Taming the Wild Beast of Alamina-Chapter 181: Late

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Chapter 181: Chapter 181: Late

Arion hated being late. ๐’ป๐‘Ÿ๐˜ฆ๐˜ฆ๐˜ธโ„ฏ๐’ท๐‘›๐˜ฐ๐“‹โ„ฏ๐˜ญ.๐˜ค๐˜ฐ๐˜ฎ

Not in the abstract, not as a preference dressed up as discipline, but with the very real and very irritating nuisance of a man whose time was usually measured down to the minute and whose word was meant to hold.

The meeting had run over by twenty-three minutes.

Twenty-three.

He was kept back by border logistics, contamination-response funding, winter transport allocations for the next year, and the quiet matter of how many mobile intervention teams Alamina could maintain near the capital without publicly admitting why they needed that many in the first place.

Ordinarily Arion would have sat through the extension without visible irritation and reduced three later appointments to compensate.

Ordinarily.

Today, however, he had promised Nero he would be the one in the ring for the exam.

He had said it directly. Not vaguely. Not โ€™if possible.โ€™ Not โ€™if schedules allow.โ€™

He had promised.

And now, simply by being trapped in a secure room with ministers who believe that one more chart will somehow improve physics, he has turned himself into a liar.

Arion disliked that.

What made the dislike sharper was that he did not particularly care about the exam itself.

Nero would pass whether Arion was present or not. That part was obvious enough to bore him. Nero had been overqualified for university assessments before the paperwork had even finished pretending to be educational. If the evaluation went ahead without Arion, Nero would still flatten whoever had been assigned to him, the faculty would still note his indecent talent, and the building would continue standing out of habit.

The exam was not the point.

His word was.

And after thatโ€”

After that, he had intended to see Dean.

He had intended to collect him at the end of the day, or at least cross his path before dinner, hear how the beast course had gone, confirm with his own eyes that the university had not exhausted him too badly, and make good on the smaller promise nested inside the larger one: that Deanโ€™s days here would not end in distance if Arion could prevent it.

That was the real reason his temper had gone cold.

Not Nero.

Dean.

Of course, Dean.

Arion left the meeting room with the clipped silence of a man who did not need to announce displeasure because the air did it for him. Claude, one of his secretaries, walking one step behind and to the left, did not ask whether the ministers had survived. He had far too much experience for that.

"Youโ€™re late," Claude said instead, handing Arion the secure tablet with the exam hall access already open.

"Yes."

"That seems to be upsetting you."

"Yes."

Claude glanced at him once. "Nero will live."

"That was never the concern."

"Of course not."

Arion did not waste breath answering that. He had already shed the court layers on the way out, dressing in dark tactical uniform, the one used when he needed freedom of movement and did not care whether anyone mistook him for approachable. By the time he turned down the final security corridor leading to the training sector, he looked less like a crown prince and more like the reason emergency protocols existed.

The exam hall doors recognized him before the guard station finished straightening.

The locks released at once.

Arion stepped inside.

The first thing he saw was Sylvia.

That alone was strange enough to cut through the static of his irritation.

She was seated in the observation section across the ring, one elbow on the armrest, her posture bright with the kind of attention she reserved for disasters she had not caused herself. Sylvia... alone.

Arionโ€™s blood cooled by a degree.

Where was Dean?

Had he already left?

Had he been pulled into another schedule block?

Had Voss rearranged something?

Had the beast lecture run badly enough that he had gone back to the palace without a word?

The questions barely had time to finish forming before the answer arrived in the most offensive way possible.

Movement in a blur.

Then Neroโ€™s body hit one of the reinforced side walls hard enough that his shoulders were now dusted with concrete.

Arionโ€™s gaze snapped to the ring.

Dean was standing there. Grinning.

For one clean, frozen second Arion did not think at all.

His blood went cold.

The grin on Deanโ€™s face wasnโ€™t friendly. It was a predatorโ€™s flash of teeth, sharp and utterly devoid of warmth.

He stood in the middle of the ring, his posture relaxed, but his gaze was fixed on Nero with an unsettling, predatory intensity. The air around him was strangely still, a pocket of sterile calm in a room that should have been filled with the tension of an alpha-enigmaโ€™s rage.

But there was nothing. No scent. No pressure. Just the faint, clean smell of ozone and something metallic, like blood on cold steel.

Nero pushed himself off the wall, the concrete dust shimmering around him. He shook his head once, a dog clearing its ears, and when he looked up, the bored, princely affectation was gone. His eyes, usually soft purple, were burning. He flexed his fingers, causing the air around him to warp and shimmer with an oppressive heat.

Nero smiled with the same expression a fire might wear if it learned how to enjoy itself.

"Well," he said, voice low and roughened now by something no longer close to boredom, "there you are."

Dean tipped his head, still grinning that sharp, ugly grin with no softness whatsoever. "You wanted me in the ring."

Nero rolled his shoulders once. The concrete dust slid down his black training shirt in pale streaks. Beneath the reinforced floor, something groaned.

Then the temperature climbed.

The air in the ring became hard and dry, with heat harshly pressing against the skin and throat. Neroโ€™s gift did not arrive with the scent or mood. It was as if the room itself had taken a side.

Fire kissed to life along the far boundary strip.

Sylvia made a small, strangled sound in the stands. One of the professors leaned forward and keyed a control into the panel without taking her eyes off the ring. Additional suppression systems came online with a low electrical hum.

Dean did not look away from Nero.

The stillness around him sharpened further, unnatural in its own way. A dominant omegaโ€™s neutralization was not dramatic to ordinary eyes. It was worse. It only erased. Anything pheromonal that should have filled the space broke apart on contact with him, shredded cleanly, leaving him standing in a dead zone of his own making. Every dominant signal Nero threw into the room hit that sterile radius and collapsed like it had struck a vacuum.

It made Dean look wrong.

Untouchable.

Nero loved that look.

He moved first.

The floor cracked under the launch as Nero crossed the distance with violence so blunt it stopped pretending to be elegant. He came in shoulder-first and wreathed in heat, his left hand cutting high, his right aimed to break ribs if Dean misjudged by an inch.

Dean did not retreat.

His right hand twitched.

Three loose chunks of concrete ripped off the damaged wall behind Nero and shot past his shoulder like bullets.

Nero twisted on instinct. One piece grazed his jaw hard enough to split skin. Another shattered against his forearm. The third he burned out of the air with a flare so sudden it lit the whole ring white-orange for a heartbeat.

Dean used that heartbeat.

He stepped inside the ruined line of Neroโ€™s attack and drove his elbow into Neroโ€™s throat.

The hit landed with a wet, brutal crack.

Nero staggered half a step, not because it had dropped him, but because anyone with a functioning trachea would have had to. Dean followed immediately - knee to the stomach, heel stamping down on Neroโ€™s instep, hand catching the back of his neck, and trying to wrench him forward into the rising strike that came next.

Nero got an arm up in time.

Bone met bone.

The impact sounded like a hammer blow.

Then Nero laughed - choked, furious, and thrilled - and drove his forehead straight into Deanโ€™s face.

Deanโ€™s head snapped back.

Blood burst from his nose.

Sylvia was on her feet now in the observation area, both hands flat on the glass.

"ENOUGH!"