"One Night With The Hidden Alpha" Chapter 6
It wasn't a full scent-marking.
She hadn't been formally claimed yet. But she had been touched by an Alpha, and it was close enough to matter.
Very, very interesting.
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Rain pressed softly against the gothic windows of Blackthorne University, turning the entire campus silver-gray beneath the storm.
Claire sat across from Professor Adrian Laurent in the dim warmth of his office, fingers curled around a paper coffee cup she had long since stopped drinking from.
Books towered everywhere.
Ancient literature stacked in impossible columns.
Marked manuscripts spread across the desk.
The office smelled faintly of old paper, cedarwood, and something colder she could never fully identify.
Adrian Laurent looked exactly the way students imagined a literature professor should look if they possessed highly questionable, self-destructive taste in men.
He was elegant. Impossibly composed. He was beautiful in a distant, almost predatory way that felt entirely detached from humanity. Dark hair fell with practiced carelessness across his forehead, and his sharp, aristocratic cheekbones were softened only by the low amber glow of the desk lamp. He wore a crisp black turtleneck beneath a tailored charcoal coat, seemingly immune to the stifling heat of the radiator clicking in the corner.
Women on campus absolutely adored him. Men found him intensely unsettling without ever being able to articulate why.
Claire, however, was beginning to understand. He watched people too carefully. Not rudely, and never obviously, but thoroughly—as if he were reading the margins of their thoughts.
"As much as I admire Mary Shelley's Frankenstein," Adrian said smoothly, leaning back into his leather chair, "I've always maintained that true Gothic literature was never actually about the monsters."
Claire pulled her gaze away from the stack of texts, looking up from her notebook. "No?"
"No." A faint, enigmatic smile brushed his mouth, though it didn't reach his eyes. "It is entirely about loneliness."
Outside, a low rumble of thunder vibrated through the floorboards.
Adrian turned a page of Claire's essay with long, elegant fingers. "Every classic Gothic creature is fundamentally isolated. Dracula. The Creature. Dorian Gray." His eyes lifted, locking onto hers with sudden, piercing intensity. "People become truly dangerous, Claire, when they stop believing they belong among other people."
Something about the quiet authority in his voice slid straight beneath her carefully constructed defenses. She swallowed hard, her throat tight.
Adrian noticed. Of course he did. He noticed every micro-expression.
"You disagree?" he asked softly.
Claire stared down at her cooling coffee cup, tracing the rim. "I think…" She hesitated, choosing her words like stepping stones. "I think loneliness makes people dangerous far faster than evil ever could."
A heavy, absolute silence settled between them.
Adrian went perfectly still. For one eerie, skin-crawling moment, Claire had the distinct sensation that something ancient and predatory behind his eyes had just woken up to look at her. His expression remained entirely placid, but his gaze sharpened with an imperceptible, terrifying focus. Like her words had bypassed his intellectual armor and struck a nerve somewhere deeply hidden. Somewhere dark.
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"Interesting," he murmured. His voice had dropped an octave, smooth as silk and twice as cold. "Very interesting."
Claire shifted uncomfortably in her seat, the sudden urge to leave prickling at her neck. Outside, the storm intensified, rain lashing violently against the glass.
Adrian closed her essay with slow, deliberate precision. "You write as though you understand that specific brand of isolation on a personal level."
There it is, she thought. The gentle dissection.
He never cornered his targets directly; that was his true danger. Adrian Laurent guided conversations the way a master surgeon guided a scalpel—the incisions were so smooth and clean that you barely noticed you were bleeding until the blade was already gone.
Claire forced a small, dismissive shrug. "Everyone understands loneliness a little."
"Not like that." His tone remained warm, patient, and utterly unyielding.
Claire hated how easy it felt to let her guard down around him. Maybe it was because he listened as if every syllable she uttered was of vital importance. Maybe because loneliness intuitively recognized its own reflection. Or maybe she was just profoundly exhausted from carrying the weight of the last four days entirely on her own.
"I grew up moving around a lot," she admitted quietly, her eyes fixed on the desk. "My mother didn't really… stay in one place long enough to unpack."
Adrian remained silent, offering an encouraging tilt of his head, letting the quiet pull the truth out of her.
"She used to tell me that attachment was a... design flaw," Claire said, letting out a dry, humorless laugh. "That if you're always the one to leave first, nobody can ever abandon you."
Something unreadable flickered deep within Adrian's eyes. It wasn't sympathy. It was something far worse: recognition.
"And do you believe her?" he asked.
Instantly, Claire's mind betrayed her. She didn't think of her mother. She thought of Killian.
She thought of waking up before dawn tangled in his expensive, tangled black sheets. She thought of the blind, suffocating panic she had disguised as a survival instinct. She thought of fleeing his penthouse like a thief in the night, only to be haunted by the ghost of his face at random, agonizing intervals every single day since.
Her chest tightened, a sharp ache blooming behind her ribs. "I'm trying not to," she whispered.
Adrian watched her, his gaze dropping to the collar of her sweater, his nostrils flaring almost imperceptibly as he caught the faintest, dying note of a rival Alpha's scent beneath the rain.
The silence between them stretched, taut as a piano wire.
Suddenly, Claire's phone buzzed sharply against the wood of his desk.
She jumped, startled by the harsh vibration breaking the trance of the room. She looked down at the screen.
Unknown Number.
Her stomach dropped into a cold abyss. For one completely irrational, terrifying second, her mind screamed his name. Killian.
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But that was impossible. No one—not even a man with his terrifying resources—could hunt her down that quickly. Right?
"You should answer that," Adrian noted mildly, his eyes fixed on her reaction.
Claire reached out and aggressively declined the call. "Just spam," she lied, her voice tight.
Adrian's gaze lingered on her face a beat too long, analyzing the sudden paleness of her cheeks, before he gave a slow, elegant nod. "As you wish."
But the sharp, knowing look in his eyes told her everything she needed to know. He didn't believe her. Not even slightly.
Three cities away, Killian Virel sat in the dark expanse of his executive office, staring coldly at the single manila file that had finally been placed on his desk.
Elias dropped into the leather chair opposite him, looking like a man who was actively reconsidering every life choice that had brought him to this moment.
"You are completely unhinged," Elias informed him flatly, rubbing his temples. "I'm just professionally documenting that for the record before the board has us both institutionalized."
Killian ignored him entirely. His entire universe had narrowed to the university record resting beneath his hands.
NAME: Claire Holloway
AGE: 24
STATUS: Graduate Student, Blackthorne University
DEPARTMENT: Major in Comparative Literature & Psychology
Paperclipped to the top right corner was a photograph. It showed Claire standing on a brick campus pathway beneath a canopy of fiery autumn trees. She was looking away from the camera, her expression beautifully distracted by something just out of frame.
The moment Killian's eyes locked onto her face, his chest tightened so violently it felt like a physical blow.
Mine.
The feral, possessive instinct hit him with the force of a freight train, making his wolf roar to life directly beneath his skin. Four days. Four unbearable, agonizing days without the scent of vanilla and rain. Without the quiet cadence of her voice. Without knowing if she was safe, if she was warm, or who was looking at her. He had slept less than six hours total since she ran, and his entire empire had bled for it.
Slowly, his fingers hovered over the paper, his thumb brushing over the curve of her cheek in the photograph.
"She studies Gothic literature?" he murmured, his voice a low, gravelly rasp.
Elias let out a tired, cynical sigh. "Yes. Terrifyingly smart women always do."
Killian barely heard him. His dark amber eyes narrowed as he memorized every line of her face, a cold, obsessive certainty locking into place within his chest.
Found you.
And for the first time in four days, deep within the cage of his ribs, the wolf finally stopped pacing.
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