Chapter 79 Divided Focus
POV: Elara (Age 17 - Ten Days Before 18th Birthday)
Combat training with Logan is where I feel most comfortable.
Not because I'm good at it. I'm mediocre at best. But because it's honest. Straightforward. You attack or defend. You win or lose. No politics. No manipulation. No pretending.
Just pure truth delivered through violence.
"Again," Logan commands. He's been running me through the same scenario for an hour. Single opponent. Silver weapon. Coordinated attack designed to exploit Oracle-Alpha hybrid weaknesses.
I fail. Again. Get "killed" within fifteen seconds.
"You're relying on Oracle voice," Logan says. "Using it as first response instead of last resort. That's predictable. Professional hunters will expect it. Will have countermeasures. Will kill you while you're trying to command reality."
"Then what do I use?" I demand. Frustration making my voice sharp.
"Alpha wolf," Logan says. "Speed. Strength. Instinct. The things that don't require conscious thought. The things hunters can't predict because they're trained to counter Oracle magic, not wolf dominance."
Through the bond I feel Rafe's distant approval. He's in political training with Jax. Learning things I hate. But he's happy there. Thriving in environment that makes me want to scream.
We're different. Always have been. Training is making it more obvious.
"Show me," I tell Logan. "Don't just tell me what I'm doing wrong. Show me how to do it right."
Logan shifts. His black wolf emerging. Massive. Scarred. Built for violence in ways that make my smaller, faster wolf look inadequate.
But he doesn't attack. Just demonstrates. Movement without Oracle power. Pure physical combat. Technique refined over decades.
I watch. Learn. Try to absorb what he's showing.
Then he shifts back. "Your turn. Wolf form. No Oracle voice. Just physical combat."
I shift. Let my wolf emerge. Smaller than his. Faster. Built differently.
The scenario runs again. I attack using only physical capabilities. No Oracle commands. No reality manipulation. Just teeth and claws and instinct.
I last thirty seconds instead of fifteen. Progress. Small but real.
"Better," Logan says. "You're faster than you realize. More agile. Your wolf is built for speed-based combat. Stop trying to be me. Be you."
Through the bond I feel Rafe's satisfaction. Feel him recognizing I'm learning. Feel him proud even from distance.
The lesson continues. Three hours of pure physical combat. Building muscle memory. Learning to trust wolf instinct instead of Oracle power.
By the end I'm exhausted. Covered in training injuries that will heal by tomorrow. But I'm better. Measurably better.
"Tomorrow we integrate," Logan tells me. "Learn when to use Oracle voice versus when to use wolf combat. Learn to switch mid-fight. Learn to be unpredictable instead of predictable."
I nod. Too tired to speak. Just grateful for training that makes sense to me.
Political training with Jax is where Rafe thrives.
I'm sitting in on the session because Mom insisted we each understand what the other is learning. Cross-training. Ensuring we're both competent even in areas we hate.
Jax is running scenario. Mock pack lord meeting. Rafe has to build alliance without revealing twin heirs' full power. Has to navigate politics without using Oracle voice.
I watch Rafe work. Watch him schmooze. Watch him negotiate. Watch him manipulate pack lords into agreeing with him while thinking it was their idea.
He's good at this. Natural. Like Jax trained him his whole life instead of just four days.
Through the bond I feel his satisfaction. Feel him enjoying the puzzle. Feel him thriving in environment I despise.
"Elara," Jax says. "Your turn. Same scenario. Different approach."
I stand reluctantly. Take Rafe's position. Face simulated pack lords who are really just Jax playing multiple roles.
The scenario plays out. I try to do what Rafe did. Try to schmooze and negotiate and manipulate.
I fail spectacularly. Last maybe two minutes before pack lords storm out offended by my directness.
"You're treating negotiation like combat," Jax observes. "All force. No finesse. You're trying to dominate when you should be partnering."
"I don't know how to partner," I admit. "I know how to fight. How to win. How to force compliance. Not how to make people want to comply."
Through the bond I feel Rafe's sympathy. Feel him recognizing I'm struggling. Feel him wanting to help but not knowing how.
"Different strengths," Jax says. "Rafe excels at consensus building. You excel at forcing change. Both valuable. Both necessary. You just need to know when to use which approach."
"When do I use my approach?" I ask. "When is forcing change appropriate?"
"When negotiation fails," Jax says. "When pack lords are too entrenched to persuade. When only force will move them. That's when your directness becomes asset instead of liability."
Through the bond I feel Rafe's recognition. Feel him understanding that Jax is teaching us to complement each other. Feel him seeing how our different strengths can work together.
