LOGIN"You're blocking the hallway again," Nia says. "Is that, like, your thing? Taking up space where nobody wants you?"
I count four tiles between my left foot and the lockers. I have seventeen seconds before the first bell. Bren is twenty feet ahead of me, deep in conversation with Theo and their group. He heard what she just said — every wolf in this hallway heard what she just said — and he hasn't turned around.
He won't.
I have stopped being surprised by that. What surprises me is how much it still hurts — just a small, sharp thing, like a paper cut in the same place every single day.
"I'm walking to class," I say, keeping my voice flat.
"Slowly." Nia smiles. "Very, very slowly. It's honestly impressive how little urgency you have about your own life."
Jade is on my left. Petra is already moving behind me and I clock the shift in her weight half a second before she tries to step on the back of my shoe.
I move my foot.
She stumbles.
It is small, fast, and looks accidental. Nia's eyes narrow. She caught it. She is smarter than people give her credit for — that is the most dangerous thing about her. She knows I do it on purpose. She has never been able to prove it to anyone else.
"Careful, Petra," I say. "The floor's uneven here."
Nia steps closer. She is two inches taller than me and she knows how to use it. "You know what your problem is, Zara?"
I wait.
"You think if you stay quiet enough, stay still enough, nobody will notice you're here." Her voice is soft. That is how I know she means it to land. Nia is loud when she wants witnesses. She goes quiet when she wants damage. "But we all notice. We just don't care."
She walks away. The crowd that gathered drifts apart. The bell rings.
I stand there for exactly three seconds — just three — and breathe through my nose. Then I walk to class.
Commander Holt pulls me aside at morning training.
Pack training runs from five to six-thirty, before school starts. All high school students are required to attend the basic track. The intermediate and advanced tracks are voluntary, but open to anyone with ranked blood — which means I am technically allowed in all three. My father would prefer I appear in none of them, but nobody has officially barred me, so I come to everything.
My brother is always already there when I arrive. He never saves me a spot. I started standing in the back near the east wall four years ago. Now it is just my spot. No one else wants it.
Today the training ground feels different. The usual rhythm is there — the sound of drills, the bark of instructions, the morning cold slowly burning off — but there is a watchfulness over everything. Two people sit in the observation stand above the field that is not usually occupied during basic training.
I recognize Kade Voss immediately. He is sitting very still, forearms resting on his knees, eyes moving. He tracks the field methodically, section by section. Not like someone watching a show. Like someone building a list.
Beside him is a woman I don't recognize — tall, dark-skinned, hair pulled back tight. She has a clipboard and she is writing.
"New move sequence today," Commander Holt says beside me, not looking at me. His voice is low, packed into the noise of the field so no one around us catches it. "The third combination — the redirect-and-lock. You've drilled it?"
"Two hundred times."
"Good." He pauses. "He's going to watch the demonstrations."
I look at the observation stand. Kade has not looked at me yet, but that means nothing — I have a feeling Kade Voss sees everything on a field without ever pointing his eyes directly at it.
"I'm not doing a demonstration," I say quietly.
"You're not being asked." Holt moves away. "But when the opportunity comes, don't disappear."
I want to say that disappearing is the entire point, that disappearing is the only thing that has kept me standing in this pack for seventeen years. Instead I say nothing and move to take my place at the east wall.
The new girl arrives halfway through the intermediate session.
She walks onto the field like she belongs there — not arrogant, just settled, the way you look when you've been on enough training fields that another one is just another field. She is tall, maybe 5'7", copper-toned skin, honey-brown eyes scanning the space with easy confidence. She spots Commander Holt and heads straight for him, which tells me she was expected.
He speaks to her briefly. She nods. He gestures — toward me.
I watch her cross the field and prepare to be polite and brief.
"Mira Steele," she says, and extends her hand like it is the most natural thing in the world. "My aunt and uncle are stationed here. You're Zara?"
I shake her hand. "Yes."
"Holt said you know the new sequence."
"I've drilled it."
"Can you run me through it? I want to get it before the full group session."
I look at her. She looks back. There is no calculation in her face — no angling, no social measurement. Just a girl who wants to learn a drill. I have been in this pack long enough to know that is either completely genuine or extraordinarily good acting.
"Sure," I say.
