Caught by the Mad Alpha King-Chapter 314: Wedding (2) (Win - Win)
"His Royal Consort, Christopher of Saha."
For a heartbeat, the world narrowed.
Despite his constant prodding, Chris never showed Dax what he was wearing, and Dax never really insisted.
And most of all, Dax hadn’t seen Chris since the attendants had taken him away, not since tradition and protocol and an entire state apparatus had decided they could not be in the same room until this precise, choreographed moment.
And then Christopher appeared.
Ivory and gold, light and intentional defiance of modesty, the robe falling in soft, dangerous folds, the neckline exactly as deep as Dax had known - had hoped - it would be. The cut framed his throat, his collarbones, and the elegant, lethal grace of him. The jewelry caught the light. The tiara, Dax’s absurd, extravagant, violet-eyed madness, rested on his dark hair like it had always belonged there.
A consort. His consort.
Dax smiled, and most of the people present felt like they should leave.
Of course Chris had chosen the deep V again.
Of course he had walked into the most watched room in the world dressed like a promise and a threat at the same time.
"Predictable," Dax murmured under his breath, the word fond, reverent, and deeply, deeply satisfied.
Sahir, standing just behind him, caught the sound and huffed quietly, half exasperated, half indulgent.
Andrew, to Dax’s side, leaned in just enough to mutter, "You look like a man who is about to forget the existence of an entire audience."
Dax did not deny it.
His eyes never left Christopher as he advanced, posture perfect, expression composed, and yet, just for a flicker of a second, their gazes met.
And in that instant, ceremony fell away.
The hall breathed in as one in a collective stillness, one that happened when thousands of people realized they were witnessing something that would be replayed, analyzed, and remembered for generations.
Across the Empire, screens glowed.
In private homes, in crowded cafés, in hospitals, in military bases, and in the small towns that rarely saw the capital except through weather reports and tax notices, people had paused their lives to watch. Families gathered around televisions. Soldiers stood at ease in mess halls. Students leaned over phones between classes. Even the markets had gone quiet for a few minutes, vendors glancing up at mounted screens with something like reverence.
And there he was.
The Consort. 𝗳𝐫𝚎𝗲𝚠𝚎𝗯𝕟𝐨𝘃𝚎𝗹.𝗰𝗼𝗺
The cameras caught him in motion, the way the ivory and gold moved with his steps, and the way the light curved around him as if the hall itself had learned how to look. Commentators faltered for half a second, trained voices losing their rhythm as the image filled every screen.
Across Saha and far beyond it, the reaction rippled.
News anchors forgot their scripts. Social feeds exploded in real time, words stacking over words, disbelief and delight and awe colliding in a thousand languages. Analysts spoke of symbolism, of tradition and rupture, of how the cut of the robe echoed ancient consort regalia and yet defied it. Fashion houses would dissect the lines for years. Political experts would talk about the message. And beneath all of it, a simpler truth moved like a current: he was beautiful, and he was claimed, and the world was watching the claim be honored.
In quiet living rooms, people leaned forward. In barracks, soldiers straightened up. In cafés, cups paused halfway to mouths. A collective, wordless recognition passed through millions: this was history, and it was personal.
Serathine watched from a private box, her back straight, hands folded, eyes sharp and shining with something that might have been pride and might have been calculation and was, in truth, both. The man she met a year ago now stood in the consort’s light, and the Empire had no choice but to look at him.
Beside her, Cressida’s lips curved, slow and satisfied, already cataloging every ripple this would cause, every door it would open, every old faction that would choke on the sight and be forced to bow anyway. "Oh," she murmured softly, "this will be delicious."
Mia, somewhere between laughter and tears, covered her mouth with one hand, her eyes bright. "He did it," she whispered, as if afraid to break the moment. "He really did."
Heather sat very still, young and wide-eyed, the romance of it hitting her full force, tragedy and grandeur and devotion tangling in her chest until she didn’t know whether she wanted to sigh or stand up and cheer.
Marianne, ever the strategist, tilted her head, already measuring impact and narrative and the way this single entrance would dominate headlines for weeks. "That," she said quietly, "is how you enter a throne’s story."
And in another part of the hall, Trevor and Lucas exchanged a look.
Just a look. A brief lift of one brow from Lucas and the faintest answering curve from Trevor, with shared amusement and recognition passing between them.
—
The doors closed behind them with a soft, final sound.
The noise of the palace, the music, the voices, and the carefully maintained splendor of the gala fell away as if someone had drawn a blade through reality and cut it clean in two. The suite beyond was quiet, lit in warm gold and shadow, the space designed for rest and intimacy and the illusion that the world could be kept outside if one wished hard enough.
Dax followed.
Not as a king. Not as a figure of state, but as a man who had spent an entire day made of restraint, ceremony, and iron control, and who now had exactly one thought left in his head.
That damned robe.
And the man inside it.
His husband.
Chris walked ahead of him, unhurried and composed, every line of his posture still perfect from hours of public scrutiny. The ivory and gold trailed softly with each step, catching the light, clinging in ways that felt calculated and entirely unfair. The neckline, the drape, the way the fabric moved when he turned a corner... Dax saw all of it, from every angle, as if his mind were cataloguing the image for later survival.
Carefully, he closed the door.
Chris felt it before Dax touched him, before a word was spoken. The temperature of the room seemed to tilt, the way it always did when Dax’s control tightened, when the calm became something coiled and dangerous instead of merely serene.
He slowed, just a fraction; the pheromones made the back of his neck prickle with a single murmur, ’You are being looked at like prey and treasure at the same time.’
"You’re staring," Chris said lightly, without turning yet.
Dax did not deny it.
"I am exercising remarkable restraint," he replied, voice low, controlled to the point of being almost too smooth. "You should appreciate it."
Chris finally turned, leaning one shoulder against the edge of a table, the robe pooling elegantly around him, the jewels at his throat catching the light. His expression was amused, fond... and cautious in the way only someone who knew Dax very well could be.
He hummed softly. "Dax, I wore this only for you."
"For me?" he repeated softly. "You wore this knowing exactly what it would do to me."
He took a step closer, unhurried, with the control that only existed because something far more violent was being kept on a very short leash.
Chris didn’t move away. He lifted his chin instead, the light catching on the jewels at his throat, on the line of skin the robe so beautifully framed. His pulse was visible there, quick enough to betray him.
"Of course I did," he said. "It’s my wedding. I wasn’t going to be subtle."