"So Rafe negotiates first," I say slowly. "Builds alliances. Tries to persuade. And if that fails, I force compliance. We work in sequence instead of simultaneously."
"Exactly," Jax confirms. "Good cop, bad cop. Diplomat and enforcer. Negotiator and warrior. Both necessary for effective leadership."
Through the bond I feel the understanding settling between Rafe and me. Feel us recognizing our differences aren't weakness. They're strategic advantage. They're complementary rather than contradictory.
Strategic training with Asher is where both Rafe and I struggle equally.
Long-term thinking doesn't come naturally to seventeen-year-olds. Understanding consequences three moves ahead requires discipline we haven't developed.
Asher makes us map scenarios. Draw trees showing how current choices create future outcomes.
"Unity path," he says. "Map consequences. Five years out. Ten years out. Twenty years out."
Rafe and I work together. Drawing branches. Showing outcomes.
Unity creates centralized power. Efficient decision making. Clear hierarchy. Risk of tyranny if wrong person holds power. Risk of stagnation if system becomes inflexible. Risk of rebellion if wolves feel unrepresented.
"Destruction path," Asher continues. "Same exercise."
We map again. Destruction dissolves power structures. Creates freedom. Allows individual choice. Risk of chaos if no organization exists. Risk of violence if disputes have no resolution system. Risk of vulnerability if external threats require coordinated response.
"Transformation path," Asher says. "Unknown consequences. Map possibilities."
This is harder. We don't know what transformation actually means. Don't know what we'd be creating. Don't know what costs it carries.
We map anyway. Showing potential outcomes. Some positive. Some catastrophic. All uncertain.
"This is the problem with third path," Asher tells us. "Known paths have known consequences. You can predict. Plan. Prepare. Unknown path has unknown consequences. You're gambling with entire pack structure on possibility that innovation will work."
Through the bond I feel Rafe's concern. Feel him recognizing that choosing third path is risky. Feel him uncertain if innovation is worth the gamble.
I feel differently. Feel that known paths have known failures. Feel that trying something new might succeed where old approaches failed.
"But known paths have failed before," I point out. "Unity became Council tyranny. Destruction becomes pack wars. Known paths don't guarantee success. Just guarantee predictable failure."
"True," Asher agrees. "Which is why strategic thinking requires weighing known risks against unknown possibilities. Requires deciding if predictable problems are better or worse than unpredictable outcomes."
Through the bond I feel Rafe processing. Feel him recognizing that this is exactly the choice we're facing. Known paths with known failures versus unknown path with unknown possibilities.
Feel us starting to diverge. Feel him leaning toward known risks. Feel me leaning toward unknown possibilities.
Feel our differences crystallizing into actual strategic disagreement.
"Ten days until our birthday," Rafe says after training ends. "Ten days to decide if we're choosing together or separately. Ten days to figure out if our differences are complementary or contradictory."
"Vera said we can disagree while maintaining bond," I remind him. "Said unity doesn't require uniformity."
"But we still don't know if prophecy agrees with Vera's interpretation," Rafe counters. "Don't know if twin bond survives actual contradiction versus just different approaches to same goal."
He's right. We're theorizing. Hoping. Gambling on interpretation that might be wrong.
"Only one way to find out," I tell him. "We test it. We practice disagreeing while maintaining bond. We see if connection holds when we actually oppose each other."
Through the bond I feel Rafe's hesitation. Feel him fearing that testing might break what we're trying to preserve. Feel him wanting to avoid risk.
"We test it or we go into prophecy blind," I press. "We find out now if disagreement breaks the bond, or we find out on our birthday when it's too late to adjust. Which do you prefer?"
Through the bond I feel Rafe's grudging acceptance. "Fine. We test it. But carefully. Controlled environment. Ready to pull back if bond starts fracturing."
That night we set up the experiment.
Mom and the dads are present. Safety measure. If bond starts breaking, they can intervene. Can help us pull back before permanent damage.
"What are you testing exactly?" Mom asks. Her silver eyes holding concern.
"Whether twin bond survives actual disagreement," I explain. "Whether we can oppose each other while staying connected."
Through the bond I feel Rafe adding his explanation. "Vera suggested we don't have to choose identically. That twin bond might hold even if we choose different paths. But prophecy is unclear. We're testing if that interpretation is viable."
The dads exchange glances. Silent communication built over seventeen years of tri-bond.
"It's risky," Jax says. "Twin bonds are delicate. Pushing them to breaking point intentionally could cause damage you can't undo."
