Page 140 of Wrecker


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I was on the floor because I’d fallen and falling wasn’t the same as losing.

When I pushed myself upright, my legs shook, but they held.

And that—right there—was the difference.

Ranger didn’t touch me.

Didn’t speak.

He waited.

I sucked in a breath. Then another. Pressed my palms flat against the mat. Felt the texture. Counted the lines in the rubber padding.

Here. Now.

I pushed myself up.

“That’s it,” Brutus said quietly. “That’s the difference.”

Sweat soaked through my shirt. My arms burned. My lungs felt raw.

And for the first time in a long time, the ache didn’t feel like punishment.

It felt like progress.

We took a break mid-morning. Doc appeared with water and protein bars, scowling like he expected me to collapse at any second.

“Hydrate,” he ordered.

“Yes, sir,” I said, and meant it.

Outside, the compound buzzed with low-level activity. Bikes being tuned. Radios crackling. Scout sat on the porch wrapped in a blanket, nursing a mug and talking quietly with Ariel. He looked tired. Still healing.

Still here.

I caught his eye as I passed, and he gave me a small nod.

Something steady clicked into place inside me.

We moved to weapons after lunch.

Nothing live. Nothing reckless.

Ranger walked me through grip and posture with a handgun first, correcting small things. My elbow angle, my wrist tension, the way I breathed before pulling the trigger. Each correction made the shot cleaner. More controlled.

“This isn’t about power,” he said. “It’s about intention.”

The words stuck.

Brutus took over for close-quarters work. No theatrics. No mercy either.

“Again,” he said, every time I hesitated.

By the time my muscles started to shake, I wasn’t thinking anymore. My body reacted before my fear could catch up.

That was the goal.

Wrecker never stepped in.