The alarm clock on the motel nightstand was one of those cheap ones that ticked so loud it made you question every life decision. I didn't need it. My body woke with the rhythm of the storm outside, pulse thrumming, senses keyed to a world that never slept. Travis, on the other hand, was still curled in bed, guitar tucked to his chest like a child, face relaxed in ways humans rarely allowed. I wanted to tell him how ridiculous that was—but didn't. Let him have this fragile illusion of peace.
I pulled on my jacket and slipped out into the corridor. The fluorescent lights buzzed lazily above me. The carpet smelled like mildew and old cigarette smoke, an olfactory reminder that safety was a polite fiction. The door clicked shut behind me, and I paused to listen. Nothing. Just the faint creak of the building settling, the distant drip of water. Hunters didn't wait for alarm clocks, but neither did they appear when I expected. That made them dangerous in ways I could respect.
Back in the car, Travis stirred when I slid into the passenger seat. He squinted at me through half-lidded eyes. "Early bird catches…?"
"The hunters," I muttered, starting the engine. Rain had eased into mist, painting the windshield in streaks that blurred the world outside.
"Charming," he said, rubbing his eyes. "You could have said coffee."
"I've had coffee. I need air." My hand hovered over the knife tucked under my jacket. Old habits die hard, and instincts don't care about new companions.
He laughed, soft, teasing. "You're adorable when you're murderous."
I flicked him the finger without looking. He deserved it for the comment, and because I didn't feel like explaining that being "adorable" was not on my list of surviving attributes.
The drive was silent at first. Mist curled around the headlights, swallowing the road, turning the world into a silver smear. I watched, alert. Travis drummed his fingers on the steering wheel, humming something off-key. Music had always been his camouflage—his way of making the road feel less like a path to death and more like… well, something else.
"Ever… not be running?" he asked suddenly. His voice was low, hesitant.
I snorted, eyes on the road. "Not really. Why would I stop? People like hunters don't leave you alone just because you're tired."
He nodded slowly, as if cataloging this, storing it for some later reckoning. "Yeah, I get that. But someday, maybe. If the world gives you a minute."
I glanced at him. "The world doesn't give minutes. Only consequences."
"Consequence's better with company," he said, eyes flicking toward me with that infuriating grin. "Besides, it's less lonely when someone else is screwing up the plan with you."
I almost laughed—almost—but the edge of danger was always close. Almost wasn't enough.
We stopped for gas at a place that smelled like bleach and burnt tires. Inside, I caught the cashier staring. I gave a polite, neutral smile—the kind humans always think masks everything. Hunters can smell fear, I reminded myself. Human suspicion is a bonus.
When we got back in the car, Travis pulled out his guitar. "For emergencies," he said, strumming a few chords that were too clumsy to be accidental. Music in motion, a shield, a tease. "If hunters show up, maybe I can lull them to sleep."
"You? Lull them?" I raised an eyebrow. "You barely know how to play 'Happy Birthday' without murdering a melody."
"Exactly," he said, grinning. "Confusion is a weapon."
I shook my head. Maybe that was the first time I allowed myself to think about him in anything other than survival terms. Maybe that was dangerous too.
The hours passed in a rhythm of wet roads, empty towns, and conversations that skirted real truths. He asked about my scars—not the kind you see, the kind buried in memory. I deflected, joked, poked at him. He revealed pieces of himself too, carefully. Blonde hair messy from the wind, eyes too pale for comfort, hands that could strum melodies or crush bones.
"You ever… wonder what it's like to live without ghosts?" he asked quietly, one hand on the wheel, the other resting near the open window, letting mist curl over his fingers.
"Ghosts are useful," I replied. "They remind you who's hunting you."
He chuckled softly, but it didn't reach his eyes. "Sometimes I think I'd like one that reminds me to laugh more. Or… maybe just one that isn't a nightmare waiting to happen."
I studied him. It was rare, the vulnerability he let slip through cracks of charm. It didn't scare me—yet—but it did something unexpected. I wanted to protect it. Not from him, from the world. The world always won. And yet here he was, letting a tiny spark through anyway.
By midnight, we reached a bridge spanning a river swollen with rainwater. The mist hung thick over the surface, making the world feel unsteady, like we were moving through a dream. Travis parked on the side, guitar resting in his lap.
"Look at that," he said, eyes scanning the swirling water. "The world doesn't care who we are. Beautiful, isn't it?"
"Beautiful doesn't kill hunters," I muttered. But I leaned over anyway, letting the wind whip my hair. The river roared beneath us, a reminder that life continued whether we survived or not.
"You're thinking too much," he said, strumming a soft chord that trembled like the fog. "Sometimes, you just… let the music happen."
And maybe, just for a moment, I did. Maybe for the first time in years, the night felt like it belonged to neither hunters nor fear, but to me. And to him.
Of course, the world wouldn't let it last. But right now, right here, we had a small slice of something dangerous and fragile: trust.
And I was willing to see how far it could go.