17kNovel

Font: Big Medium Small
Dark Eye-protection
17kNovel > My Sister Stole My Mate, And I Let Her > My throat was raw125

My throat was raw125

    125 Chapter 125 LOCKWOOD INSTINCT


    SERAPHINA’S POV


    Three straight days of hosting duties had drained me more than I wanted to admit.


    Smiling until my jaw ached, bowing, shaking hands, weing one self–important Alpha after another–it


    was exhausting in a way even training wasn’t.


    But now, finally, thest of the visiting packs had been settled. Tonight, at least, I had my hours back.


    After seeing all my potentialpetitors, I was determined to pour those hours into training. After throwing


    that miraculous punch at Maya, I didn’t want to lose my momentum.


    She was already stretching when I walked into the private training room, her braided ponytail swinging


    behind her like a whip.


    The floor smelled faintly of resin and leather, mats worn down from hours upon hours of werewolves honing


    themselves against each other.


    My muscles hummed with anticipation, though a heavy weariness still clung to me from all the public


    courtesies I had been forced to perform.


    “Ready?” Maya arched a brow, already dropping into a stance.


    I nodded and rolled my shoulders. “More than ready.”


    We began–but within minutes our rhythm splintered.


    I couldn’t get the maneuver right. Maya wanted me to use my momentum differently–less force, more angle


    -but every attempt ended in failure.


    She corrected me once, twice, then sighed, frustration leaking through her patience.


    “No, Sera, you’re not redirecting. You’re charging. Look-” She moved through the motion herself, smooth


    and clean. “You let their energy carry over. You don’t fight it head–on.”


    “I am trying,” I muttered, stepping back into position. My palms stung from hitting the mat wrong. “You make


    it sound simple, but my body won’t-”


    125 Chapter 125 LOCKWOOD INSTINCT


    “Stop fighting the flow,” she cut in, clicking her tongue. Then she flicked my forehead. “You’re overthinking


    again.”


    I scowled at her, rubbing the sore spot. She just smirked. “Again. And this time,”–she tapped the side of her


    temple-“empty here, goddammit.”


    I tried again. Failed again.


    The p of my body against the mat echoed too loudly in the room.


    Heat crawled up my neck. For all the progress I had made these past weeks, this small nuance seemed


    impossible.


    The ss door slid open.


    Both our heads turned at the same time.


    Ethan leaned against the frame, arms crossed, hair floppingzily over his forehead.


    “Having fun?” he asked dryly.


    Maya groaned as I bristled. “Don’t start.” She shot me an exasperated look. “She’s refusing to understand basic


    redirection.”


    “I’m not refusing,” I shot back. “I just-” I stopped, pressing my lips together. My bruised pride didn’t need


    another witness tonight, especially not my older brother’s.


    Ethan walked in anyway, ignoring my re. “Show me.”


    I blinked. “Excuse me?”


    “Do the move,” he said, nodding toward Maya. “Go on.”


    Maya shrugged at me. “Might as well. He’s not a half–bad fighter.”


    Ethan snorted. “You’ve forgotten how easily I can put you on your back, babe?”


    Maya smirked, leaning in to him. “I cleared that memory in favor of all the other…ways you can put me on my


    back”


    Ethan’s teeth sank into his lower lip. “Yeah? How aboutter tonight-”


    Ob 550


    125 Chapter 125 LOCKWOOD INSTINCT


    “Okay!” I exhaled sharply, shooting to my feet as Ethan’s head began to dip, a suggestive glint in his eyes.


    I supported their rtionship, but I absolutely did not want a front–row seat to the canoodling.


    Maya winked at him and mouthed, ‘Later,‘ before turning back to me.


    Rolling my eyes, I squared my stance opposite Maya.


    We went through the motion again. I pivoted, tried to redirect, and failed just as miserably as before.


    The result was me t on my back, staring up at the fluorescent lights with my hair syed like a halo.


    “See?” Maya muttered.


    Ethan crouched beside me before I could scramble up. He shook his head slowly. “You’re resisting at the


    wrong point. You want to push, not catch. Watch”


    Without asking, he pulled me to my feet like I weighed as much as a bag of feathers, then gestured for Maya


    to lunge at him.


    Without hesitation, she did–sharp, precise–but Ethan moved differently.


    He caught her momentum fluidly, almostzily, shifted his stance, and suddenly, Maya was the one with her


    back on the ground.


    “That,” he said, straightening, “is what she’s trying to teach you.”


    Maya blinked, gracefully pushing herself to her feet. “You…actually did it better than me.”


    “Don’t sound so shocked?” His mouth curved in a brief smirk, then his gaze returned to me.


    “You’re trying to meet force with force, Seraphina. That’s not how our instincts work. Lockwood blood


    doesn’t only hit head–on. It adapts.”


    Something prickled at the back of my mind. “Lockwood blood?”


    He nodded. “You keep fighting as if you’re an outsider who has to learn from scratch. But that instinct–you


    already have it. You’re resisting your own nature.”