We run it twice slow. The third time at half speed. By the fourth she has the basic shape of it. She is a strong learner — she doesn't fight the correction, she just adjusts and runs it again. I find myself loosening slightly, the way I do when I am only thinking about movement and not people.
"You're really good," she says after the fifth repetition.
"It's just mechanics."
"No, it's not." She wipes sweat from her forehead. "I've had three different instructors try to teach me that redirect. You explained it in two sentences and I got it. That's teaching, not mechanics."
I don't know what to do with that, so I don't do anything. I just say, "Run it again."
She does. She gets it clean.
Above us, I feel the observation stand before I look at it. When I do glance up — just for a second, just to calibrate — Kade Voss is looking directly at me.
Not at Mira. At me.
I look away first.
The demonstration happens because of Nia.
She shows up to intermediate training in athletic wear, which means she came to be seen. She never participates but she is technically allowed to observe, and she sits at the edge of the field with Jade and Petra, positioned perfectly in Kade Voss's sightline.
When Commander Holt announces a live demonstration of the new sequence, Nia leans forward.
"Can anyone volunteer?" Holt asks.
There is the usual shuffling — nobody wants to go first, especially not with the Alpha King's evaluator watching. Bren and his group hang back. Nia is whispering something to Jade.
"Zara." Holt's voice is calm and final.
I go still.
Don't, I think at him, knowing full well he can't hear it. Don't do this.
He does it.
"And Mira. Come up."
Mira moves immediately. She does not hesitate or look around. I pull in a slow breath through my nose and follow.
The field goes quiet. Not all at once — in stages. First the people near the front, then it spreads back like a ripple, until the only sounds are wind and distant birds and the soft gravel under our feet.
Holt gives the instructions. I zone out the crowd. I zone out the observation stand. I zone out Nia's sharp intake of breath somewhere to my left, and Bren's absolute stillness at the edge of my vision.
I look at Mira.
She gives me a small nod. Ready.
"Mira attacks. Zara, defense. Clean execution. Go."
Now, Raya says inside me — not wild, not excited, just present and sure. Like she has been waiting for exactly this moment for years.
I let her in. Just a little.
Mira launches. She is fast and she commits fully, which is exactly right, and I step into the redirect — left foot, weight shift, elbow pin — and in four seconds she is on her back on the mat looking up at me with wide, honest eyes.
Silence.
Then Commander Holt says, "That is what it looks like when it's done correctly."
I help Mira up. She grabs my hand and holds it an extra second, shaking it. "You're incredible," she says quietly, genuine as anything I have ever heard.
I hear something from the direction of the field's edge. A sharp exhale, controlled. I turn my head just far enough to catch Nia's face.
She is not laughing.
She is not doing the thing she does where she performs disinterest. She is looking at me with an expression I have never seen from her before — and I have known Nia Strand for seven years.
Fear.
Not of me. Of what I mean now that people can see me.
Above the field, I hear a sound in the observation stand — the quiet close of a notebook. When I glance up, the woman with the clipboard is writing fast. Kade Voss has not moved. His eyes are still on me, and this time, he does not look away first.
I walk back to the east wall.
Mira follows me.
Behind us, I hear Nia say something to Jade — fast, quiet, the register she uses when she is planning.
I don't catch the words.
But Raya does.
And she goes very, very still.
The crowd thins slowly after Strand disappears into it, the lantern light catching faces that are still trying to decide what they just watched. I stand near the edge of the platform and let the noise wash past me without needing to organize it into anything yet.Mira finds me first. She says nothing about Strand or the council or the formal censure that will likely follow him by morning. She just stands beside me, shoulder to shoulder, the way she has stood beside me since the second week I knew her."He's not going to recover his standing easily," she says eventually."No," I agree."How do you feel about that?"I think about it honestly, the way she taught me to think about most things that matter. "I don't feel anything large about it," I say. "He built something cruel and patient for nine years and tonight it stopped working. That's just consequence. It doesn't need a feeling attached to it."She nods, satisfied with the answer, and we walk together toward the gates where the res
My father is standing.He stands the way he stands when he is about to address the pack council, straight backed, hands loose at his sides, the particular posture he has used for seventeen years to carry the Beta's authority into every room he enters. But there is something different underneath it tonight, something that was not there in the kitchen or in his office or in any of the rooms where he told me not to draw attention. I watch him take it in, the full weight of what Kade has just laid out in front of the entire pack, and I watch him decide what to do with it in front of everyone instead of behind a closed door.He says, his voice carrying clearly across the now silent field, that he has reviewed the formal evaluation file himself, in full, including the supplementary documentation attached to his own prior request for review.He says he has nothing further to add to what Commander Voss has just stated, because there is nothing in the file that requires correction or dispute.
