"One Night With The Hidden Alpha" Chapter 19
Rainwater pooled in the tire ruts outside the brick entrance of the alley, oily and black. Claire kept her head down, her boots squelching into the wet gravel.
The storm had passed, but the air still held that sharp, metallic bite of ozone and cold stone.
She stopped exactly where the bricks turned a darker, bruised purple from the impact three nights ago. Her eyes scanned the ground, tracking the line where the mortar had crumbled away into raw silt.
Right there. Between two loose, moss-rimmed bluestone pavers. Something caught the gray daylight—a tiny, hard glint of silver buried deep in the mud.
Claire knelt, her dark golden curls falling forward, cutting off the view from the main street. She dug her fingernails into the frozen slime, her breath hitching as her skin hit cold metal.
With a dull, wet tear, a jagged piece of silver sheared out of the earth. It was heavy, roughly the size of a matchbox, its edges twisted and torn by immense force.
A thick, dark paste coated the fractures, smelling faintly of dried iron and old coins. Across the center ran a deeply etched pattern—a dense, suffocating knot of thorned briars.
Claire closed her fist around it, the sharp metal teeth biting straight into the meat of her palm.
The sting was immediate, hot, and perfectly clear.
She shoved the fragment into her coat pocket, stood up, and walked toward the university.
By four o'clock, the basement annex of the library was completely dead.
Dust motes spun lazily in the yellow light, drifting over stacks of old folklore texts.
Claire sat in the corner, a blunt graphite pencil moving in tight, jerky circles over scrap paper.
Scratch. Scratch.
She traced the thorned lines from memory, her hand stiff, her fingers still stained with grey mud.
The drawing looked vicious, a tangled wall designed to keep things out—or trap them inside.
"An isolation mechanism," she muttered, her thumb tracing the jagged edge of her sketch.
The air behind her turned cold instantly, dropping five degrees in a single second. The scent of dried snow and old cedar hit her before she heard the floorboards.
A hand descended over her shoulder, pale, long-fingered, and completely bloodless. Adrian Keller pressed his index finger directly onto the center of her paper. The graphite snapped. Snap. The broken lead tore a dark, ugly line through the briars.
Claire's left hand instantly locked onto the seam of her jeans under the table, squeezing hard.
Her right hand slid into her coat pocket, her fingers finding the silver shard again.
She didn't look up, forcing her chest to rise and fall in a steady, false rhythm.
"You know," Adrian said, his voice a low, dry drawl right above her head, "obsession is a terrible color on you, Claire."
He pulled out the heavy oak chair opposite her, the legs sliding over the linoleum without a sound.
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He sat with a fluid, unnatural grace, his blue-gray eyes glinting behind his gold frames.
"Professor Keller," Claire said, keeping her lips tracking a polite, distant line. "I didn't hear the door."
"Clearly." Adrian leaned his forearms on the table, his gold rims catching the dull window light. "The Siren myth. Our seminar topic for Tuesday. Yet you're down here... digging through old German heresy records."
"I wanted context," she said, leaning back just enough to clear her personal space.
"Context." He repeated the word, his tongue clicking against his teeth. "You look frantic. Your pulse is hitting your collarbone. You're holding that table like you want to throw it."
"Too much espresso," Claire lied, her green eyes fixing straight onto his face. "Actually, I was thinking about your lecture. The Siren narrative. How the real danger isn't the monster's teeth, but the victim's projection of safety."
Adrian's eyes narrowed, a tiny, clinical shift behind his lenses.
"Go on," he murmured.
"If a subject is under extreme stress," Claire said, her right hand squeezing the shard until fresh blood slicked her palm, "their nervous system misinterprets threats. They look at a predator—something massive, territorial, comfortable with violence—and they mistake that territorial aggression for protection."
She watched his face, her voice dropping into a flat, academic trap.
Adrian let out a short, cold laugh, his fingers tapping a rhythmic beat against the wood.
"A beautiful theory from a sophomore textbook," he said, his voice slowing down until it felt heavy. "But you're misreading the core text. The Siren doesn't promise safety. And the sailor isn't stupid. He knows the rocks are coming. He just... prefers the sharp end of the rock to the emptiness of the sea."
He reached into his white linen shirt pocket, pulling out a heavy, matte-black fountain pen.
With three swift, black strokes, he drew two inverted, interlocking triangles directly over her sketch.
The messy graphite branch suddenly looked rigid. Institutional.
"You're in the wrong section of the stacks," Adrian whispered, the wet ink reflecting the yellow light. "If you want to identify what dropped that silver in the mud, look under modern anomalies."
Claire's lungs locked. He knew the alley.
"What is it?" she asked, dropping the academic mask.
Adrian looked up, the blue-gray in his pupils expanding until his eyes looked almost black.
"They call themselves the Suture," he said, his upper lip curling into a tight, sharp line. "A street-level gang of genetic rejects. Broken bloodlines. Wolves who couldn't keep their packs clean, leeches who got sloppy in the gutters. They stitch human marrow into altered venom. A disgusting mess."
Claire watched the skin around his jaw tighten at the word wolves. It was ancient, visceral hatred.
"The Suture," she repeated, recording the word. "Are they here? In the city?"
"They're a disease," Adrian said, his fountain pen capping with a sharp, metallic click. "They scavenge the borders because they think the older... houses won't notice them. They use low-level runners until their hearts explode, then leave the meat for the city trucks."
He knew about the attack, the runner, the silver. He was mapping her.
"You seem very familiar with their deployment patterns, Professor," Claire said, her voice dropping lower, testing the boundary. "Is this your private research?"
Adrian didn't blink. The silence between them stretched until the library felt entirely empty.
"I hate bad blood, Claire," he said simply.
He stood up, his long black coat sweeping the dust off the floor like a shroud.
He didn't walk away. He moved around the table, stopping inches from her left shoulder.
His shadow blotted out the last ray of gray sun from the basement window.
He bent down, his skin radiating a dead, winter chill against her cheek.
His breath was entirely cold, moving the loose strands of hair near her glasses.
"Adrian," she warned, her hand locking onto the silver fragment inside her pocket.
"Listen to me," he whispered, his voice a sharp blade cutting through velvet. "You think you're conducting an investigation, but you're just writing your name on a cutting board. The things out there don't respect a high GPA, Claire. They see an anchor. Or a snack."
He reached out, his pale thumb brushing the wool of her sweater over her shoulder, once, before dropping away.
"Stay out of the dark lanes," Adrian whispered, his gold frames flashing red in the dark. "And stay away from those beasts who smell of burnt sulphur and old fur. They are loud. They are stupid. And when the cull begins... they won't leave enough of you to bury."
The basement door clicked shut before she could even turn her head.
Claire sat in the gray light, her bleeding palm staining the scrap paper where the black triangles met the thorns.
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