Lucien did not move from where he stood, yet sohow the space between us shifted the mont he chose to speak.
"Careful, little brother," he said, his tone light, almost conversational, though there was sothing beneath it that didn’t belong to casual words. "You’ve always had a habit of mistaking instinct for certainty, and it never ended well for you."
Rowan didn’t react imdiately, but I felt the change in him anyway.
It wasn’t visible to anyone who didn’t know what to look for, yet it was there in the way his shoulders settled just slightly differently, in the way his focus sharpened without becoming aggressive. This wasn’t the kind of tension he had shown with Kael. This was older. Quieter. More controlled.
"You didn’t co here to give advice," Rowan replied, his voice steady, though the edge beneath it was impossible to miss.
Lucien’s smile widened just enough to acknowledge that truth.
"No," he said. "But I thought I’d start with sothing familiar. It’s been a while since you last ignored a warning that mattered."
I frowned slightly, my attention shifting between them as the tone of the conversation changed in a way that felt... personal. Not just strategic, territorial. Sothing deeper.
"What is he talking about?" I asked, my voice calm but direct.
Rowan didn’t answer.
Lucien did.
"He hasn’t told you?" he said, his gaze sliding toward with quiet interest. "That’s disappointing. I thought we were past his selective honesty phase."
"That’s enough," Rowan said, sharper this ti.
Lucien tilted his head slightly, studying him.
"No," he said calmly. "I don’t think it is."
The air shifted again, not with power this ti, but with sothing more dangerous.
History.
Lucien straightened from the wall, finally pushing himself away from it as he stepped closer, not enough to invade space, but enough to make his presence undeniable.
"There was soone before," he said, his voice quieter now, though sohow more precise. "Soone he was certain about. Soone he thought he could protect just by wanting it enough."
My chest tightened slightly. I didn’t know why. I didn’t know who. But the way he said it made it feel like sothing that still mattered.
"What happened?" I asked, before I could stop myself.
Rowan’s gaze snapped to .
"Elara—"
But Lucien didn’t let him interrupt.
"He lost her," he said simply.
The words landed without force. And yet they hit harder than anything else so far. I looked at Rowan, searching his expression for denial, for correction, for anything that would make that statent less final. But there was nothing.
"It wasn’t like that," Rowan said after a mont, his voice controlled, though sothing beneath it had shifted.
"No?" Lucien replied mildly. "Then tell what it was like."
Rowan didn’t answer.
Lucien exhaled slowly, as though unsurprised.
"That’s what I thought."
I didn’t fully understand what had happened between them, but I understood enough. This wasn’t just a story.
It was a wound.
And Lucien knew exactly where to press.
"Why are you telling this?" I asked, my voice quieter now, though no less steady.
Lucien turned to again, and for the first ti, his attention felt fully focused.
"Because patterns repeat," he said. "And I’d hate to watch him make the sa mistake twice."
Sothing about the way he said it made my stomach tighten.
"Which mistake?" I asked.
His smile returned, slower this ti.
"Believing he gets to keep what he finds."
The aning was clear.
Too clear.
Rowan stepped forward then, placing himself just slightly between us, not enough to block, but enough to shift the dynamic.
"That’s not your concern," he said.
Lucien’s gaze flickered to him, amused.
"Isn’t it?" he asked. "It always has been."
For a mont, no one spoke.
Then Lucien continued, his tone shifting again, this ti not mocking, not probing, but almost... thoughtful.
"If you’re going to stay involved in this," he said, glancing between us, "you’re going to need more than instinct and stubbornness."
Rowan didn’t respond.
Lucien went on.
"There’s soone you should find."
That caught my attention imdiately.
"Who?" I asked.
Lucien’s gaze returned to , studying in a way that felt far more deliberate than before.
"An old wolf," he said. "Older than either of them. Older than most of what you think you understand."
"That’s not very specific," I said.
"It’s not ant to be," he replied.
Rowan’s expression darkened slightly.
"You think he’ll help?" he asked.
"I think he’ll tell the truth," Lucien said.
"And you won’t?" Rowan countered.
Lucien’s smile sharpened.
"I already am."
Silence stretched again, but this ti it felt different. Less like a standoff. More like a decision waiting to be made. I looked at Rowan.
Really looked at him.
At the control he carried, at the things he didn’t say, at the past I had only just begun to glimpse. There was sothing there I didn’t fully understand yet, sothing that made Lucien’s words harder to dismiss than I wanted them to be.
"You were in love with her," I said quietly.
It wasn’t a question. Rowan didn’t deny it. For a mont, sothing shifted in . Not jealousy or even anger. Sothing more complicated. Sothing that made the distance between us feel... less certain than it had before.
I exhaled slowly.
"Where do we find this wolf?" I asked.
Rowan looked at , sothing unreadable in his expression.
"You don’t have to—"
"I know," I interrupted. "But I’m not staying here pretending I understand sothing I clearly don’t."
A brief silence passed. Then he nodded.
Lucien watched the exchange with quiet interest, though there was sothing else in his gaze now, sothing that hadn’t been there before.
Approval. Or perhaps anticipation.
"Careful," he said lightly, as we turned to leave. "The last ti he went looking for answers, he lost soone he thought he couldn’t live without."
I didn’t stop walking. But I did answer.
"Then maybe this ti," I said, "he won’t make the sa mistake."
Lucien’s voice followed us anyway.
"Oh, I’m counting on that," he said.
There was a pause.
Then, softer—
"And if he does..."
I didn’t turn back but I felt his gaze.
"I’ll take again what he can’t keep."
This ti, the aning didn’t need to be explained.
And for the first ti— I understood that whatever this was becoming...
Lucien wasn’t just watching it.
He was waiting for his turn.
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