    I snorted. “You’re joking, right?”


    No way my brother was suggesting I had some innate fighting instinct when I didn’t even have a wolf.


    125 Chapter 125 LOCKWOOD INSTINCT


    Maya crossed her arms. “You mean…she’s making it harder by not trusting herself?” She cocked her head and


    shot me a knowing look. “She’s thinking too fucking much?”


    I rolled my eyes as Ethan continued.


    “Exactly.” His expression was unsettlingly earnest. “You already feel it before you move, Sera. That’s what


    tripped me up when I was younger–I didn’t trust the flicker, thought it was just a reflex. But it’s instinct.


    Lockwood instinct. And you obviously have it in droves, seeing how far you’ve progressed in such a short


    amount of time.”


    I crossed my arms. “So now you’re attributing my hard work and determination to what, genes?”


    Surprisingly, he smiled. “You’re stronger than I was. It took me quite a while to figure out that father wasn’t


    trying to drill something foreign into me. He was just trying to teach me how to stop ignoring what was


    already there. He would have been proud of your progress.”


    The mention of my father seemed to poison the air. The reminder that he’d never seen it fit to train me.


    Celeste hadn’t cared to train properly, and he’d respected her wishes.


    But I’d wanted to. And he shunned me, threw a dumbbell at the door the day I peeked in to watch one of his


    private sessions with Ethan.


    The thought of him being proud of me would have beenughable if I wasn’t too busy trying to breathe


    through the sudden pain in my chest.


    I turned my back on Ethan and Maya, busying myself with picking up my water bottle.


    I heard Ethan sigh. “Sera…”


    I shoved my towel into my bag without answering. The scrape of the zipper was too loud.


    “Seraphina,” he said again, the apology thick in his tone. “He was wrong. We were all wrong. I’m so sorry.”


    I stilled. Hearing it from him, unprompted, made my throat constrict. But the memory of years wasted, of


    pain I had carried alone, rose like a tide.


    I didn’t reply. I couldn’t.


    Maya shifted ufortably, then pped her hands. “Okay, this is depressing. How about dinner? My shift


    was long, training was longer, and I refuse to go home hungry.”


    125 Chapter 125 LOCKWOOD INSTINCT


    Ethan hesitated, eyes flicking to me warily, no doubt recalling the hot mess that was thest time we’d dined


    together. “If she doesn’t want-”


    “I’lle,” I cut in, slinging my bag over my shoulder. His brows shot up. I couldn’t me him; I was surprised


    at myself.


    “You will?”


    I forced a small smile. “Consider it payment for the lesson.”


    The relieved, grateful smile on his face sted away any reservations that this was a bad idea.


    ***


    The restaurant Maya chose was a cozy one on the edge of the district, low lights and polished wood, the air


    fragrant with herbs and sizzling butter.


    The kind of ce that made you forget the world outside for a while.


    We found a booth near the window. Maya immediately ordered a te of garlic bread with too much cheese,


    grinning widely and chattering animatedly as if determined to keep the mood light by sheer willpower.


    When the bread arrived, steaming, Maya dove in first. Ethan leaned back against the booth, watching me with


    a quiet expression I didn’t know how to interpret.


    “You’ve changed,” he said after a moment.


    If I had a penny for every time I’d heard that phrase.


    “Meaning?” I arched a brow.


    “You’re not…brittle anymore. Or maybe I’m just noticing toote.”


    Maya shot him a warning look, but he didn’t back down. His words weren’t cruel–just contemtive. I could


    sense he was being careful with me tonight.


    I broke off a piece of bread, shrugging. “You’rete to many things, Ethan.”


    That earned a huff of augh from Maya. Even Ethan smiled ruefully. “Fair enough.”


    For a while, the conversation drifted to lighter ground.


    08:67


    125 Chapter 125 LOCKWOOD INSTINCT


    Maya recounted a disastrous sparring session involving an old trainee, too much bravado, and a window.


    Ethan countered with hrious tales of his early training days and the countless bruises he gave himself, and


    I actually found myselfughing, genuinely, the tension loosening like knots slowly untying.


    Maybe this was what it felt like to breathe among family, without the poison of old grievances constantly


    choking the air.


    But then the restaurant door opened.


    The chime above it was delicate, almost lost in the chatter, but I felt the shift before I even looked up.


    When I did, I almost honest–to–goodness burst intoughter.


    Because someone was definitely ying games with my life–and they’d run out of original moves, so they


    just kept repeating the same old bullshit over and over again.


    Hence, there they were, like a fucking rash that just wouldn’t clear up.


    Celeste and Kieran.


    <b>Comment </b>2


    You’ve arrived at thetest chapter!


    Vote
『Add To Library for easy reading』
Popular recommendations
The Wrong Woman The Day I Kissed An Older Man Meet My Brothers Even After Death A Ruthless Proposition Wired (Buchanan-Renard #13)