Hale said orientation was over.

Then he handed them a schedule thick enough to be used defensively.

Mark took his copy with both hands.

Gabriel stared at his like it had demanded a blood sample.

Thane flipped through three pages, saw dense blocks of time, acronyms, room numbers, range days, physical assessment dates, scenario rotations, report deadlines, legal modules, and one entry simply labeled OC / CHEMICAL AGENTS.

His ears flattened.

Gabriel leaned over.

“Pepper spray day?”

“No.”

Mark looked at his own schedule. “It is listed.”

“No.”

Hale stood at the front of the room, arms folded, looking at the class with the dry satisfaction of a man who had just issued everyone a map to discomfort.

“Sixteen weeks,” he said. “Law. Procedure. Ethics. Firearms. Driving. Defensive tactics. Report writing. Testimony. Emergency response. Physical standards. Scenario training. Exams. Remediation if you earn it. Paperwork if you deserve it. More paperwork if you complain.”

Mark’s eyes brightened despite himself.

Gabriel saw it.

“He said that last part for you.”

Mark did not look up. “Paperwork is a system.”

“So is punishment.”

Ross stood beside Hale with a stack of binders and the smile of someone who had packed suffering in alphabetical order.

“Some of you think the hard part will be physical,” Hale said. “Some of you think it will be academic. Some of you think wanting this badly will matter.”

His eyes moved across the room.

Cass sat still, calm and ready.

Brent sat two rows over, posture straight, face guarded but less sharp than before.

Jordan Vale sat near the aisle, one hand on his gear bag as if reassuring it.

The trio sat together, because no one had yet been foolish enough to assign otherwise.

Hale continued.

“Wanting it gets you to the door. Training shows what you brought with you.”

He looked briefly at Thane.

Then Gabriel.

Then Mark.

“All of it.”

No one joked.

Not even Gabriel.

Ross handed out binders.

When she reached Mark, she paused.

“One binder.”

Mark looked at it.

Then at the stack in her arms.

“I understand.”

“Do you?”

“Yes.”

“You are not allowed to create a master index for the class.”

Mark’s ears went back.

Gabriel whispered, “Pre-crime.”

Ross handed him the binder.

“You may create a personal index.”

Mark’s ears lifted.

“One page,” Hale said from the front.

Mark froze.

Ross smiled.

“Sixteen weeks,” Hale said. “The academy does not care what you intended to become. It shows you what you are under pressure.”

Thane looked down at the schedule.

Sixteen weeks.

Not possible anymore.

Actual.

The door had opened.

Now they had to walk through it.

Week One

The first week smelled like dry marker, coffee, nervous sweat, new paper, and human fear pretending to be professionalism.

The classroom work began immediately.

Criminal law. Constitutional limits. Search and seizure. Probable cause. Reasonable suspicion. Use of force. Ethics. Department policy. Civil liability. Report structure. Radio procedure.

By Wednesday, several cadets had discovered that being able to yell command presence did not help with case law.

By Thursday, Jordan had apologized to a scantron sheet.

By Friday, Mark had become a problem.

The legal instructor, Lieutenant Brenner, stood at the front of the room with the first written quiz in hand and a frown that suggested either disappointment or mathematics.

“Mark.”

Mark looked up.

“Yes?”

“I need to speak with you after class.”

Gabriel leaned toward Thane.

“He broke the answer key.”

Mark whispered, “I did not.”

Brenner looked down at the page.

“You may have.”

Gabriel’s face lit up.

Mark looked offended and pleased in equal measure.

After class, Brenner held up Mark’s quiz. “Question twelve asked for the best answer.”

“I selected the best answer.”

“You selected the best answer, wrote why the question was poorly worded, and provided two fact patterns where another answer could become correct.”

Mark adjusted his posture.

“Yes.”

Brenner stared at him.

“That is not how multiple choice works.”

“It is how law works.”

Hale, passing by the open classroom door, stopped.

“No.”

Mark turned. “Sergeant—”

“No.”

Brenner pointed at Hale. “Thank you.”

Mark looked betrayed by institutional unity.

Thane did better than expected.

That surprised everyone but him.

Law made more sense when it stopped being paper and became lines. Not polite lines. Hard ones. Lines between force and punishment. Search and trespass. suspicion and proof. help and control.

He did not like all of them.

But he understood why they existed.

Gabriel did well in ethics and communication, though his essay answers came back with comments like persuasive but not responsive and less flourish.

He read the second one aloud.

“Less flourish.”

