"One Night With The Hidden Alpha" Chapter 13
Then, Claire whispered very softly into the dark: "…Thank you."
Killian froze. "You're thanking me?" he murmured, his voice rough.
Claire rubbed at her forehead tiredly, her walls crumbling from sheer exhaustion. "Don't make it weird, Killian."
Claire exhaled a shaky breath through her nose. "I mean it," she whispered, her eyes fixed on the floor mats. "No one has ever… no one has ever done something like that for me before."
Something unreadable and volatile crossed Killian's face then. It was something much sad, threaded with a dark, terrifying possessiveness. "You should have been taken care of properly from the beginning," he said quietly.
---
The SUV slowed to a stop outside her apartment building. Claire looked up automatically through the glass.
Warm, bright lobby lights now glowed behind the newly polished steel-and-glass doors. The broken security camera was completely gone, replaced by modern tech. Home looked… safe.
Killian moved first, his large frame shifting as he reached for the door handle to escort her inside.
Without thinking, Claire reached out and touched his wrist to stop him.
Both of them froze instantly. Her small fingers rested lightly against his warm skin, right over the raised edge of an old scar.
Claire pulled her hand away far too fast, her skin tingling. "Sorry."
"You never have to apologize, Claire."
The low, gravelly roughness in his voice made her pulse jump violently. Claire grabbed her backpack immediately, desperate to escape before her nervous system completely embarrassed her logic any further.
"Goodnight, Killian."
He watched her with an intense, monitoring focus. "Text me when you're safely home, Claire."
Claire opened the heavy SUV door halfway, the cool night air rushing in, before she paused. Normally, she would have argued. She would have mocked his possessiveness, or refused the demand automatically to maintain her independence.
Instead: "…Okay."
Killian went still. This tiny, fragile piece of agreement meant too much to him.
Claire escaped into the midnight air before she could overthink it. Halfway inside the brightly lit lobby, she stopped and glanced back over her shoulder instinctively.
The heavy black SUV remained idling at the curb. Through the dark windshield, she could see Killian sitting perfectly motionless in the back, watching the building.
Something inside Claire shifted quietly then. It wasn't love, and it wasn't a total surrender. It was the birth of something far more dangerous:
Trust.
---
The breakfast appeared the next morning at exactly 7:12 AM.
Claire discovered it the moment she stepped out of her building's newly fortified glass entrance. She was half-awake, her heavy headphones draped around her neck, and her cognitive psychology lecture notes sticking messy and unorganized halfway out of her tote bag.
A sleek, black paper cup sat directly beside the lobby door. It was still steaming, condensation pooling on the polished metal frame. Beside it rested a folded brown pastry bag from the artisanal bakery three blocks away—the precise, tiny establishment she'd once casually mentioned liking because they recklessly put far too much cinnamon in everything they baked.
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Claire stopped dead in her tracks, staring down at the concrete.
Oh, no. No. Absolutely not.
She already knew. The realization irritated her entirely on principle, her jaw tightening. Slowly, deliberately, Claire lifted her head and looked toward the curb across the street.
A heavy, matte-black SUV waited silently.
Of course it was him.
Her pulse betrayed her instantly, a sudden, frantic rhythm fluttering against her ribs. It wasn't fear; it was recognition. It was the terrifying realization that some stupid, traitorous part of her biology had already begun categorizing his suffocating presence as familiar.
Claire walked toward the bag carefully, eyeing it with deep suspicion as if the pastry inside might emotionally manipulate her upon physical contact. She reached down and peeked inside.
An iced coffee, prepared with the exact, hyperspecific ratio of milk and espresso she drank. A warm, heavy cinnamon pastry. A small container of perfectly ripe, fresh strawberries.
And no note. That somehow made the gesture infinitely worse.
Because handwritten notes implied a performance. Notes meant someone was trying to court or seduce. Killian Virel didn't perform; he simply executed. He did things quietly, thoroughly, and without an ounce of ego. It was as if the act of taking care of her was rapidly becoming an involuntary instinct, a fundamental routine that didn't even require acknowledgment.
