Miles
Nineteen years into the future, Miles remains a cornerstone of the Wolf Pack’s place in Babylon Gardens, unchanged in physical age but profoundly evolved in experience and responsibility. Though time has not advanced his body—or the bodies of his family, mate, or friends—his life has continued to accumulate new chapters, roles, and expectations that reflect a long stretch of adulthood lived in full.
Miles has fully settled into his identity as both an educator and a community stabilizer. At River Ridge High, he is no longer just a substitute teacher but a long-term faculty figure trusted by staff and students alike. His teaching style has matured into something distinctly his own: structured but deeply empathetic, blending logical discipline with the instinctive understanding of those who feel like outsiders in human society.
Outside the school, Miles has become an informal mediator for conflicts involving the Wolf Pack and the broader Babylon Gardens community. His calm demeanor and reputation for fairness have made him the first call whenever misunderstandings arise between species, factions, or households. Despite this responsibility, he remains grounded in the same principle he once voiced early in his life: there is always room for more at Wolf House.
His relationship with Lucretia remains stable and deeply cooperative, evolving into a partnership defined less by youthful intensity and more by mutual leadership. Together, they function as the quiet backbone of the Wolf Pack’s structure, guiding their children and extended family with consistency rather than authority. Their children—North Star, Rockstar Hawk, and Darth Vader Sanchez—have grown into independent adults in mindset and role, though they still orbit Wolf House as a central gathering point.
Miles’ brothers, Daryl and Other Daryl, continue to be constant presences in his life, often acting as contrasting forces to his structured approach. Where they bring unpredictability, Miles provides grounding. This balance has become one of the defining dynamics of the Wolf Pack’s long-term stability.
Over the years, Miles has also developed a broader philosophical outlook on integration between feral and domestic life. Rather than viewing civilization as something to simply adapt to, he now sees it as something that must continuously adapt back—suggesting that coexistence is an ongoing negotiation rather than a finished achievement.
Despite his growing influence, Miles has never positioned himself as a leader in name. Instead, he remains what he has always been: a thoughtful, disciplined wolf who quietly ends up holding everything together when things begin to fall apart.
And even after all this time, he still greets newcomers with the same steady reassurance he always has—because in his mind, the most important rule has never changed, no matter how many years pass:
There’s always room at Wolf House.
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