Hale, walking past, said, “Frame it.”

Gabriel looked down at the paper.

“I might.”

Cass was steady. Not flashy. Never behind. She answered exactly what was asked, and sometimes exactly what the instructor wished everyone else had understood.

Brent worked harder than he wanted anyone to see.

Thane saw anyway.

The first week ended with a room full of cadets who had not yet failed, which Hale described as “statistically acceptable.”

Gabriel called it encouragement.

Hale called Gabriel “incorrect.”

Week Three

The range made the human cadets look at the werewolves differently.

At first, some expected arrogance.

Why would creatures with claws, speed, strength, and fangs care about firearms?

Thane heard that thought in their heartbeats before anyone said anything.

He saw it in the sidelong looks when the modified hearing protection came out. Oversized muffs, fitted around ears that did not fold conveniently into human equipment. Custom eye protection. Adjusted stance. Modified grip discussions because claws changed hand mechanics.

The range instructor, Sergeant Molina, treated all of it with an expression that suggested she had seen worse and would not be impressed until someone gave her a reason.

“A firearm is not a personality,” Molina said. “It is not a symbol of authority. It is not an argument. It is a tool that makes permanent mistakes if you get careless. Respect it or leave.”

Thane liked her immediately.

Gabriel did not like the range.

Not because he was afraid.

Because gunfire with werewolf hearing was an act of violence even through protection.

The first volley cracked down the line and Gabriel’s ears pressed hard under the muffs.

Brent glanced over.

“You don’t like gunfire?”

Gabriel’s smile was thin.

“I enjoy keeping my skull on the inside.”

Brent considered that.

Then nodded like the answer made too much sense to mock.

Mark was mechanically precise. He treated the firearm like a system whose failure modes deserved reverence. Every movement controlled. Every check exact. Every instruction followed with terrifying consistency.

Molina watched him for a while.

“You always this careful?”

Mark looked surprised by the question.

“With objects designed to launch metal through people? Yes.”

Molina nodded.

“Good answer.”

Thane’s accuracy created the first real silence.

Not because it was impossible.

Because it looked unfair.

He fired, adjusted, fired again, and the paper target developed a tight wound in the center mass area that made the cadet on his right lower his own pistol slightly and stare.

Thane noticed.

Molina noticed more.

“Eyes on your own target,” she barked.

The cadet snapped forward.

Gabriel’s grouping was almost as tight, though he grimaced after every string. Mark’s was clinical.

At the end, several humans looked impressed.

A few looked unsettled.

Molina took in the targets and the faces.

“Good. They can shoot.”

She turned on the class.

“Now spend the rest of your careers hoping you never have to prove it.”

That shut down the awe before it grew teeth.

Thane looked at the paper target.

Strength. Accuracy. Speed.

None of it had made the pistol lighter.

Not legally.

Not morally.

Not in the hand.

Week Six

Ross drew a circle on the mat with blue tape.

Thane stared at it.

Gabriel leaned toward him.

“Your old enemy.”

“Tape is getting bold.”

Ross smiled from across the gym.

“Tape remembers.”

Defensive tactics had moved from stance and contact into resistance, balance, holds, disengagement, and survival under pressure. For the human cadets, it was hard physical work.

For the werewolf trio, it was hard because the point was not to be impressive.

Ross reminded them often.

“Do not win unless winning is the assignment.”

“Do not solve every problem by being the largest weather event in the room.”

“Gabriel, stop making eye contact like you’re negotiating with gravity.”

“Mark, bodies are not compliant diagrams.”

“Thane, if you move him by accident, I will make you carry him emotionally next.”

Brent had improved. Not magically. Not completely. But visibly. He asked more questions now. Listened to Cass. Stopped treating every correction like a duel.

That day, Ross pointed to the taped circle.

“Strength and balance demo.”

A low murmur moved through the room.

Ross looked at Thane.

“Circle.”

Thane stepped into it.

“Your job,” she said, “is to stay standing and not hurt anyone.”

He nodded.

Ross pointed to Owen Price, a broad cadet with a county jail background, then to Brent.

“You two. Move him out.”

Owen and Brent exchanged a look.

Brent looked at Thane.

Thane lifted both hands slightly.

“Try.”

Gabriel whispered, “He says that like a haunted house.”

Owen took one side. Brent took the other. Both set their feet and pushed.

Nothing happened.

Not enough happened to count as failure.

Thane stood in the blue circle like a tree that had opinions.

Owen grunted.

Brent reset his stance and tried to angle.

