Not really.
He just leans down, kisses my forehead, and whispers, “Go back inside. I’ll bring breakfast.”
My stomach flutters for all the wrong reasons.
“Ryder…”
“Go.”
So I do.
But I don’t stop worrying.
Because I’ve seen him like this before.
And every time, it means he’s about to do somethingverynoble andverydumb.
Back at the cabin, I dig through my bag for the notes I made on the ward symbols Hazel etched into the amulet.
My gut’s been squirming all morning.
I want to believe we’re ahead of this thing. That the rift hasn’t already slithered past our last line of defense. That we have time.
But I know better.
The lake’s been quiet for almost twelve hours now.
And quiet means it’s building something.
Coiling tighter.
Pulling back.
Getting ready to strike.
I’m mid-scroll through my notebook when Ryder comes back with two paper-wrapped breakfast sandwiches and a camp thermos of questionable coffee.
He sets everything down and slides onto the bunk beside me.
I kiss his shoulder in thanks and hand him a pen.
“Write down everything you felt yesterday. When it pulsed. The timing. The pull. The direction.”
He arches a brow. “We’re doing this now?”
“Uh, yeah. The apocalypse doesn’t get weekends off.”
He smirks faintly, but does what I ask. Good man.
Still, his shoulders are tense.
His jaw keeps ticking.
And I know he’s thinking something he hasn’t said out loud yet.
So I say it for him.
“You’re planning something.”