Chapter 322
ALEXANDER
I had just finished reviewing patrol reports when there was a soft knock on my office door.
I didn’t look up immediately. “Come in.”
The door opened without hesitation.
+25 Points
When I finally lifted my gaze, Faye was leaning lightly against the door after closing it, watching me with an expression that was far too casual to be accidental.
“To what do I owe this visit, Luna?” I asked mildly.
She rolled her eyes at the title, though the corner of her mouth curved slightly. “Can’t I check on my mate
without an official reason?”
“You can,” I replied. “It’s just rarely without one.”
She walked toward my desk slowly, fingers grazing the edge of the bookshelf as she passed. There was no tension in her posture. No confrontation in her eyes. Just that familiar composure she carried when she was pretending not to be thinking too much.
“I was just passing by,” she said. “Thought I’d see if you were alive under all this paperwork.”
“I am,” I said dryly. “Barely.”
She stopped in front of my desk and studied me for a second longer than necessary. Then, without announcement, she leaned forward and pressed a soft kiss to my lips.
It wasn’t demanding. It wasn’t teasing.
Just warm, Familiar.
I let myself relax into it for that brief second before she pulled away.
“You look tired,” she murmured.
“I’m not,” I replied automatically.
She gave me a look that said she didn’t believe me.
Instead of arguing, she moved around the desk and settled into the chair beside mine rather than the one across from me. Close enough that her shoulder brushed my arm
That was deliberate.
I pretended not to notice.
For a few moments, she said nothing Just sat there, watching the papers in my hands as though they were fascinating.
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“You came to talk about Roman,” I said finally.
She didn’t even attempt to look surprised.
“I might have,” she admitted.
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I set the file down and leaned back slightly in my chair, turning just enough to face her fully. “Go on.” I
already knew exactly what she wanted to talk about.
She folded her hands loosely in her lap. “He looked exhausted.”
“He was.”
“Alexander.”
“What?”
She exhaled slowly. “Do you have to be that hard on him?”
There it was.
I studied her face carefully. She wasn’t accusing. She wasn’t challenging my authority. She was asking from a place of affection for the boy. I understood that.
That made it harder to dismiss.
“I wasn’t hard on him,” I said evenly.
She raised an eyebrow.
“I wasn’t,” I repeated, calmer. “If anything, I was measured.”
She tilted her head slightly. “Measured?”
“Yes.”
“Because from where I stood, it looked like you were dismantling him.”
I almost smiled at that.
“I’ve seen him train before,” she continued. “He’s not incompetent. But today… he looked frustrated. Like he couldn’t reach whatever you were expecting.”
“That’s because he couldn’t.”
Her expression softened, but she didn’t look away.
“He doesn’t even fully understand what he is yet,” she said quietly. “Maybe he just needs time
I folded my hands together, resting my elbows on the desk.
“Time won’t fix hesitation,” I said. “And softness won’t build instinct.”
She frowned slightly.
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“You want me to go easy on him,” I continued. “And expect results?”
She didn’t answer immediately.
“He’s not like the others,” she said instead. “He didn’t grow up knowing any of this.”
“I’m aware.”
“And?”
“And that’s precisely why I’m approaching him the way I am.”
She studied me carefully now, searching my face.
“I am already adjusting,” I added.
Her brows drew together.
“If he were any other trainee,” I said calmly, “I would be twice as hard on him. You know….”
That caught her attention.
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“I’m not pushing him the way I normally would,” I continued. “Because I know his situation is… different.”
Roman didn’t know what he was supposed to feel. Didn’t recognize the internal cues most of us grew up understanding. He second–guessed everything because he had no foundation to stand on.
But that didn’t mean I could coddle him.
“He overthinks every movement,” I said. “He trusts his logic more than his body. That delay will get him
killed.”
Her jaw tightened faintly at that.
“I’m not breaking him,” I added. “I’m stripping away what’s unnecessary.”
“And what if you strip away too much?” she asked softly.
“I won’t.”
She searched my face again, weighing my words.
“He needs pressure,” I continued. “Controlled pressure. Enough to force him to confront what he’s
suppressing.”
“And you’re sure that’s there?” she asked.
“Yes.”
I had seen it.
In the split second when he stopped calculating and simply moved. In the way his balance corrected itself instinctively before his mind caught up. In the tension beneath his skin when frustration peaked.
There was something there.
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Dormant.
“And you believe harshness will awaken it?” she asked.
“Not harshness,” I corrected. “Expectation.”
She was quiet at that.
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“I don’t train wolves to be comfortable,” I said. “I train them to survive… that’s how I was trained. That’s the
only way I know.”
The room settled into silence for a moment.
Then she sighed softly and leaned her head against my shoulder.
“I just don’t want him crushed before he even understands what he’s fighting for,” she murmured.
I rested my hand lightly over hers.
“He won’t be,” I said.
Because I wasn’t trying to break him.
I was trying to force him to meet the version of himself he didn’t yet recognize.
And I had no intention of being gentle about it.
–
ROMAN
By the fifth training day, I understood something clearly.
Alexander had been holding back.
I realized it the moment I stepped onto the field and saw the setup.
The usual sprint lanes were gone. In their place stood a longer course that stretched from the open
clearing straight into the forest edge. Ropes hung between trees. Weighted sleds sat half–buried in dirt.
Targets were mounted at irregular heights. The balance beam had been raised higher.
My stomach tightened.