Better.

Still nothing.

Ross crossed her arms.

“Notice something?”

Jordan raised his hand.

Ross sighed. “Yes, Vale.”

“He is not moving.”

“Correct but not helpful.”

Cass said, “They’re using effort against mass and balance, but he’s not contesting them. He’s just rooted.”

Ross nodded.

“Better.”

Brent stepped back, breathing hard, but not angry.

He looked at Thane’s feet.

“No shoes, no slide.”

Thane looked down at his footpaws. Claws lightly touching mat. Pads gripping.

“No shoes.”

Owen muttered, “That is deeply unfair.”

Ross pointed at Owen. “Reality often is. Adapt.”

Then Ross stepped into the circle.

Thane looked at her.

She tapped his shoulder with two fingers.

“Step out.”

Thane stepped out.

The room went quiet.

Ross turned to the class.

“The only person who moved him today was him. Remember that. Control is internal before it is external.”

Hale, watching from the wall, nodded once.

Gabriel whispered, “That almost sounded like wisdom.”

Ross said, “I heard that.”

He smiled. “It was admiration.”

“It had better be.”

The awe in the room did not vanish.

But it changed shape.

It became less about what Thane could do to them.

More about what he had chosen not to do.

That mattered.

Later that week, Gabriel caught a falling baton before it hit the floor.

The instructor had dropped it from shoulder height while demonstrating a disarm. It slipped, spun, and should have clattered against the mat.

Gabriel’s hand flicked out.

He caught it by the end without looking away from the instructor’s face.

The whole row behind him made a sound.

Gabriel looked at the baton.

Then at the class.

“What?”

The instructor stared at him.

Mark said, “Reflexive motion.”

Gabriel handed the baton back. “That sounds more official than showing off.”

“Were you showing off?” the instructor asked.

Gabriel smiled.

“No. If I were showing off, I would have bowed.”

Ross called from another mat.

“Do not bow.”

Gabriel lowered his shoulders.

“Oppressive.”

Mark had his own moment during evidence-handling practice.

Three training dummies had been moved around the room during a scenario. The instructor asked which cadet had handled which dummy based on positions, notes, and observations.

Mark answered before anyone else had finished looking.

“Brent moved dummy two. Cass moved dummy one. Jordan touched dummy three but did not move it.”

The room turned.

Jordan blinked.

“I did touch it.”

The instructor narrowed his eyes.

“How?”

Mark looked confused by the question.

“Scent transfer. Cass had hand sanitizer with aloe. Brent has range-cleaning solvent on his right sleeve. Jordan has the cinnamon gum smell and anxiety sweat.”

Jordan whispered, “Sorry.”

Gabriel patted his shoulder. “Your anxiety has evidentiary value.”

The humans stared.

The instructor held up one finger.

“Impressive.”

Then another finger.

“Also useless unless documented properly.”

Mark nodded solemnly.

“Understood.”

Hale, passing through the doorway, muttered, “They learn.”

Week Nine

The ruck/run started at dawn.

Full gear.

Weighted packs.

Duty belts.

Hydration.

Training uniforms modified for the trio, standard gear for the humans, and enough Oklahoma heat waiting in the rising sun to make the entire exercise feel personally hostile.

The course looped along a gravel service road behind the training grounds, then through a wooded strip, then up a long hill everyone hated by reputation before they met it.

Hale stood at the starting line with a stopwatch.

Ross stood beside him.

“Goal is completion,” Hale said. “Not heroics. Not collapse. Not proving your ancestors crossed mountains. Completion.”

Gabriel looked at the hill in the distance.

“My ancestors made better choices.”

Mark adjusted his pack.

Thane rolled his shoulders under the weight.

The pack felt like a suggestion.

That was part of the problem.

When Hale called start, the group moved.

At first, the run held together.

Boots struck gravel. Gear shifted. Water sloshed. Breath settled into patterns. The trio kept pace with the group, not ahead. Ross had made that point very clear.

“You are not setting the pace,” she had said.

Thane had looked at the course.

“I could.”

“Yes,” Ross said. “And that would be useless.”

So they stayed in formation.

Brent ran near the middle, jaw set, efficient. Cass kept a steady rhythm, watching the people around her as much as the road. Maya paced herself well.

Jordan struggled by mile two.

Not from laziness.

Never that.

He fought for every step. Sweat soaked his shirt. His breathing went ragged. His pack rode wrong no matter how many times he adjusted it. His boots dragged more often. His eyes fixed on the ground too close in front of him.

