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Chapter 5 THE RAINSTORM

​The drive to the Northern California estate was supposed to be a four-hour straight shot-a chance for Elias to retreat into his digital world while Jax focused on the road. But the sky had other plans. What started as a light Pacific mist had transformed into a violent, blinding deluge.

​Jax gripped the steering wheel of the armored SUV, his knuckles white. The wipers were at full speed, barely clearing the sheets of gray water long enough for him to see the winding mountain pass.

​"The GPS is cycling," Elias said from the backseat. It was the first time he'd spoken in an hour. His voice was taut, vibrating with the same frequency as the lightning that occasionally cracked across the horizon. "The satellite link is down. Jaxson, we should have stayed at the museum."

​"Staying wasn't an option once you started looking like a ghost, Mr. Vance," Jax grunted, downshifting as the tires hit a patch of standing water. The vehicle hydroplaned for a sickening half-second before Jax's instincts corrected the slide.

​"I am fine," Elias snapped, though the way he was huddled against the door, arms wrapped around himself, suggested otherwise.

​A massive crack of thunder shook the chassis. Suddenly, a wall of mud and stone tumbled from the embankment fifty yards ahead, spilling across the narrow road. Jax slammed on the brakes. The heavy SUV skidded, the ABS pulsing under his boot, until they came to a dead stop inches from the debris.

​"The road's gone," Jax said, his voice level despite the adrenaline spiking in his veins. He peered through the gloom. "And the shoulder is eroding. We can't stay in the car; if more of that slope comes down, we're going over the cliff."

​Elias looked out the window at the churning blackness. "There's nothing out here. This is a dead zone."

​"There was a gate about a mile back. Stone pillars. Looked like an old hunting lodge," Jax recalled, his tactical memory already mapping the route. "We're going back there. On foot if we have to, but I'm going to try to reverse this beast."

​The "hunting lodge" turned out to be a sprawling, Tudor-style manor that had long since been abandoned to the redwoods. Jax had to use a crowbar from the SUV's emergency kit to force the heavy oak door.

​Inside, the air was thick with the scent of cedar, dust, and old cold. There was no electricity, only the rhythmic drumming of the rain against the leaded glass windows.

​"Stay here," Jax commanded, his voice echoing in the hollow entryway. He moved through the dark with a flashlight, checking corners and windows like he was clearing a compound in Fallujah. When he returned, he found Elias standing exactly where he'd left him, looking small and utterly overwhelmed by the shadows.

​"It's clear," Jax said. "There's a massive hearth in the Great Room. I found some dry wood in the shed attached to the kitchen. I'll get a fire going before the temp drops any further."

​Within twenty minutes, a fire was roaring, casting long, flickering orange shadows across the high-beamed ceiling. Jax had stripped off his wet suit jacket and tie, his white dress shirt clinging to the heavy muscles of his back as he worked.

​Elias sat on the edge of a dusty velvet sofa, staring at the flames. He looked drained, the adrenaline of the gala and the terror of the storm finally catching up to him.

​"You're shivering," Jax observed. He walked over, his presence looming in the firelight.

​"I'm merely... cold," Elias whispered.

​Jax didn't ask for permission this time. He reached into his duffel bag-which he'd grabbed from the car-and pulled out a thick, tactical wool hoodie. He stepped toward Elias.

​"Rules be damned, Elias. You're going into shock." Jax sat on the sofa, much closer than the 'two paces' allowed. He held out the hoodie. "Put this on. Then give me your hands."

​Elias hesitated, then pulled the oversized hoodie over his head. He looked even smaller inside it, his pale face peeking out from the dark fabric. Slowly, tentatively, he reached out and placed his hands in Jax's.

​Jax's hands were massive, warm, and rough with calluses. He began to rub Elias's fingers, his movements slow and deliberate, trying to coax the blood back to the surface.

​"Why did you take the deal, Jaxson?" Elias asked suddenly. His voice was quiet, stripped of its usual corporate iron. "A man like you... you could have run. You could have started over in a country with no extradition. Why stay and be a shadow?"

​Jax didn't look up from Elias's hands. "I spent my whole life building things that were supposed to be unbreakable. My company. My reputation. When it all fell apart, I realized I hadn't actually protected anything that mattered. I was just guarding money."

​He looked up then, his dark eyes locking onto Elias's grey ones. The firelight danced in the reflection of Elias's pupils.

​"Maybe I took the deal because for the first time, the person I'm guarding is worth the effort," Jax said, his voice a low, honest rasp.

​The tension in the room shifted. It was no longer about a debt or a storm. The air between them felt thick, charged with the same electricity that was lighting up the sky outside. Elias didn't pull his hands away. Instead, he leaned in, just a fraction, his gaze dropping to Jax's mouth.

​Jax felt a surge of heat that had nothing to do with the fire. He was an employee. He was a debtor. He was an alpha who was used to taking what he wanted, but with Elias, he felt a strange, terrifying urge to wait. To be invited.

​"Jaxson," Elias breathed, his voice a broken silver thread.

​Before Jax could respond, the old house groaned under a massive gust of wind, and a branch shattered a window in the far kitchen. The moment broke. Elias flinched, pulling back into the safety of the hoodie.

​"Get some sleep, Elias," Jax said, his voice rougher than before. He stood up, putting the distance back between them. "I'll keep watch by the door."

​"Jax?"

​Jax stopped at the edge of the firelight. "Yeah?"

​"Thank you," Elias whispered.

​Jax nodded once and stepped into the shadows. He didn't sleep a wink. He just watched the fire die down and wondered how a man half his size had managed to bring him to his knees without saying a word.

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