“This,” I said, raising my voice over the murmurs, “is what we’re facing. And you’re going to learn how to fight it.”
“Get into your stances,” I commanded. “He’s not here for show. He’s here to help you train.”
Some hesitated. I didn’t give them time to dwell on it. “Now.”
That snapped them into motion.
The first round of drills began. Brian was fast—inhumanly fast-faster than any vampire or werewolf I’d seen—switching forms mid-combat, exploiting blind spots, adapting to their attacks with chilling ease.
He was stronger than most of the warriors could comprehend. He held back, but he didn’t go easy on them. I could tell. He wasn’t here to maim. He was there to help.
It was almost mesmerizing. And terrifying.
Micah, Jason, and I stood back, just watching.
“Damn,” Jason muttered. “He’s efficient.”
“Calculated,” Micah added. “Doesn’t waste energy.”
I nodded, arms folded, eyes on every movement. “That’s how the rest of them fight. They are ruthless.”
We kept watching, analyzing every strike, every maneuver. Brian didn’t brag, didn’t showboat. He was quiet. Precise. Lethal.
It had been maybe thirty minutes when a giggle broke the tension. That’s the only warning I got.
Something warm and small slammed into my chest.
A small blur ran across the field and something warm and small slammed into my chest before I could even register what was happening.
I instinctively caught her.
“Aspen?” I looked down in shock as her little arms wrapped around my neck, and she beamed up at me.
“I found you!” she announced proudly.
The training ground went completely silent.
She reached up and touched my cheek, her smile stretching wide. “I found you, Mister Alec.”
I felt it—this massive, aching swell in my chest.
Goddess, this little girl… She had no idea what she did to me. How she cracked me open with nothing but a smile and those bright, trusting eyes. She didn’t care that warriors were staring. That gasps echoed across the field. That I was the big, bad alpha.
To her, I was just me.
I smiled. “You found me, huh?”
She nodded and then, as if we weren’t in the middle of a very intense training session, she started talking. “I told Mommy that I dream of you and that I will find you with my nose. I told her you smell like fire and trees. Did you know that? You do.”
I laughed—actually laughed. It caught me off guard.
“I missed you,” she whispered, brushing her tiny nose against mine.
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