Claire stared at the breakfast for several agonizing seconds. Then, with a sharp snap of her wrist, she closed the paper bag.
No. She was absolutely not encouraging this behavior.
Across the street, the black SUV remained parked in absolute silence. Watching. Monitoring. Claire crossed her arms tighter over her chest, turned her back on the curb, and started marching toward campus without touching the food.
Three blocks later—she turned around.
The bag was still sitting there, completely undisturbed on the steel frame. A warm, defensive irritation climbed straight into her throat.
By the time she reached the center of the university quad, she was carrying the breakfast. It was purely because wasting high-quality food was morally and economically wrong. There was no other reason behind it. Obviously.
The massive stone campus fountain roared softly beneath the overcast October skies, shooting plumes of water into the air while crowds of students crossed the quad wrapped tightly in winter coats and wool scarves.
Claire sat on the damp stone edge of the fountain, placing the coffee beside her. She left it untouched for nearly five full minutes, watching the steam rise into the cold air.
Then, finally, her resolve crumbled. She took one slow, deliberate sip.
A heavy, rich warmth spread immediately through her chest, striking straight to her core. Damn him. The coffee was perfect. It wasn't "close enough" or standard café fare. It was flawless. It was as if Killian had painstakingly memorized the tiniest, most obscure details about her preferences without ever asking for her permission. Claire hated how deeply, how easily that affected her.
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"You're accepting gifts from me now."
The low, gravelly baritone came from right behind her.
Claire snapped her head up instantly, her heart leaping into her throat. Killian stood several feet away near the stone archway of the fountain entrance. The soft morning light caught the sharp, aristocratic angles of his face, though nothing could fully mask the dangerous, predatory stillness that lived permanently beneath his skin.
He didn't move any closer. He didn't crowd her space or try to corner her against the stone. He just waited. Like a wolf that understood approaching too quickly would send its prey bolting into the trees.
Claire lifted the paper cup defensively between them, her knuckles turning white. "This is not an acceptance of anything, Killian."
"No?" One of his dark eyebrows lifted slightly.
"It's the ethical avoidance of food waste."
A faint, uncharacteristic warmth touched his amber eyes. It wasn't amusement, exactly. It was something softer. Something heavy. "You walked three blocks back to the lobby just to carry it here."
Claire immediately looked away, staring into the cascading fountain water. Because unfortunately—when he put it like that—it sounded incredibly incriminating out loud.
Killian remained exactly where he was, his free hand loose in his pocket. Around them, streams of students unconsciously curved their walking paths away from him, giving him a wide berth without ever realizing why their brains were signaling them to do so.
"You didn't have to freeze outside my building since dawn," she muttered quietly.
"Yes," Killian said, his voice flat and unyielding. "I did."
The simple, absolute certainty in his voice settled heavily into the freezing morning air between them. Claire stared down into the dark liquid of her coffee cup instead of looking at the intense gravity in his face.
"You can't keep doing things like this, Killian. You have an empire to run."
"I know."
"Then why are you still standing on my street corner?"
A profound, soft silence stretched between them, punctuated only by the rushing water of the fountain. Finally, Killian spoke, the words sounding rough, as if they had been dragged directly from his throat.
"Because every single time I force myself to stop," he said quietly, his amber eyes burning into her, "I end up parked outside your building anyway."
Claire swallowed slowly, her throat tight. God. This man was dangerous in ways her textbooks couldn't even begin to quantify.
She stood up abruptly, her boots scraping against the stone. "I have a lecture. I'm going to be late."
Killian nodded immediately, stepping back a fraction to clear her path. Just a low, gravelly: "Walk safe, Claire."
Claire hesitated, then slowly held up the black paper coffee cup a few inches into the air. "…Thank you for the breakfast, Killian."
Something shifted visibly across his sharp features. It was a tiny, microscopic fracture in his armor, but it was entirely real. It looked as though she had just handed a starving, desperate thing a small, priceless piece of mercy.
Then, Claire turned quickly on her heel before her own swirling emotions could become any more embarrassing, disappearing into the heavy double doors of the psychology building—still tightly clutching the coffee he had remembered perfectly.
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