Thane noticed before the instructors called it.

So did Cass.

She glanced back once, assessing.

Brent noticed too, but he was breathing hard enough that help would cost him more than he could give.

Jordan dropped another ten yards.

Then fifteen.

The line stretched.

Hale’s vehicle moved slowly along the side road, watching.

Thane looked forward.

Then back.

Report before motion.

Cadet falling behind. Heat. Fatigue. Still moving. Not quitting. Needs help.

He slowed.

Gabriel noticed instantly.

Mark did too.

“Thane,” Mark said quietly.

“I see him.”

Ross’s voice came from the side of the course.

“Do not turn this into a show.”

Thane looked at her.

“I won’t.”

Then he dropped back.

Jordan saw him coming and shook his head before Thane said anything.

“Don’t.”

“Bad lie.”

Jordan tried to laugh.

It came out like a cough.

“I’m fine.”

“No.”

“I can finish.”

“Then finish that tree.”

Jordan looked ahead.

A scrub oak stood maybe forty yards away.

“That tree?”

“That tree.”

Jordan gritted his teeth.

They reached the tree.

Thane kept beside him, not touching, not crowding.

“Next cone.”

Jordan’s breathing rasped.

“Why are there so many cones?”

“Government.”

That got a real laugh.

Small.

Painful.

Useful.

They reached the cone.

The hill began after that.

Jordan looked up and his face changed.

Not fear.

Defeat trying to arrive early.

Thane stepped in front of him, angled, not blocking the route.

“Look at me.”

Jordan did.

Barely.

“Not the hill. Next ten steps.”

Jordan nodded.

They made ten.

Then ten more.

Then five.

His legs shook.

His breath hitched.

His foot slipped on gravel and he caught himself on one knee.

Thane stopped.

So did the air around him.

Jordan tried to push up.

Could not.

His face twisted.

“I can’t.”

The words broke something in him as they came out.

“I can’t. I’m sorry.”

The group ahead had slowed. Cadets looked back. Cass stopped at the crest despite Ross calling for forward movement. Brent turned, hands on his knees, chest heaving.

Hale stepped from the side vehicle.

Thane looked at him.

“Permission?”

Hale looked at Jordan first.

Not at Thane.

Good.

Jordan was pale under the flush, soaked, trembling, done. Not quitting. Done.

Hale looked at Thane.

“Do not hurt him.”

Thane knelt.

Jordan shook his head weakly.

“No, no, don’t—”

“You did,” Thane said.

Jordan stared at him.

“You didn’t quit. Now we finish.”

The words landed.

Thane moved slowly enough for everyone to see.

“Arms.”

Jordan hesitated.

Then looped his arms forward.

Thane lifted him.

Full gear. Pack. Belt. Sweat. Embarrassment. Exhaustion.

All of it.

Jordan weighed almost nothing in Thane’s arms.

That was not the point.

Thane settled him across his shoulders in a secure carry, one arm bracing Jordan’s legs, the other steadying his back.

Jordan made a strangled sound.

“Am I heavy?”

Gabriel, from up the hill, called, “Emotionally?”

Ross snapped, “Gabriel.”

Thane looked up the hill.

Then sprinted.

The formation went silent.

Not because Thane moved fast.

They had known he could.

Because he carried Jordan as if the gear, the heat, the hill, and the weight of another grown man were no more than weather.

Gravel kicked behind his footpaws. Claws bit and released. The hill vanished under him.

He passed the rear of the formation.

Then the middle.

Brent stared as Thane went by.

Cass watched, eyes softening.

Maya whispered, “Holy—”

“Keep moving,” Ross barked, but her voice had changed.

Thane reached the front, slowed, and turned back into formation pace.

Not showing off.

Not breaking the run.

Carrying the cadet at the pace the group needed to finish.

Jordan had gone very quiet across his shoulders.

At the final stretch, the whole class moved together. Slower than the werewolves could have gone. Faster than Jordan could have managed alone.

Across the finish line, Hale stopped the clock.

Thane stepped aside and lowered Jordan carefully to his feet.

Jordan nearly collapsed, but Thane steadied him with two fingers at the elbow.

Two fingers.

Not a grip.

Jordan stood.

Barely.

His eyes were wet, though he tried to hide it with sweat and breathing.

“I didn’t finish it.”

Thane looked at him.

“You didn’t quit it.”

Jordan swallowed.

Hale came over.

“There is a difference,” he said. “Learn it.”

Jordan nodded.

