Ethan POV
I reached out to Lizzy’s parents personally. That was not a conversation I could delegate. It would have been easier to send a report, easier to let soone else handle the formalities, but leadership is not about choosing the easier path, it is about choosing the correct one, even when it sits heavy in your chest before you make the call.
They answered with grief hit first, shock second and denial sowhere in between but I told them everything.
Not softened, not exaggerated, but clear, asured, factual, the way it needed to be, including what Lizzy did, what she aligned herself with, and what it cost in the end. I gave them space to react, to ask questions, to direct their anger where they needed to, and when it settled into sothing quieter, sothing that felt more like understanding than acceptance, I offered condolences that were honest rather than performative.
They lost a daughter, we lost sothing else and both things can be true at the sa ti. The days that follow are structured, they have to be.
Routine returns in pieces, first through patrol rotations and training schedules, then through communal als and daily tasks, and the pack leans into it, not because they are unaffected, but because forward motion is how we maintain stability.
Maze arrives three days after the fight and he does not make an entrance. He never does. He steps into ops like he belongs there, which he does, his presence shifting the room without disrupting it, and Daniel straightens almost imdiately, Mateo already moving to pull up files before a single word is spoken.
The envelopes co up quickly.
They have been coming for a while now, subtle at first, isolated incidents that were easy to dismiss as coincidence or minor interference, but Daniel tracked them, cataloged them, and what once looked like scattered anomalies now forms a pattern too consistent to ignore.
Maze studies the data without interruption, his focus absolute, and when he finally speaks, it is not to question the findings, but to expand them.
"This isn’t localized," he says calmly. "Other packs are reporting the sa drops. Different timing, sa structure."
"Foreign influence. Coordinated." Mateo nods, his fingers already moving across the interface.
"Then we stop treating it as isolated." Maze’s gaze shifts between them and what follows is not a discussion, it is a decision.
A task force is ford on the spot, not ceremonial, not tentative, but operational, built to track and counter external threats before they root themselves deeply enough to destabilize entire territories, and when Maze nas Daniel and Mateo as heads of that division, there is no hesitation in the room.
They’ve already been doing the work, now they have the authority to match it.
"Cross-pack communication becos standard," Maze continues. "No more silos. No more delayed reporting. If sothing lands in one territory, everyone knows."
"Understood." Daniel nods once.
"About ti." Mateo’s expression sharpens with sothing like satisfaction. And I agree with him; it is about ti.
Ezra hates being still.
That becos clear within a day of him regaining full consciousness, because while his body is healing, his mind refuses to follow the sa pace, and he tests boundaries the way he always has, pushing where he can, ignoring limits when he thinks no one is looking but Allison does not let him get away with it.
Not harshly, not forcefully. But firmly enough that even Ezra has to concede, because there is no argunt he can make that she hasn’t already anticipated, and the patience she shows him, the steady way she redirects instead of restricts, keeps him grounded in a way none of us could manage alone.
He complains constantly and she ignores most of it. Then she redirects the rest and when he finally settles, when the restless edge dulls just enough that healing can actually do its job, it is because she held that line without wavering.
Outside of that room, she moves through the pack with the sa deliberate presence.
She does not retreat into recovery, she steps forward.
She shows up in the nursery, sitting cross-legged on the floor with children gathered around her, reading stories in a voice that softens the edges of the room without losing clarity, and I watch from the doorway more than once, taking in the way even the youngest settle around her, drawn not by authority, but by sothing quieter.
She helps where she can, not as a performance, not to prove anything, but because she chooses to.
Daily tasks, small repairs, conversations that matter more than they seem at first glance, and often I’m there beside her, or Elijah is, not because she needs us to be, but because we choose to stand with her openly now, without hesitation or calculation and the pack responds.
Most of them already have.
Respect ca quickly after the fight, her skill undeniable, her control even more so, but what settles deeper is the way she listens, the way she engages without dismissing, the way she holds space for perspectives that don’t always align with hers and still moves forward with clarity.
They see it, they trust it, but not all of them.
A few council mbers still push back, quietly, persistently, their resistance less about Allison now and more about what she represents, change they cannot control, influence they cannot shape, and we monitor them closely, not with paranoia, but with awareness. We’ve learned that lesson already.
The pack is not fractured. It is shifting, and shifts like this take ti to settle fully.
I stand at the edge of the training grounds as evening settles in, watching as Allison walks across the open space with Elijah at her side, her posture relaxed but aware, her presence drawing attention without demanding it, and I let the mont sit.
We didn’t lose him, we didn’t lose her and we didn’t lose the pack.
That matters.
Everything that cos next builds on that, and this ti, we’re ready for it.
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