Taming the Wild Beast of Alamina-Chapter 177: Pheromone Mutation Theory and Management (2)
Dean’s notes stopped being casual at once.
Because that list did not read like theory.
It read like reports.
Var’s expression did not change. "Unlike subject-origin mutations, external corruption fields do not require biological consent, compatibility, or prior instability in the exposed population. They impose a pattern. That is what makes them strategically significant."
A beta student near the back raised a hand, then seemed to regret it immediately when Var looked at him.
"Yes."
"Is this," he started carefully, "the same category associated with the restricted zone reports near the Capital?"
There it was, the same area Arion was dispatched to right after returning from Palatine with Dean. Dean kept his eyes on the slides as he didn’t want to think about what he and Arion did after.
Var answered without hesitation, which somehow made it worse. "Yes."
No one moved.
Dean could almost feel the line draw itself under the class: what could be talked about and what couldn’t and what everyone here was old enough or in the right place to hear without pretending they didn’t know.
"The zone in question," Var said, "remains under active state management. You will not speculate about exact causes in assessed work unless you enjoy being wrong in writing."
That won the faintest shift in the room. Not laughter. Recognition, perhaps.
"What matters academically," she continued, "is the mechanism of effect."
The next slide appeared, and this time the diagram was uglier.
A mapped figure of a normal exposure pathway on the left. On the right, a branching contamination model that showed signal behavior moving through air, soil, organic matter, and living subjects with the cold elegance of a disaster someone had measured too many times.
Dean stared harder, as this looked like corruption behaving like an atmosphere.
Var tapped one section of the model. "External fields of this type produce a pheromonal miasma dense enough to alter local response structures. In ordinary subjects, this can present first as nausea, sensory confusion, compulsive ideation, or aggression displacement. With prolonged exposure, the effects become less psychological and more systemic."
Dean’s stomach went colder when the new information unfolded before his eyes.
"Animals are often affected first," Var said. "Not because they are weaker, but because they lack the layered social resistance and medical intervention humans sometimes receive in time. Their resulting mutation patterns tend to be faster, more visible, and profoundly hostile."
One of the alphas in the room asked, "Aren’t the mutations deadly?"
Var looked at him without softening.
"Often," she said. "Not immediately."
That was somehow worse.
The room held still around the sentence.
Dean’s stomach went colder when the meaning finished unfolding in his head, because immediate death at least belonged to simpler forms of horror. Immediate death ended things. This did not sound like ending.
It sounded like conversion.
Var turned back to the screen and changed the slide again.
FIELD PROGRESSION: EARLY TO TERMINAL STAGES
Exposure; signal lodging; behavioral disruption; directed compulsion; structural corruption; full hostile manifestation.
No one wrote for a second.
Then everyone did.
"The reason these events are strategically dangerous," Var said, "is precisely because lethality is not the only outcome, nor even the most urgent one in the early phase. Corrupted subjects may remain ambulatory, reactive, and biologically functional long enough to spread exposure further."
A beta in the second row swallowed visibly.
Dean’s stylus moved faster.
Var continued in the same even tone, which somehow made every word land harder. "In animals, progression is typically faster. The body deteriorates, behavior narrows, and what remains of ordinary instinct is replaced by a primary compulsive drive."
She paused once.
"To transmit."
The word sat in the room like something alive.
Dean stared at the screen.
Because that was the reality of it, wasn’t it?
Var tapped the slide once more, and a secondary note appeared beneath the progression chart.
TRANSMISSION IMPULSE - Compulsive spread behavior.
The alpha who had spoken before asked, more carefully now, "So once they turn, they don’t just attack whatever is near?"
"No," Var said. "That assumption gets people killed."
The room went still again.
"Corrupted fauna do not behave like ordinary predators. They are not seeking food. They are not defending territory in any recognizable form. They are attempting to spread. That may look like attack, pursuit, contamination contact, directed scent projection, or vectoring through residue. But the objective is replication of the field effect."
Dean’s grip on the stylus tightened.
Because the distinction mattered. Because it was one thing to imagine violent creatures.
It was another to imagine creatures no longer trying to survive at all, only to continue themselves by forcing the corruption onward into whatever still breathed.
Var looked toward the left side of the room. "In human exposures, the danger compounds."
No one moved.
"Because humans retain hierarchy recognition longer."
That was the sentence that truly ruined the air.
Dean felt it before he fully understood it.
Then he understood it.
And wished, briefly, that he did not.
Var did not dramatize it. She did not need to.
"A partially corrupted human subject may still identify social value, rank, visibility, and vulnerability. In some cases, that makes them more dangerous before full manifestation than after."
A girl near the back stopped writing.
One of the betas said quietly, "You mean they choose?"
Var’s expression remained perfectly controlled. "In early and middle progression, some subjects demonstrate directed target preference, yes."
Dean’s stomach turned hard.
Because now the logic was becoming visible in all the ways he hated most.
"The field appears to favor propagation through significance where available," Var said. "Important figures. High-contact individuals. Central nodes in family, military, or political structures. And" - she paused only briefly - "developing dominants before full biological manifestation."
No one breathed quite right after that.
Dean looked down at his notes and found that for a second he could not actually see them.
Developing dominants.
Children, then.
Children not yet fully expressed.
Children not yet protected by the very biology that would later make them difficult to contaminate at all.
One of the dominant omegas across the room spoke for the first time, voice flat. "Because they’re not immune yet."
"Yes," Var said.
There was no gentleness in the answer.
Only fact.
"Once dominant expression fully stabilizes, resistance increases sharply. Before that threshold, susceptibility remains closer to ordinary alpha or omega risk patterns, though case variation exists."
Dean’s mouth flattened.
He thought, unwillingly and immediately, of how many state systems in the world were probably built around that sentence alone.
How many transport protocols are there?
How many security decisions?
How many rules adults invented and called overprotective without ever seeing the reports those rules were based on.
Another girl raised her hand. "Infected like His Highness, Prince Arion was?"







