"One Night With The Hidden Alpha" Chapter 27
The lecture hall for Advanced Psychology was a theater of cold light and humming electronics.
The air smelled of industrial disinfectant and the bitter, burnt dregs of student coffee.
Claire Reyes sat in her usual spot, third row, left side, near the emergency exit.
She kept her chin tucked into the high collar of her black turtleneck.
Her fingers were wrapped tightly around a ballpoint pen, the plastic casing digging into her palm.
There was a residual heat living in her marrow—a phantom vibration from the penthouse the night before.
She could still feel the weight of Killian's hand against her spine, a furnace-like temperature that had nearly scorched her skin.
At the front of the room, Adrian Keller moved with a liquid, bloodless grace.
He didn't use a PowerPoint slide today.
He walked to the center of the stage, unfolding a large, yellowed sheet of vellum.
It was a rubbing—a charcoal reproduction of a medieval mural titled "The Flayer and the Wolf Pack".
The image was a chaotic spiral of violence: a tall, skeletal figure in robes standing over a group of snarling beasts.
One long, spindly finger was buried in the fur of the largest wolf.
"The thirteenth century had a very specific way of visualizing the psyche," Adrian said.
His voice was a low, dry drawl that seemed to vibrate the glass panes of the windows.
He didn't look at the class. His dark blue-gray eyes were fixed on the rubbing.
"They didn't call it 'Repression' or 'Behavioral Conditioning.' They called it the Battle of the Blood."
He turned then, his gold-rimmed glasses catching a sharp, white glint from the overhead lights.
"Ms. Reyes," Adrian said, his tone conversational, almost pleasant.
Claire's posture went rigid, her vertebrae stacking into a defensive line.
"Look at the Alpha in the corner of the mural. The one with the collar of thorns."
Claire forced her gaze toward the charcoal sketch.
The wolf looked desperate, its eyes wide, its body arched as if trying to tear its own skin off.
"Why does he fight the Flayer?" Adrian asked, taking a slow, unhurried step toward her row.
"Is it a struggle for freedom? Or is it a failure of... of basic logic?"
Claire cleared her throat, her voice sounding thin in the pressurized silence of the hall.
"It looks like a territorial displacement," she said.
"The subject isn't fighting for freedom. He's fighting because the Flayer is occupying the space where his instinct used to be."
Adrian stopped at the edge of her desk.
He leaned down, his presence invading her personal space like a wave of dead winter air.
"Territorial displacement," Adrian repeated, the word sounding like a mockery in his throat.
"A very modern, very... very clinical label for a very ancient sickness."
He tilted his head, his nostrils flaring just a fraction of a millimeter.
Claire felt the scent of cedar and ash on her sweater being systematically dismantled by his winter-chill.
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"But look closer, Claire. The wolf isn't snarling at the Flayer. He's snarling at the mark on his own throat."
Adrian straightened up, his shadow stretching across her notebook.
"He hates the leash, but he's already forgotten how to hunt without the... the sound of the chain."
A student in the back row raised a hand. "But isn't the Flayer the one keeping the pack from eating the village? Isn't that... protection?"
Adrian let out a soft, elegant laugh. It carried no humor.
"Protection is just a slow-acting form of ownership," Adrian murmured.
"A cage lined with silk is still a cage. Eventually, the bird stops trying to fly and starts worrying about the... the quality of the seed."
He turned back to the mural, his long, pale fingers tracing the charcoal lines of the Flayer's hand.
"The problem with instinct is that it's loud. It's messy. It's... sulphur and fur."
Claire felt her heart rate begin to settle—a rhythmic, steady beat that didn't match the anxiety in her head.
*Body trust.*
Her nervous system was accepting Killian's claim as a biological stabilizer.
"But logic?" Adrian continued, his voice dropping into a lethal, intimate register.
"Logic is quiet. Logic knows that if a limb is rotting, you don't wrap it in wool. You take a blade."
The lecture ended ten minutes early.
The room erupted into the chaotic noise of shuffling papers and zipping backpacks.
Claire moved to leave, her movements jerky and uncoordinated.
"Ms. Reyes. A moment."
Adrian was standing by his podium, holding a stack of research prompts and leather-bound folders.
Claire walked down the stairs, her boots hitting the concrete with a heavy, isolated thud.
She stopped three feet away, her bag held like a shield across her chest.
"The seminar notes," Adrian said, his voice returning to its filtered, academic polish.
He reached out, holding a manila folder toward her.
Claire reached for it with her right hand.
Adrian didn't release the folder.
He waited until her fingers brushed the paper, then he moved.
His index finger and thumb clamped around her wrist.
The touch was freezing—a dead, winter chill that seemed to suck the very heat from her blood.
He wasn't looking at her face. He was looking at the pale skin of her inner wrist.
His nostrils flared as he mapped the heavy, aggressive scent of Killian Virel living in her pores.
"You smell of a forest fire, Claire," Adrian whispered, his eyes turning a dark, bruised obsidian.
"Cedar, ash, and a... a claim that hasn't even begun to cool."
Claire tried to pull back, but his grip was a frozen vice.
"It's just... it's just my detergent," she lied, her voice cracking.
Adrian's lip curled into a thin, mocking line.
"A wolf doesn't use generic brands to mark its nest," he whispered, leaning closer.
His breath hit her cheek, odorless and icy.
"He's built a nest inside your veins, Claire. You're vibrating at his frequency."
He moved his thumb, provocatively, slowly tracing the line of her pulse.
The friction was a physical threat.
"Some marks are like toxins," Adrian whispered.
"They don't need a wound to kill you. They just need... time."
He released her then, his hand dropping to his side.
Claire stumbled back, her wrist throbbing with a phantom cold that refused to dissipate.
"Get some sleep, Claire," Adrian said, adjusting his gold frames.
"The city is full of things that want to peel the skin off your bones just to get to the marrow he left inside you."
He turned on his heel and walked into the shadows of the faculty lounge.
Claire stood in the empty lecture hall, her hand trembling as she clutched the folder.
She walked out of the building, her lungs searching for air that didn't smell like ice.
Chicago was a vast, gray sheet of stone and wind.
She reached the curb and pulled out her phone.
A message was already waiting, sent sixty seconds ago.
KILLIAN: Don't look back, Claire. Get in the car.
She looked up.
The matte-black SUV was idling twenty yards away, a dark, pressurized block of steel.
She looked toward the library windows.
On the fourth floor, behind the glass of the Special Collections, a silhouette stood perfectly still.
Adrian Keller was holding a glass of dark liquid, his gaze locked on her back.
Claire didn't wait.
She ran for the SUV, the only cage that felt like a sanctuary.
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