"But we need to know," Rafe says. "Need to know if our differences are compatible with bond survival. Need to know before prophecy forces the choice."
Mom is quiet for long moment. Then: "When your uncle and I fought, the bond held. We disagreed constantly. About strategy. About risks. About everything. But the bond never broke because underneath disagreement was love. Was respect. Was recognition that we were stronger together than apart."
Through the bond I feel Rafe's hope. "So disagreement doesn't break twin bonds?"
"Not if foundation is strong enough," Mom says. "Not if love outweighs disagreement. Not if you remember you're twins first, individuals second."
"How do we test that?" I ask.
"Argue," Logan suggests. Blunt as always. "Pick something you genuinely disagree about. Really argue. See if bond holds under stress."
Through the bond I feel Rafe's immediate resistance. Feel him hating conflict. Feel him wanting to avoid fight.
I feel differently. Feel that controlled fight is better than discovering during prophecy that we can't disagree.
"Unity versus Destruction," I say. Looking at Rafe. "That's what we actually disagree about. That's what we need to test."
Through the bond I feel Rafe's reluctance. Then acceptance. "Fine. You argue for Destruction. I'll argue for Unity. We'll see if bond survives genuine opposition."
We face each other. Twin bond open between us. Mom and dads watching ready to intervene.
"Destruction is freedom," I begin. "It's giving every wolf choice. It's refusing to let anyone control pack structure. It's trusting individuals over systems."
Through the bond I feel Rafe's disagreement rising. "Unity is security. It's organized response to threats. It's efficient decision making. It's building something lasting instead of just tearing down."
"Unity is tyranny waiting to happen," I counter. "It's power concentration. It's one bad leader from becoming the Council you toppled. It's trading freedom for false security."
Through the bond I feel the strain. Feel Rafe's emotions sharpening. Feel disagreement becoming personal.
"Destruction is chaos waiting to happen," Rafe argues back. His voice carrying heat now. "It's no coordination when threats come. It's wolves fighting wolves because there's no resolution system. It's freedom that kills you because no one coordinates defense."
The bond pulses. Stress building. Both of us feeling the strain.
But it's holding. Uncomfortable but stable. Painful but intact.
"You want to build another system that will fail," I tell him. "Another hierarchy that will corrupt. Another power structure that will hurt people."
"You want to destroy everything without building anything," Rafe counters. "You want freedom without responsibility. Choice without consequence. That's not transformation. That's just burning down what exists without creating what comes next."
Through the bond the pain intensifies. Both of us feeling each other's anger. Each other's fear. Each other's genuine belief that we're right and the other is wrong.
But underneath the disagreement. Underneath the argument. Underneath the stress.
Love. Constant and undeniable. Twin bond holding not despite our differences but because our foundation is stronger than our disagreement.
We stop arguing. Stand in silence. Both of us breathing hard. Both of us feeling the bond pulse with strain and strength simultaneously.
"It held," Rafe says quietly. "We disagreed genuinely. Argued for real. And the bond held."
Through the connection I feel his relief matching mine. Feel both of us recognizing that maybe Vera was right. Maybe we can disagree while maintaining bond. Maybe twin heirs don't have to be identical.
"You can choose different paths," Mom says. Her voice carrying understanding. "As long as you respect each other's choices. As long as you maintain love underneath disagreement. As long as you remember you're twins first."
Through the bond I feel Rafe's understanding settling. Feel him recognizing that we've been thinking about prophecy wrong. Feel him seeing that maybe third path is actually both paths chosen together.
"Unity and Destruction aren't opposites," I realize aloud. "They're balance. Someone builds. Someone ensures freedom. Both working together creates transformation."
"Transformation requires both," Rafe agrees. "Can't transform without understanding what to keep and what to destroy. Can't create new without honoring old. Can't move forward without respecting both structure and freedom."
Through the bond I feel our thinking synchronizing differently. Not into identical thoughts. Into complementary ones. Into recognition that maybe we've been seeing the prophecy as forcing choice when it's actually offering synthesis.
Ten days until our birthday.
Ten days to figure out how to choose differently while choosing together.
Ten days to find the third path that requires both of us being exactly who we are.
For the first time since learning about the prophecy, I'm not angry about it.
I'm excited.
We can do this. Together. While being different. While disagreeing. While being exactly who we are instead of who everyone expects.
That's what being twin heirs means.
Not being identical. Being complementary.
Not agreeing on everything. Respecting each other despite disagreement.
Not choosing the same path. Choosing to walk different paths together.
Ten days.
We can figure this out in ten days.
Together.