Marcus’s POV 1
Five years have passed, and my body still remembers the discipline of dawn. No alarm clock needed. Never has been. My eyes open to the familiar gray half–light creeping through the single window above my bed. The world exists in that fragile space between night and day, when nothing pretends anymore. No false security. No comfortable lies.
The cabin holds its breath around me, wrapped in the particular silence that belongs to neutral ground. Different from pack territory. No collective heartbeat pulsing through the earth beneath my feet. No Alpha energy crackling at the edges of perception. Just wood, stone, and the honest emptiness of a place built for function rather than comfort. These walls carry no history. No ghosts walk these floors.
I push myself upright, bare feet finding the cold wooden planks. The chill bites through my skin, but I welcome it. Pain keeps you centered. Keeps you from drifting into places your mind shouldn’t wander. I sit on the edge of the mattress, forearms resting on my knees, breathing controlled and even. The daily check–in with myself that became habit after everything shattered. No anxiety clawing at my chest. No phantom voices echoing in my skull. Just steady awareness.
you
way. Heat makes The shower runs barely warm because I designed it that weak. Makes you linger in comfort instead of staying alert. I stand beneath the lukewarm spray and let it shock my system fully awake, eyes shut tight, jaw clenched against the cold. The walls stay clear of steam, the air sharp and unforgiving. The soap is unscented, practical. No luxury. No softness to dull the edges. I scrub until my muscles release their overnight tension, until the persistent ache between my shoulder blades shifts from distraction to manageable background noise.
At the mirror, I avoid my own reflection at first. Instead, I focus on the scar
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decorating my chest just below the collarbone. Pale and crooked, a crescent–shaped reminder of violence I can no longer recall with clarity. I remember the war itself. Blood soaking into dirt. The sound of bodies collapsing under gunfire. Commands screamed over chaos, the wet thud when someone fell wrong and didn’t get back up. I remember running until my lungs burned like acid, each breath a fight to stay conscious.
But the exact moment this mark was carved into my skin? That memory got erased somehow.
My subconscious performed surgery, cutting out the worst footage before it could poison everything else. Survival isn’t just about enduring trauma. It’s about choosing what pieces of hell you allow to define you afterward.
I spit the toothpaste foam into the sink and finally meet my own stare. The eyes looking back are older than five years should have made them. Not exhausted. Not empty. Just careful. Like I learned to examine everything twice before deciding whether it deserved space in my head. Like nothing crosses the threshold without explicit permission.
Coffee comes next, black and bitter in the same ceramic mug with the chipped rim that scrapes my thumb if I hold it wrong. I found it at some forgotten roadside store and bought it because it felt substantial. Real. Something that survived damage without breaking completely. The coffee is strong enough to strip paint, the kind that doesn’t pretend to be gentle or nurturing. Its sharp aroma fills the small space, more effective than any memory at keeping me grounded in the present moment.
Messages can wait.
First, I review the overnight reports on my tablet. Blue light cuts through the cabin’s dim interior as data flows across the screen. Territorial disputes resolved without bloodshed. Two minor boundary violations handled through negotiation instead of force. A mediation request from a southern pack that still hasn’t figured out diplomacy. Another pack quietly requesting extensions on sanctions they definitely earned through their own stupidity.
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Five years didn’t end the war. It just taught everyone better ways to hide their wounds.
I sip the bitter coffee while I read, letting it coat my tongue as I process information. Statistics. Names. Behavioral patterns. Timeline projections. This is leadership nobody writes epic poems about. Death by paperwork instead of claws. Gradual pressure instead of explosive confrontation. Choices that feel mundane but determine who suffers and who doesn’t.
I mark several items for follow–up, mentally noting which situations will explode if ignored much longer, then finally check my personal messages.
The list is short. It always is. No pack gossip. No crisis alerts. A single confirmation from a courier about delivery schedules. That’s everything.
Peaceful, if you ignore all the missing pieces.
I dress in plain, durable clothing. Reinforced pants that won’t tear easily. Boots that have walked more miles than they’ve seen polish. A jacket without patches, insignia, or decorative stitching that might indicate rank or loyalty. No symbols anywhere. No reminder of what I used to be, or what others still think I should become.
Deliberately unremarkable.
When I step outside, the morning air attacks with teeth. It cuts straight through the jacket and completes the process of waking me up. The horizon shows the first thin line of actual daylight, gray–blue like the world is being drawn back into existence one careful stroke at a time.
Asher is already walking his morning patrol along the perimeter, following the same route he takes every dawn. Checking boundaries that rarely shift but always matter. He doesn’t startle when he spots me. Doesn’t straighten into formal posture or offer unnecessary salutes. Just raises one hand in casual acknowledgment and continues his circuit.
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