He does not raise his voice. That is the first thing I notice, the thing that tells me this has been planned rather than provoked. A man who has spent nine years running a committee that disposed of complaints without action does not lose his composure in front of an audience this large. He delivers what he says next the way he has delivered every dismissal of his daughter's victims for years, calm, reasonable, dressed in the language of concern.He says he has watched this evaluation process with growing unease. He says the results being read tonight cannot be separated from the relationship between the candidate and the Alpha King's evaluator who compiled them. He says, with the particular precision of a man choosing each word to do maximum damage while remaining technically defensible, that he has reason to believe Commander Voss's professional judgment regarding Zara Cole has been compromised by a personal attachment, and that the entire evaluation, six weeks of documented work, s
The public results segment happens at dusk, on the central platform beneath the Alpha King's crest, with the full assembly of the pack and its visitors gathered along the risers and standing in loose clusters around the field's edge. Lanterns have been strung along the perimeter fence. The formality of it is heavier than anything I experienced yesterday, the particular weight of a ceremony that has happened the same way for generations and is not going to bend for anyone.Commander Holt stands at the platform with the official scroll in hand. He has run this reading for years, I learn later, though never before with a name on it that meant as much to him as the one near the top of tonight's list.He reads through the categories in descending order of rank significance. Combat rounds first, then tactical, then the combined academic and field score that determines final standing within each age bracket. The crowd responds in its expected patterns, applause for familiar names, murmurs fo
Day two begins with the live combat rounds, the portion of the Trials that draws the largest crowd and carries the most weight toward final placement. The risers are full by mid-morning, pack representatives from across the region filling in beside the compound staff and the assembled families of competing candidates. I do not look for my father in the crowd when I arrive. I tell myself this is because I am focused on the work. It is only partly true.My category is paired by a randomized draw conducted the night before. I am matched against a girl named Castellan from a northern border pack, ranked second in her age group regionally, broad through the shoulders and known, according to the murmur that moves through the staging area before the round, for closing distance fast and finishing early.I have read her file. Kade made sure of that weeks ago, the same careful preparation he has brought to every part of this process. I know her tendencies before she steps onto the mat, and Raya
The Pack Trials ground is larger than I remembered it being, though I have walked past it nearly every day of my life. Today it is dressed for something else entirely, banners along the perimeter fence, formal seating risers built up along the western edge, the Alpha King's crest mounted above the central platform where the rankings will eventually be read. I stand at the edge of it in the grey light before the gates open and I let Raya take in the full shape of the space the way she takes in everything, completely and without hurry.The first day is assessment. Academic evaluation in the morning, ranked combat demonstration in the afternoon, a written tactical component woven through both. I have done versions of all three things so many times in the last six weeks that my body has stopped treating them as separate categories. There is just the work, and the work is mine.Mira finds me at the candidate staging area, where six benches have been arranged beneath a canvas awning for the
My father is home when I get back. I know before I open the door — his car is in the driveway and the kitchen light is on, which means he is eating early and wants the house quiet.I come in through the side door."Zara."I stop. He is standing at the counter, still in his Beta uniform, a folder op
"You were an accident, Zara. The sooner you accept that, the easier your life gets."My father said that to me on my twelfth birthday. He was standing in the kitchen, coffee in hand, not even looking at me. I had just walked in wearing the dress Dara helped me pick out the night before. I thought m
Kade makes the announcement on Friday morning.He stands at the head of the training ground in the particular stance he uses when what he says is official — shoulders squared, evaluation file open in his left hand, the professional distance fully assembled. The entire advanced group is present. Rey
Nia changes tactics on Monday.I notice it before anyone tells me, because I have spent seven years reading Nia Strand and I know the difference between her forward campaigns and her lateral ones. A forward campaign is direct — the hallway comments, the heels on concrete, the specific and targeted