Cass handed him water.

Brent stood nearby, still breathing hard, looking at Thane with something that was no longer competition.

Maybe respect.

Maybe something heavier.

Gabriel came up beside Thane.

“That was very noble.”

Thane grunted.

“And slightly ridiculous.”

“Stop.”

“You looked like a rescue truck with ears.”

Ross pointed at Gabriel. “Hydrate before you become paperwork.”

Gabriel took water.

Mark arrived last of the trio, because he had stayed with the formation exactly as instructed. His eyes moved from Jordan to Thane to Hale.

“Completion standard met?”

Hale looked at the group.

Then at Jordan.

Then at Thane.

“Yes.”

Mark nodded.

“As a system, it adapted.”

Gabriel smiled. “He made friendship sound like logistics.”

Jordan, still bent over his water, laughed once.

That was enough.

Week Ten

Someone decided Cass was a problem.

That was unwise.

His name was Mason Rell, a late transfer from another academy group whose confidence had not yet encountered enough correction. He was tall, loud, and had the kind of grin that looked borrowed from someone who enjoyed locker rooms for the wrong reasons.

Cass had beaten him twice in scenario scoring without seeming to notice.

That seemed to bother him.

It happened after a communication practical. Cass had given a clean response to a mock domestic call, controlled the room, separated parties, identified the safety issue, and avoided every trap the instructors had set.

Mason had rushed his scenario, barked commands, escalated the actor playing the suspect, and ended with Ross saying, “Congratulations, you made everyone louder.”

In the hallway afterward, Mason muttered loudly enough to be heard.

“Easy to look good when you’ve got instructors grading for quiet little den mother energy.”

Cass stopped.

Not fully.

Just enough.

Brent, walking nearby, turned.

Thane was down the hall with Mark, speaking to Hale about a gear adjustment.

Gabriel was closer.

Much closer.

Cass did not turn around.

Mason continued, because foolishness often mistook silence for permission.

“Guess babysitting the wolves gets you points.”

The hallway changed.

Not because anyone moved.

Because Gabriel stopped being casual.

He turned slowly.

No growl.

No teeth.

No step forward.

Just attention.

Mason saw him and smirked.

“What?”

Gabriel smiled.

It was not warm.

“Nothing.”

Mason laughed. “Sure.”

Gabriel tilted his head.

“I was just admiring how efficiently you confused quiet with weak. That usually takes people longer.”

The hallway went still.

Cass turned slightly.

Mason’s smirk thinned. “You got something to say?”

“Yes.”

Gabriel folded his hands loosely in front of him, claws visible but relaxed.

“Cass has carried more useful weight in silence than you have produced in every sentence since Monday. You are not angry that she gets special treatment. She doesn’t. You’re angry that she is competent without asking the room to clap for her.”

Brent’s eyebrows lifted.

Mason’s face flushed.

Gabriel continued, voice calm and surgical.

“You barked at a scenario until it became a fight. She spoke to it until it became manageable. That bothers you because loud is the only tool you brought, and it keeps failing in public.”

Mason stepped forward.

Gabriel did not.

That made it worse.

“Careful,” Mason said.

Gabriel’s smile faded.

“No. That is the point. You weren’t careful with her name. You weren’t careful with your ego. You weren’t careful in your scenario. And now you’re trying to borrow intimidation from proximity because substance continues to be unavailable.”

Someone made a small sound.

Possibly Jordan.

Possibly a dying laugh.

Ross appeared at the far end of the hall.

Of course she did.

“Mason.”

Mason stopped.

Ross walked closer, eyes moving from Mason to Gabriel to Cass.

“What happened?”

No one spoke for half a second.

Then Cass said, “Mason made a comment. Gabriel corrected it.”

Ross looked at Gabriel.

“Corrected.”

Gabriel gave her a polite nod.

“Verbally.”

“I noticed.”

Hale appeared behind Ross, drawn by either instinct or administrative dread.

He looked at the scene.

Then at Gabriel.

“Effective?”

Ross said, “Very.”

Hale’s eyes narrowed.

“Clean?”

Ross paused.

“No.”

Gabriel’s ears angled back.

Hale stepped closer.

“Words are force.”

Gabriel nodded once.

“Yes.”

“Use of force still gets judged.”

Gabriel did not smile.

“Yes.”

Hale looked at Mason.

“You, with me.”

Mason opened his mouth.

Hale’s expression stopped him.

“Now.”

Mason followed.

Ross stayed.

She looked at Cass.

“You good?”

