Anastasia had been trying very hard not to get involved.
Really.
She'd been leaning against the fence line for the better part of twenty minutes, arms folded across her chest, watching the drills with the detached expression of someone who absolutely had opinions and was choosing, out of extraordinary generosity, to keep them to herself.
It had been going surprisingly well.
Then the older Ecosian opened his mouth.
Stasia closed her eyes briefly.
“Ah,” she muttered. “There it is.”
The universal language of someone about to make a bad decision.
She watched the exchange unfold with the weary resignation of a woman who had spent years around military officers, hunters, alphas, generals, and every other flavor of stubborn authority figure the universe could invent.
The male hit the ground.
Dust flew.
The host immediately found religion and got back into formation.
“Mm.”
Stasia popped her gum.
“Effective.”
She waited until the drills resumed before finally pushing away from the fence. Boots crunched softly against the dirt as she approached, hands still buried in her jacket pockets.
The air around the training field thrummed with the beat of wings overhead.
“You know,” she said conversationally as she stopped a few feet away from Caelius, “for someone who complains about other people being dramatic, you do throw Ecosians at the ground with impressive theatrical timing.”
One brow lifted.
“Very inspiring leadership. Nine out of ten. Lost one point for dust cloud.”
Her eyes flicked briefly skyward toward the reforming host.
“They are tired,” she observed.
Not criticism.
Just fact.
“Half of them started anticipating the maneuver instead of executing it twenty minutes ago. The older one especially.” A pause. “Which means his mouth got ahead of his judgment.”
Stasia tilted her head slightly, studying him.
“You okay, Big Bird?”
The question came casually.
Too casually.
Like she wasn't asking about the tension still wound through his shoulders or the fact that his patience had clearly been stretched thin.
She glanced toward the sky again.
“Because if you keep glaring at them like that,” she added dryly, “they're either going to improve very quickly...”
A beat.
“...or start placing bets on who survives training.”
Caelius whirled at the woman's voice and the look that crossed his face was a mixture of both irritation and pure surprise at her very presence. "What are you doing here?!" He questioned sharply, but forced himself to keep his voice at least somewhat controlled. He cut his gaze across the city, as if it could see through the buildings and stone and into the small cavern the Veil opened up into and the guards that were supposed to be vetting everyone that wanted to get into the Night.
Perhaps he was being a tad unfair though, he considered, as the woman seemed only mildly amused by the training session and more interested in ambushing him with that ridiculous nickname of hers for him.
He pursed his lips as he considered her casual observation. "Ecosian fighters are veritable wells of stamina. These drills should be child's play to them - not something that should have tired them out after only..." He glanced at the horizon and cursed. "...more hours than I realized." He admitted. He watched his men for a few moments longer before dismissing them with a wave of his hand and turning to the woman now. "Why are you here?" He questioned more calmly this time.













