Current location: Novel nest One Night With The Hidden Alpha Chapter 15

"One Night With The Hidden Alpha" Chapter 15

Somehow—without her ever consciously permitting it—Killian Virel became a regular part of her daily routine.

That was the most deeply disturbing aspect of the entire situation: it hadn't been intentional.

He simply kept appearing. He would be waiting just outside her lecture halls when the doors opened. He would be idling near the edge of the campus café during her long afternoon shifts. His matte-black SUV would be parked quietly across the street after her late-night seminars concluded.

He never forced a conversation. He never demanded her attention or tried to corner her into speaking. He was just there. Like some massive, dangerously beautiful animal quietly shadowing her through the margins of her daily life.

Claire knew she should have resisted harder. She should have erected higher walls, built stronger fortresses, and demanded he leave her alone. Instead, her body kept adapting to his frequency first.

And that was what truly frightened her. It wasn't a sudden flash of physical desire, nor was it a standard romantic attraction. It was trust. Slow, instinctive, and deeply biological. The kind of bone-deep safety that settles directly into a person's muscle memory long before conscious thought ever has a chance to catch up and analyze it.

---

It started with the coat.

On Friday evening, a freezing rain hammered the campus hard enough to send hordes of students sprinting frantically between stone buildings. Claire stood trapped beneath the concrete awning of the psychology department, silently cursing herself for forgetting her winter gloves on her kitchen counter yet again. Her fingers had gone entirely numb around the paper coffee cup she was holding.

"You're shivering."

Claire snapped her head up instantly. Killian was standing right beside her beneath the dim, amber lights of the entrance. His long black wool coat was dampened at the broad shoulders from the downpour.

"You always appear out of nowhere like a Victorian ghost," she muttered, her breath pluming in the freezing air.

"I can leave, Claire."

The immediate, unblinking answer softened the defensive irritation right out of her. Because she knew he meant it. 

Claire exhaled a slow, shaky breath. "That's not what I told you to do."

Something warm and incredibly intense flickered briefly in his amber eyes. Then—without a single word of warning—Killian smoothly removed his heavy wool coat and draped it carefully over her shoulders.

Claire froze in place. The massive garment settled warm and heavy around her frame instantly, completely enveloping her. It carried the rich, intoxicating traces of cedar, woodsmoke, fresh rainwater, and him.

It was too intimate. Way too intimate.

Normally, every survival mechanism she possessed would have forced her to step back and hand it right back to him. Instead, her body betrayed her logic; she relaxed completely into his warmth before her brain could form a protest.

Killian noticed. His gaze darkened significantly as he tracked the way her posture softened, though he kept his expression perfectly composed.

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"Killian—"

"You're cold, Claire."

"You're going to freeze standing out here in just a shirt."

"No," he said quietly, his voice carrying a strange, absolute certainty that sent a different kind of shiver straight down her spine. "I won't."

Claire unconsciously pulled the lapels of his coat tighter around her chest, burying herself deeper into the fabric. It still held the intense, radiating heat of his body.

Dangerous. She thought.

---

The second moment happened two nights later.

Claire nearly took a dangerous spill on the wet concrete of her apartment stairwell while hauling a heavy bag of groceries up to the sixth floor after another exhausting shift. One second, she was steady, her mind drifting—and the next, her boot slid sharply against a slick, rain-dampened step.

Before she could even gasp, a hand caught her.

Strong, iron-clad fingers wrapped securely around her forearm, locking her in place before any impact could ever occur. Claire sucked in a sharp breath, her heart hammering against her ribs.

Killian was standing exactly one step below her on the staircase. He was holding her remaining grocery bag loosely in his free hand as if appearing inside her private, secured building at the exact millisecond she lost her footing was completely reasonable behavior.

"How are you even in here?" she breathed, her pulse racing.

"You forgot your umbrella on the counter at the café."

Of course he had noticed that, too. Claire stared down at his large hand where it was still firmly steadying her arm. It was warm. Incredibly careful. Killian wasn't gripping her skin hard enough to bruise, but he held her with a terrifying baseline of strength that kept her perfectly balanced.

And for the first time in her life, her immediate instinct wasn't to yank herself away from a touch. It was to stay right there, anchored to his side, for just one more second.

The realization hit her hard enough to leave her intellectually unsettled. Killian felt the physical shift in her demeanor immediately. Claire saw it play out across his sharp features—that dangerous, primal stillness tightening beneath his corporate composure every single time she unconsciously accepted his touch.

"You're following me again," she muttered quietly, her voice uneven.

"I can't help."

He didn't let go of her arm immediately. Neither did she pull away. The sound of the outdoor rainwater echoed softly through the drafty stairwell while a thick, invisible tension coiled tightly between them.

Finally, Claire cleared her throat, breaking the spell, and moved upward toward her apartment. Killian followed exactly one step behind her in absolute silence, effortlessly carrying half her groceries up the stairs as if he already belonged in her world.

---

The third moment terrified her most of all, precisely because she barely noticed it happening until it was already too late.

It was Sunday afternoon at a crowded downtown intersection. The traffic lights reflected streaks of liquid gold across the wet pavement while swarms of pedestrians rushed shoulder-to-shoulder through the crosswalks beneath a sea of umbrellas.

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Claire absolutely hated crowds. They were too loud, too close, and entirely too unpredictable for her peace of mind. Usually, she moved through them as fast as humanly possible, her headphones clamped over her ears and her shoulders completely tense.

Today, however, Killian walked right beside her.

And somewhere between the entrance of the university bookstore and the edge of the intersection—his large palm settled lightly against the small of her back.

The gesture wasn't overly possessive or demanding. It was guiding. Protective. He applied just enough firm pressure to smoothly steer her out of the trajectory of a reckless cyclist who was cutting violently through the pedestrian traffic.

Claire knew she should have moved away from the physical contact instantly. Instead, she kept walking forward as if his hand naturally belonged against her spine. A slow, comforting warmth radiated straight through her layers of clothing from the heat of his palm.

Killian's fingers flexed once, a microscopic movement against her coat. Claire felt the vibration anyway, a sudden electric current striking her core.

The pedestrian crosswalk signal changed, flashing its warning countdown. Cars rushed past entirely too close to the curb, spraying water. Killian guided her carefully across the asphalt with that same quiet, unyielding pressure against her back.

Halfway across the street, the reality of what she was allowing crashed through Claire's academic defenses. She stopped walking abruptly right in the middle of the white lines.

Killian looked down at her immediately, his frame shifting to block an oncoming pedestrian. "What is it? What's wrong?"

"I...nevermind," she said, her gaze lingered on the man’s hand at her waist.

Slowly—immediately—Killian started to pull his hand away from her back, severing the contact.

Without a single shred of conscious thought, Claire reached out and caught him by the wrist to stop him from withdrawing.

Both of them froze instantly in the center of the crosswalk.

The roaring city noise around them seemed to blur into a strange, muffled static. The pouring rain, the blaring traffic, the rushing footsteps of hundreds of strangers—none of it mattered suddenly. The entire universe narrowed down to the space between them.

Claire stared down in absolute shock at her own fingers wrapped tightly around his thick, scarred wrist.

Oh. Oh, no.

Killian looked down at her face as if she had just placed something incredibly fragile, precious, and volatile directly into his open palms. His chest rose and fell with a sharp inhale.

Claire released her grip too quickly, her skin burning. "I just—the traffic is close, I—"

"I know," he interrupted. 

Killian stepped a fraction closer to her instinctively, his large frame shielding her from the crowded rush as he guided her the remaining way across the street. 

When his large palm returned to the small of her lower back—Claire didn't try to move away from him at all.

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