"The Alpha Rivalry: Marked by My Nemesis" Chapter 50

Chapter 50: The Final Score

The morning of the final ranking was not marked by the typical, frantic humidity of a Riverdale Prep exam day. Instead, a biting, crystalline cold had settled over the campus, the kind of winter air that felt clean, sharp, and entirely devoid of the tension that had plagued the students for the last three years.

The administration building’s main lobby, usually a place of hushed whispers and desperate academic scrutiny, was strangely silent as the hundred-strong senior class crowded the glass-enclosed notice board.

At the center of the crowd stood the list—the final, irrevocable tally of the year’s assessment.

Ash and Sebastian moved through the throng not as students, but as a force of nature. The students parted, a physical manifestation of the hierarchy that had solidified over the last few months.

They didn't rush. They moved with the unhurried, terrifying confidence of two kings who already knew the contents of the document before the ink had even dried.

Sebastian reached the board first. His gaze swept the top line, his eyes scanning the metrics with the practiced, clinical precision he had perfected at Northmont. The score was there, printed in bold, uncompromising black ink: 100% — Science.

The absolute, perfect score required to invalidate the board’s leverage, to dissolve the transfer mandate, and to secure his residence in the city permanently.

Sebastian’s breath hitched—a sound so subtle it might have been missed by anyone else, but Ash heard it. He watched the rigid line of the Alpha’s shoulders finally, miraculously, relax.

The long, jagged war against the board, the administrative machinery, and the legacy of his father’s house had ended in a single, perfect digit.

Ash didn't think. He didn't calculate the optics of the situation. He didn't care about the board members watching from the mezzanine, or the stunned, wide-eyed silence of the classmates who had spent years waiting for him to stumble.

He reached out, his hand snapping out to catch the silk of Sebastian’s necktie. With a sharp, sudden tug, he pulled the Alpha down, closing the remaining space between them until their lips collided in a kiss that was less of a greeting and more of a declaration.

It was a public, breath-stealing defiance. It was a kiss that tasted of victory, of cedar, of the winter air, and of the absolute, irrevocable end of the rivalry.

The student body erupted. It wasn't the polite, appreciative applause of the festival; it was a chaotic, visceral roar of shock, awe, and reluctant admiration.

Sebastian didn't pull back. He wrapped his arm around Ash’s waist, his grip firm, possessive, and entirely, unmistakably public.

He kissed him back with a hunger that stripped away every remaining layer of the facade, a raw, terrifyingly honest display of devotion that left no room for doubt about who they were, or what they had become.

They were the masters of the rank-list. They were the architects of their own future. And as they broke apart, breathless and flush with the adrenaline of the win, they looked out at the assembly with a gaze that commanded absolute, silent submission.

ADVERTISEMENT

"One hundred percent," Ash whispered, his voice a low, steady hum against Sebastian’s lips.

"I told you we were going to share the top."

"We didn't just share it," Sebastian replied, his voice a gravelly, low-frequency promise. "We owned it."

They turned toward the exit.

The main gates of Riverdale Prep loomed ahead, the wrought-iron architecture a familiar, imposing barrier that had defined their lives since the day they had first set foot on campus.

For three years, those gates had felt like a wall, a physical limit to the scope of their ambition.

Today, they were nothing more than a exit point.

They walked toward the gates, their hands locked together, their fingers entwined in an alignment that no administrative mandate could ever disrupt.

The campus fell away behind them. The archives, the library, the rehearsal halls, the auditorium—all the battlefields of their past were reduced to a series of distant, silent buildings.

They reached the gates.

Sebastian didn't look back. Ash didn't check for his mother, or the board, or the lingering, cold eyes of the administration. They reached the threshold, the metal cold and heavy beneath their touch, and they pushed.

The gates swung wide.

The world beyond was vast, cold, and entirely, refreshingly unscripted.

They stepped out together, onto the pavement of the city.

The traffic roared in the distance, the city lights beginning to flicker to life as the winter dusk approached, and the air felt different—thinner, lighter, and stripped of the suffocating, heavy pressure of the rank-list.

Ash looked at the horizon. He looked at the path that led away from the school and toward the life they had spent years planning in the dark corners of the campus.

"Where to?" Ash asked, his voice steady, his focus on the horizon.

Sebastian turned his hand, his grip tightening, his gaze fixed on the road ahead.

"To the suite. To the music. To everything we haven't even thought to build yet."

They started to walk.

The rhythm was steady. The stride was long.

They were the valedictorian and the Alpha, the duet and the king, the omega and the protector.

They were the absolute, unified whole that had defeated the board, the school, and the weight of their own biology.

The victory was complete.

The throne was behind them, a relic of the past, and the road ahead was their own.

They moved through the city, two silhouettes against the gold of the dying sun, their presence an undeniable, absolute force.

The exam was forgotten.

The grade was irrelevant.

The war was over.

And as the city swallowed them into the rush of the evening, Ash finally understood the nature of the power they had won.

It wasn't the rank-list. It wasn't the 100 percent. It wasn't the status or the position at the top of the university pipeline.

It was the hand he was holding.

It was the person who knew the symphony as well as he did.

It was the partner who had walked into the dark with him, and who had come out the other side as the only person in the world who could ever truly, deeply, and irrevocably know him.

They rounded the corner, the lights of the city becoming brighter, the noise becoming louder, the rhythm of the life they had chosen beating in time with their own hearts.

Ash didn't look back.

He didn't need to.

He was looking ahead.

He was looking at the future.

And as they disappeared into the crowd, walking with the steady, synchronized gait of two kings who had finally claimed their domain, Ash knew they would never be broken again.

The reign had just begun.

And they were going to be perfect.

Every single step of the way.

ADVERTISEMENT

You May Also Like

Compartilhar Link

Copie o link abaixo para compartilhar com seus amigos: