It was nearly empty now. A few open lockers yawned like broken teeth, the air thick with the sharp scent of sweat, metal, and detergent. Fluorescent lights flickered overhead, buzzing faintly.
Adrian stepped inside and shut the door.
The click echoed louder than it should have.
"You used your wolf,"
Adrian said, wasting no time.
Darius dropped his bag onto the nearest bench and exhaled slowly. "I used my speed."
Adrian turned on him.
"You used more than you were allowed," he snapped. "On a human field. In front of humans."
"I won the drill," Darius replied.
"That's not the point."
Darius's eyes narrowed slightly. "Then what is?"
Adrian closed the distance between them, Alpha pressure rolling off him in controlled waves. The lockers rattled softly, metal shivering in response.
"That rule exists because exposure kills," Adrian said. "One mistake. One human who notices too much. That's all it takes."
"And stagnation kills too," Darius said evenly. He didn't step back. "You trained us to survive among them-not to shrink. I chose a moment where excellence wouldn't look unnatural."
"You assumed-"
"I observed," Darius cut in, voice firm. "No cameras. No outsiders. Just boys desperate to believe in talent. Humans explain what they see in ways that make them comfortable."
Silence stretched between them.
Adrian exhaled sharply and turned away, dragging a hand through his hair.
"Funny thing though," he said, softer now.
"You talk about control," Darius went on, his tone casual, almost bored, "but in the cafeteria-"
He paused deliberately.
"You forgot it."
Adrian turned slowly. "What do you mean, I forgot it?"
Darius tilted his head slightly. "That girl."
Adrian's jaw tightened at once.
"The one in the oversized hoodie," Darius continued, unhurried. "Golden hair. Human."
"That has nothing to do with this," Adrian said.
"Doesn't it?" Darius asked. "Because I've never seen you lose awareness. Not once."
His wolf stirred uneasily, sensing the shift.
"You warn me about being noticed," Darius went on quietly. "About risk. But the way you stared at that girl-"
He paused.
"You weren't just curious. You were hesitant. Almost afraid. And it made me wonder... since when does our fearless Alpha feel curiosity-let alone fear-toward a human?"
The words landed cleanly.
The locker room felt smaller.
Adrian's voice dropped, low and dangerous. "You're crossing a line, Darius."
"I'm pointing at one," Darius replied calmly. "If we're measuring danger, we should be honest about where it comes from."
A beat passed.
"You think my choice was reckless," Darius said. "I think it was controlled. Intentional. Yours wasn't."
Silence crashed down between them.
For the first time, Adrian didn't immediately respond.
Because deep down he knew that Darius was right about one thing.
That girl had pulled his focus in a way no one ever had.
And that was a risk Adrian hadn't calculated. Hadn't prepared for.
"Next time," Adrian said at last, voice ice-cold, "you speak about my attention, you'll regret it."
Darius inclined his head-not apologetic.
Knowing.
Adrian yanked the door open and walked out.
Behind him, Darius stayed where he was, a faint smirk lifting the corner of his lips.
Because for the first time, Adrian wasn't guarding the pack from humans-
He was guarding himself from one.