Cass nodded. “Yes.”

Ross looked at Gabriel.

“Walk it off before your mouth writes reports your badge can’t cash.”

Gabriel winced. “That was vivid.”

“It was meant to be.”

Ross left.

The hallway exhaled.

Cass turned to Gabriel.

“I didn’t need rescuing.”

“I know.”

“Then why?”

Gabriel looked toward where Mason had gone.

“Because he needed stopping.”

Cass studied him.

Then nodded once.

“Fair.”

Gabriel looked relieved.

Cass added, “But next time, leave some pieces for me.”

A slow smile crossed Gabriel’s face.

“Quiet ally remains terrifying.”

“Still pending.”

Brent, from behind them, muttered, “She’s going to accept the title just to annoy you.”

Cass walked away.

Gabriel watched her go.

“I hope so.”

Week Twelve

Pepper spray day arrived despite Thane’s objections.

He had objected many times.

Privately. Publicly. Philosophically. Once by pointing at the schedule and saying “No” with enough authority to make Jordan drop a pen three rows away.

Hale remained unmoved.

“It is required exposure training.”

“I heal from bullets.”

“Pepper spray is not a bullet.”

“That is my complaint.”

Ross supervised the modified exposure protocol with the seriousness of someone who knew exactly how bad the day could get. The trio’s enhanced senses made standard exposure more complicated, so the instructors reduced intensity and adjusted safety measures.

That did not make it pleasant.

It made it survivable.

For the human cadets, pepper spray was miserable.

For the werewolves, it was a religious experience in hatred.

Thane lasted six seconds before every instinct in his body tried to exit through his skull.

Fire hit his eyes, but the eyes were not the worst.

His nose became the center of the universe and the universe was made of knives.

He could not smell the air.

He could smell pain.

Gabriel lost all charm immediately.

He made a sound that might have been a curse in a language invented by suffering.

Mark tried to recite procedure.

“Contaminated subject should—should be guided to—oh, absolutely not—”

Then he walked into a padded post.

Jordan, already flushed and crying from his own exposure, reached for him.

“Mark, this way.”

Mark held up one claw.

“I know where I am.”

“You are touching a post.”

“I am recalculating.”

Brent guided Thane toward the wash station.

Carefully.

No jokes.

No smirk.

One hand hovering near Thane’s arm, not grabbing unless needed.

“This way,” Brent said. “Water’s right here.”

Thane growled.

Not at Brent.

At existence.

Brent did not flinch.

“Yeah, fair.”

Gabriel stumbled into the rinse station beside them, eyes streaming.

“I have lost confidence in government.”

Hale stood nearby, arms folded, watching every cadet.

“Today’s lesson,” he said, “everyone has something that drops them.”

Thane bent over the water and tried to wash fire out of his face.

Ross’s voice came from beside him.

“Still indestructible?”

Thane could not see her.

He could imagine the smile.

“I hate you.”

“Good. Hate keeps you oriented.”

Gabriel coughed. “I am telling Shah this was cruel and unusual.”

Shah, who had arrived for legal observation at the worst possible time, said from somewhere behind him, “It is documented as training.”

Gabriel groaned.

“Betrayed by paperwork.”

Mark, still rinsing, muttered, “Paperwork has no loyalty.”

The humans saw it.

That mattered.

They saw Thane shaking with pain and not raging.

Gabriel helplessly miserable and not performing.

Mark unable to system his way out of suffering.

They saw Brent guiding Thane without being asked.

Cass helping Jordan breathe through the exposure.

Ross watching for safety under the hardness.

Hale making sure no one laughed at vulnerability.

No one was untouchable.

No one was above needing help.

Thane hated pepper spray with a purity that felt almost clean.

But he understood the lesson.

Everyone had something that dropped them.

The job was getting back up without making it someone else’s injury.

Week Fifteen

The final scenario took place in a fake convenience store built inside the training complex.

Of course it did.

Gabriel saw the shelves, counter, fake glass, taped exits, bystander actors, and one instructor in a gray hoodie and immediately looked at Hale.

“Subtle.”

Hale said, “Reality repeats itself. Training may as well.”

The scenario combined everything.

Bad caller information. Possible weapon. Injured person. Conflicting witnesses. Loud bystanders. Camera phones. A domestic argument bleeding into public space. A child actor crying near the back aisle. A clerk actor who wanted to yell more than help. A suspect actor pacing with one hand hidden.

The cadets rotated through in teams.

Some failed fast.

Some failed quietly.