Alexander stood near the treeline, hands clasped behind his back, posture as composed as ever. If he was planning to dismantle me today, it wouldn’t show on his face.
“You’re late,” he said calmly.
I glanced at the sky. I wasn’t.
“I’m sorry,” I replied.
“You’re late in your head,” he said. “You’re already doubting yourself.”
My jaw tightened.
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“We’re removing structure today,” he continued. “No markers. No predictable sequence. You move when I
say move. You stop when I say stop.”
“That’s it?”
“That’s enough.”
I stepped into the clearing.
“Run,” he ordered.
I didn’t ask where.
I just ran.
The ground was uneven, tree roots cutting across my path. I dodged instinctively, lungs steady at first.
Then-
“Left.”
The command came sharply.
I veered left without thinking, barely avoiding a low–hanging branch.
“Jump.”
There was no visible obstacle ahead, but I jumped anyway–and cleared a rope stretched between two
trees at knee height.
I landed hard.
“Too slow,” he called.
I didn’t slow down.
“Faster.”
pushed harder, breath burning now.
“Stop.”
I planted my feet abruptly, nearly losing balance.
“You’re bracing before every shift,” he said. “You’re waiting for my command instead of moving through it.”
“How am I supposed to anticipate what you’ll say?” I shot back.
“You’re not,”
Frustration flared hot in my chest.
“Then what do you want from me?”
“Flow.”
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The word felt useless.
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We moved into strength drills next. He had me drag a weighted sled across loose dirt while he threw
verbal commands mid–stride.
“Drop it.”
I released.
“Push–ups.”
I dropped instantly.
“Up. Sprint.”
My arms trembled as I forced myself up and ran again.
There was no rhythm. No predictable pattern. Just constant interruption.
Every time I began to find a pace, he broke it.
Every time I adjusted, he shifted the demand.
My lungs felt like they were tearing by the time we reached reflex drills. He didn’t use training balls this
time. He used blunt wooden sticks, striking from different angles without warning.
I blocked the first one.
Missed the second.
It smacked against my shoulder.
“Don’t track my hands,” he said. “Feel the movement.”
“I can’t feel something I don’t understand,” I snapped.
He stepped closer.
“You’re trying to see everything. Stop relying on your eyes.”
That made no sense.
“If you hesitate to process,” he continued, “you’ll always be a step behind.”
He swung again.
This time I didn’t think.
I moved.
The block came cleaner. Faster.
He noticed.
But he didn’t comment.
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We transitioned to the elevated beam. Higher now. Narrower.
“Cross it,” he said.
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I stepped up, legs already shaking from fatigue. The ground below felt farther than it had the first day.
Halfway across, my balance wavered.
“Don’t look down,” he warned.
I wasn’t.
I was looking at him.
Watching his face for approval. For some sign I was doing something right.
That was the mistake.
My foot slipped.
I dropped, landing hard on my side in the dirt.
Pain flared along my ribs.
I stayed there for half a second longer than I should have.
“Up,” he ordered.
I forced myself upright.
“You fell because you were looking for me,” he said evenly. “Stop looking for direction.”
“I’m following your commands,” I shot back, a bit more frustrated now.
“You’re depending on them.”
The difference felt microscopic.
But to him, it clearly wasn’t.
Anger simmered beneath my exhaustion.
“You keep saying I’m hesitating,” I said, breathing hard. “You keep saying I’m holding back. I don’t even know what I’m supposed to be reaching for.”
For the first time, he stepped close enough that I could feel the weight of his presence fully
“You’re waiting to understand before you act,” he said quietly. “That delay is your weakness.”
“And acting without understanding?” I challenged. “That’s reckless, you said so the first day.”
“Did I?”
There it was again.
Another lesson maybe… Don’t always trust what you hear.
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“I don’t have whatever you think I’m suppressing,” I said, frustration cracking through.
His gaze sharpened.
“You do.”
“How would you know?”
“Because I’ve seen it.”
Silence fell between us, thick and charged.
“You felt it just now,” he continued. “When you blocked without thinking.”
I remembered it. The brief, strange sensation–like my body had moved ahead of my mind.
It had been faster. Cleaner.
Uncontrolled.
“That’s what I want,” he said.
“It doesn’t stay,” I admitted quietly.
“Because you choke it.”
The truth of that hit harder than the training ever had.
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We ended the session with a final sprint through the forest path. No commands this time. Just distance.
“Run until I tell you to stop,” he said.
So I ran.
Branches scraped my arms. My breath tore through my lungs. My legs felt heavy by the second mile. But
somewhere in the exhaustion, something shifted.
My thoughts dulled.
The calculating voice in my head quieted.
For a brief stretch, I wasn’t thinking about pace or terrain or whether he approved.
I was just moving.
And it felt… different.
Lighter.
When he finally called, “Stop,” I nearly stumbled from the abrupt halt.
I stood there, chest heaving, sweat cooling against my skin.
Alexander approached slowly.
“You felt it,” he said again.
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I didn’t deny it this time.
“It’s there,” he added. “But you keep dragging it back into a cage.”
I wiped sweat from my face, too tired to argue.
“I don’t know how to let it out,” I admitted.
His expression didn’t soften–but it shifted.
“You will.”
That was all.
No praise. No reassurance.
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Sara Lili is a daring romance writer who turns icy landscapes into scenes of fiery passion. She loves crafting hot love stories while embracing the chill of Iceland’s breathtaking cold.