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Castiel

Growth Spurt

“Cas,I forgot how to tie my shoes!”

“What was that?” I asked, glancing down at one of my younger cousins, Bobby, as he tugged on my pants. He was the grand ol’ age of four and had insisted he was old enough for shoes with reallaces instead of Velcro.

Unfortunately, his grasp ofhowto tiea shoe with laces seemed dubious at best. This was the second time he’d approached me to help him, and I was probably the dozenth adult he’d asked.

“I forgot how to tie my shoes!” He pointed down at his foot.

I didn’t know what he was doing for them to get untied all the time, because I’d made sure to double knot it as tightly as I could the last time I’d helped him. At least he’d graduated from asking people to tie his shoe for him and just how to remind him of the instructions. Baby steps, and this baby was aggressively stepping.

“Let me put this table down, then I’ll be right with you,” I said, waiting for him to clear out before I set down the punch table I was carrying.

“Okie dokie!” He gave me a thumbs-up, then raced to sit under the nearest tree.

“Hey, no running with your shoes untied!”

“Okie dokie!” He flopped onto his back in the grass and began to roll around.

With that little one out of the way, I made sure there wasn’t anyone else tugging on my pants before I set the table down. It wasn’t our largest one, but it was the sturdiest, and that was what we needed to support the sheer number of punches being made. At least, theadultpunches. The kid-safe punches were at a completely different table.

Not that we had to worry about any of them trying to drink the booze. Our drinks werestrong—they had to be—so all it took to warn all the other young ones off was one daring teenager every three years or so to sneak some and end up getting terribly ill.

The teens didn’t have the metabolism that all the adults in my family did, and they wouldn’t until their first shift. Yep, my family were wolf shifters.

And I was their alpha.

Even at thirty years old, it was still so incredibly strange to think of myself that way. It wasn’t like it was a new thing—my father had passed me the title before his death four years ago. Yet sometimes I still felt like an imposter, like a little boy playing in his father’s oversized work boots.

“All right, Bobby, I got you. Come on over, and let’s talk you through tying your shoes.”

“Thank you!” the young boy cried before sprinting right back to me.

“Hey, what did I say about running with your shoes untied?”

“Sorry,” he said once he was closer, half-breathless. “Okay, I remember I make two loop-de-loops.” Bobby bent to show me, and I couldn’t help smiling. Was he a bit needy? Definitely. Buthe was a kid. Kids had every right to be a bit needy once in a while. In my opinion, too many people forgot that children were their own mini-beings with personalities and thoughts all of their own. And it was my job as their alpha to help them feel supported enough to ask for whatever they needed.

Even if that was an impromptu tutorial on how to tie their shoes.

“Yes, very good! That’s exactly where you start.”

It took some time, but I went through each step with him, making sure to never raise my voice or sound impatient when I needed to repeat something a few times.

I knew some alphas would accuse me of being soft, that doing such menial things took away from the “important stuff,” but to me, thiswasthe important stuff.

From what I’d heard, the alpha my father had challenged had been fairly average, but things had begun to go south when he’d gotten addicted to gambling at the human casinos in the area. Bit by bit, he’d stopped giving his attention to the pack, then his time, and then he’d begun to sell off chunks of our family’s heirloom land to the fairies.

I grimaced at the thought but quickly wiped it off my face lest Bobby catch the sour expression and think it was directed at him. My father had definitely saved the pack by challenging the old alpha, but man, it still felt like the fairies had been the ones to win in the end.

“I did it!” Bobby said, throwing his arms up into the air once the double knot was secure. I gave it an extra tug just to be sure, but other than that, he had succeeded in tying his shoes all on his own.

“Well done, little man!” I gave him a high five. In true little kid fashion, he let out a cry of delight and jumped surprisingly high before running off once again.

That was one thing done. A myriad more to go.

“Uncle Cas, where’s the bug stuff again?”