Some did well until the second complication.

Brent’s team went before the trio.

Thane watched from behind the observation glass as Brent approached too aggressively, realized it, stopped, and took one step back.

Not dramatic.

Not perfect.

But correct.

Cass, on the same team, saw it and shifted into the space he created. Jordan, assigned as radio, stumbled over the first update, corrected himself, and got the essential information out.

The scenario ended with no one tackled, no bystanders “injured,” and only one fake shelf knocked down.

Ross wrote something on her clipboard.

Hale looked almost satisfied.

When the trio’s turn came, the room hummed with old lessons.

Tape.

Passenger seat.

Two fingers.

Report.

Oath.

Thane stood outside the fake store with Gabriel and Mark beside him.

Different now.

Not less wolf.

Not less dangerous.

More placed.

The whistle blew.

The scenario began.

The clerk shouted first.

“He’s got something! He’s crazy!”

The suspect paced near the front, one hand hidden, face flushed.

A bystander filmed.

A second bystander yelled conflicting information.

The child cried near the back aisle.

Gabriel took initial voice.

Not velvet.

Not stage.

Clear.

“I’m Gabriel. Nobody move toward him. Give us space.”

Mark’s eyes moved across the room.

“Right hand hidden. Broken display near east aisle. Child in back corner. North exit blocked by bystander.”

Thane stood at the doorway.

Stopped.

Did not become the door.

One step back.

Angle left.

Hands open.

The suspect saw him and flinched.

Thane stayed still.

Gabriel caught the flinch and spoke before fear grew legs.

“He’s staying there. Look at me.”

The suspect looked at Gabriel.

Mark spoke quietly.

“Child has clear path if bystander moves. Need the north exit.”

Gabriel pointed to the bystander.

“You. Blue shirt. Step back to the wall. Now.”

The bystander actor challenged him.

“I’m allowed to film!”

“Yes,” Gabriel said. “From the wall.”

The bystander moved.

Mark radioed concise information.

“Subject agitated, right hand hidden, possible injury, child in rear aisle, clearing north exit.”

Short.

Useful.

Hale watched through the glass.

Voss stood beside him.

Ross stood with arms folded.

The suspect stumbled.

His hand came out.

Not knife.

A shard of plastic from the display.

Still sharp.

Still dangerous.

Thane did not move until Voss’s voice came over the scenario speaker.

“Thane, guide him left if he advances.”

The suspect advanced.

Thane stepped from the side.

“I’m going to guide your arm. I won’t hurt you.”

Two fingers.

Enough to communicate.

Not enough to move him like furniture.

“Step left.”

The suspect stepped.

Gabriel kept voice control.

Mark called the safe path.

The child actor moved with Cass, who had entered as secondary support in the scenario and took the child out without fuss.

The suspect dropped the plastic after two clear commands.

End whistle.

The room stopped.

For a moment, all anyone heard was the hum of lights.

Then Ross said, “Acceptable.”

Gabriel closed his eyes.

“That is basically a parade.”

Hale entered the training room.

He looked at the three of them.

“Not terrible.”

Mark whispered, “Fireworks.”

Thane kept his hands open until the instructor playing the suspect stepped fully away.

Then he lowered them.

Voss approached from behind Hale.

“You waited.”

Thane nodded.

“Mostly.”

“Mostly is becoming a theme.”

Gabriel said, “A successful theme.”

Ross looked at him.

“You used fewer words.”

Gabriel smiled.

“I mourned every one.”

Mark looked at Hale.

“My radio traffic?”

Hale checked his notes.

“Concise.”

Mark breathed out.

Then looked worried.

“Too concise?”

Hale stared.

Mark shut up.

“Good correction,” Hale said.

That counted too.

Graduation Day

Sixteen weeks did not make them smaller.

It did not make them ordinary.

It did not file down claws, dull teeth, quiet instinct, erase strength, soften senses, or turn wolves into men shaped conveniently for the system.

The academy tried anyway.

It gave them law, forms, scenarios, driving blocks, range qualifications, chemical agents, bodycam review, mock testimony, defensive tactics, emergency response, ethics, radio codes, report standards, and enough acronyms to make Gabriel threaten to defect to poetry.

It gave Mark a binder so organized that Hale refused to look at it directly.

It gave Brent humility in uneven pieces.

It gave Cass recognition she had never asked for.

It gave Jordan a finish line he had crossed on Thane’s shoulders and then spent the next seven weeks earning on his own feet.

It gave the class stories they would probably tell wrong for years.

