the same time, Jaxon waves his other arm out in a wild arc that stops everyone in their tracks. Some even fall over completely.

Iโ€™m still across the room at the entrance, but the power he blasts out hits me, too. And Flint. We both end up stumbling backward, grabbing on to the double-wide doorframe to keep from falling.

I know Iโ€™m just a human, but Flint isnโ€™t, and he was shoved backward, too. I canโ€™t imagine the force the people close to him felt. No wonder so many of them ended up on the ground.

I think itโ€™s overโ€”the fight and whatever Jaxon planned on doing to that shifterโ€”so once the power blast dissipates, I take a step forward. โ€œJaxon!โ€ I call, hoping to get his attention. Hoping to make him think in the middle of all this madness.

He glances my way for one second, two, and his eyes are like nothing Iโ€™ve ever seen before. Not blank. Not ice. But fire. A raging inferno blazing in his gaze.

โ€œJaxon,โ€ I say again, softer this time, and for a moment, I think Iโ€™m getting through.

At least until he turns his head, cutting me off. Blocking me out.

Seconds later, he reaches out a hand, and Cole is once again brought to his feet. This time, though, the entire room holds its collective breath as we wait to see what comes next.

It doesnโ€™t take long for us to find out.

Cole starts struggling, eyes going wide and fingers clawing at his throat as Jaxon reels him in. Slowly dragging him closer and closer until Cole is once again standing directly in front of him. Eyes bugging out. Livid red scratches on his neck. Terror in his eyes.

Itโ€™s enough, more than enough. Whatever Jaxon is doing, whatever point he is trying to make, heโ€™s done it. Everyone in this room knows what he can do.

โ€œJaxon, please.โ€ I say it softly, not sure if heโ€™ll be able to hear me but unable to keep silent when heโ€™s so close to killing this boy. So close to destroying the shifter and himself in one moment of careless rage.

Everything inside me tells me to go to him, to get in the middle of him and the shifter before Jaxon does something he canโ€™t take back. But when I try to move toward him, itโ€™s like Iโ€™m running straight into a wall.

Unable to rush forward.

Unable even to take one single step.

Itโ€™s not meโ€”I can move or walk however I wantโ€”but thereโ€™s an invisible barrier in front of me, as strong as stone and twice as impenetrable.

No wonder Flint has made no move to interrupt this nightmare. He must have known the wall was there all along.

Itโ€™s Jaxonโ€™s doingโ€”of course it isโ€”and Iโ€™m furious that heโ€™s

done this, that heโ€™s cut me off from him and his fight so completely. โ€œItโ€™s enough, Jaxon!โ€ I yell, pounding on the wall because I canโ€™t do anything else. โ€œStop. You have to stop.โ€

He ignores me and terror swamps me. He canโ€™t do this. He canโ€™tโ€”

Suddenly, I lurch forward as my hand and arm slide right through the mental barricade that Jaxon erected.

โ€œWhat the fuck?โ€ Flint breathes from beside me, but Iโ€™m too busy trying to get Jaxonโ€™s attention to respond. Or pull back.

โ€œJaxon!โ€ I all but scream his name this time. โ€œStop.

Please.โ€

I donโ€™t know whatโ€™s differentโ€”if itโ€™s because I somehow pierced through the barrier or if heโ€™s reached the same conclusion I have. Either way, whatever psychic grip heโ€™s been using on Cole disappears. Now standing under his own power, the shifter nearly falls to his knees even as he drags loud, painful-sounding breaths through his abused throat and into his air-starved lungs.

Relief sweeps through meโ€”and the room. Itโ€™s finally over. Everyone is still alive. Some are more than a little worse for wear, but at least

Theyโ€™re aโ€”

Jaxon strikes so fast, I almost miss it. His fangs flash, and his hands grab Cole’s shoulders as he leans forward, sinking his teeth into the left side of his throat.

Someone screams, and for a second, I think itโ€™s me, until I realize my throat is too tight to make a sound. Seconds passโ€”I donโ€™t know how manyโ€”as Jaxon drinks and drinks. Eventually, the shifter stops fighting and goes limp.

That’s when Jaxon finally lets go, lifting his head and dropping Cole into a limp heap on the ground.

Cole’s pallor is frightening, but he’s still alive, eyes wide and terrified, blood trickling from the fang marks on his neck. Jaxon looks out over the room and hisses, “This is the only warning you get.”

Then he turns and walks straight toward me, without a backward glance.

And when he takes my elbow in a grip as gentle as it is unyielding, I go with him. Because, honestly, what else am I going to do?

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