The day certificates were handed out, the training hall looked almost formal.

Rows of chairs.

Families and department personnel.

Instructors along the side wall.

Hale in dress uniform, looking like the uniform had personally disappointed him.

Ross standing beside him, sharp and proud in a way she would deny under oath.

Voss and Rusk near the back.

Crowe with arms folded, watching like a supervisor counting problems that had become assets against her better judgment.

Shah sat near the aisle, perfectly composed, likely prepared to object to excessive sentiment.

The trio wore modified dress uniforms for the first time.

Not patrol uniforms yet.

Not detective clothes.

Not the final thing.

But close enough that the room understood what was coming.

Dark fabric fitted for shoulders, tails, arms, and movement. No shoes. Footpaws on polished floor. Claws visible. Badges not yet pinned to their chests, but the shape of that future waiting.

The class received certificates one by one.

Cass Morgan walked across the front to steady applause. Ross’s clap was sharper than most.

Brent Talley crossed next, jaw set, eyes forward. Hale handed him the certificate and held it for an extra half second.

Whatever Hale said was too quiet to hear.

Brent nodded.

Jordan Vale crossed later. When Hale handed him the certificate, the class applauded louder than expected.

Jordan looked startled.

Then saw Thane standing in the row.

Thane gave him one small nod.

Jordan straightened.

Then came Gabriel.

Hale handed over the certificate.

Gabriel smiled.

Hale said, “Do not say anything charming.”

Gabriel accepted the certificate.

“I would never.”

Hale stared.

Gabriel added, “Today.”

Ross shook her head.

Mark came next.

Hale handed him the certificate.

“One page,” Hale said quietly.

Mark looked offended.

Then smiled.

“Yes, Sergeant.”

Thane crossed last.

The room felt the size of him even in ceremony.

Hale held out the certificate.

Thane took it carefully.

For a second, Hale did not let go.

His eyes met Thane’s.

“You passed CLEET,” Hale said quietly. “That does not make you a good cop.”

Thane nodded.

“It means you have earned the right to start becoming one.”

The words landed heavier than the paper.

“Yes, Sergeant.”

Hale released the certificate.

Ross caught Thane as he stepped down.

“One step back,” she said.

He looked at her.

“I know.”

“If you forget, I will find you.”

Gabriel, passing behind him, said, “That sounded affectionate.”

Ross looked at him.

“It was a threat.”

“Affectionate threat.”

“Move.”

Voss waited near the back doors when the ceremony ended.

The class scattered into families, photos, handshakes, awkward hugs, and instructors pretending not to care.

The trio approached her together.

For once, none of them joked first.

Voss looked at their certificates.

Then at their uniforms.

Then at the three of them as if seeing the beginning of something she had helped set in motion and was still not entirely sure she should have.

“Congratulations.”

Gabriel smiled. “That sounded almost painless.”

“It wasn’t.”

Mark held his certificate carefully.

“What happens Monday?”

Voss’s mouth twitched.

“Field training assignments. Patrol.”

Thane’s ears lifted slightly.

“Passenger seat?”

“For now.”

Gabriel looked at Thane. “The seat gets another chance to survive.”

Voss ignored him.

“You are not detectives. You are not special enforcement. You are probationary officers entering field training. You will ride with training officers. You will write reports. You will take calls. You will be corrected. Often.”

Mark nodded. “Expected.”

Gabriel said, “Dreaded.”

Thane said nothing.

Voss looked at him.

“You ready?”

He looked past her toward the parking lot, where patrol units sat in rows, white and black under afternoon sun. Doors. Radios. Cameras. Reports. People waiting somewhere in the city to become calls.

Sixteen weeks had not made him safe.

Not harmless.

Not ordinary.

But training had done something harder.

It had taught him where to put the strength.

“Not yet,” Thane said.

Voss’s expression softened.

“Good.”

Gabriel looked at him, then at Mark.

“We are still not cops?”

Mark glanced at the certificate in his hand.

“No.”

Thane looked toward Hale, who stood near the front pretending not to watch them.

“Almost.”

The word felt strange.

Too small for sixteen weeks.

Too large for what came next.

Outside, the day was bright and hot and ordinary. The Xterra waited in the lot, practical and properly parked. Beyond it, Cross Timber stretched under the Oklahoma sky, full of glass doors, bad calls, hidden injuries, loud witnesses, frightened children, angry men, lost keys, blocked exits, and stories waiting to be written down correctly.

Monday waited.

So did the badge.