Current location: Novel nest One Night With The Hidden Alpha Chapter 34

"One Night With The Hidden Alpha" Chapter 34

The air in Adrian Keller's office was unnaturally still, the kind of silence that usually preceded a storm. Adrian sat behind his mahogany desk, his blue-gray eyes devoid of their usual academic warmth as he slid a thick, digitized file across the polished surface.

"I've done the math, Claire," Adrian said, his voice dropping into a register of intimate urgency. "The city's geological surveys are being scrubbed, but I found the redundancies. Look at these coordinates."

Claire leaned over, her fingers tracing the map. Several abandoned zones—industrial ruins, forgotten sewers, and long-shuttered sanitariums—pulsed with localized, anomalous energy collapses. It was exactly the signature she had been tracking: the footprint of the Suture.

"This is where it's feeding," Adrian whispered, leaning closer, his scent of old paper and winter chill invading her space. "Killian's security detail is being lead in circles because they're looking for a person, not a localized phenomenon. But you… you see the patterns. You know how to read these systems."

Claire felt the weight of the moment. This was the trap. She put on a performance of mounting terror, her breath hitching, her hands trembling as she pulled back from the screen.

"If you want to be free, you have to stop playing the victim," Adrian said, his tone sharpening. "Take this data to him. Act the part of the concerned lover. If he sees you 'investigating' for his sake, he'll open his systems to you. Once you have the access codes to his private security perimeter, you feed them to me. And then, we finish him."

Claire swallowed hard, forcing a nod of agreement. "I'll do it. I'll make him think I'm doing it for him."

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The penthouse was a tomb of dark oak and filtered city light. 

Claire sat on the white leather sofa, the geological reports spread across her lap. A series of red circles marked the "blind spots" in Chicago's power grid. 

The private elevator hummed—a low-frequency vibration that Claire felt in her teeth. 

Killian stepped into the room. He walked directly to the sofa, his light brown eyes igniting into a blinding, molten amber as they hit the papers on her lap. 

He didn't look at the screen; he looked at her, his amber eyes narrowing with a sharp, possessive suspicion. "You were with Keller again."

Claire didn't flinch. She looked up, her green eyes wide and deceptively steady. "I got them from Adrian," she said. She pulled up the geological reports on her tablet, presenting them.

"He thinks he's smarter than you. He's hiding secrets in these ruins, and I'm tired of being kept in the dark while you fight a war in the shadows. I want to know where the threats are."

Killian froze. "I don't trust the source," his voice a low, warning rumble.

"Then verify it," Claire countered, stepping into his personal space, her eyes daring him to say no. "Give me the access. Let me prove I'm not just someone you protect—let me be your eyes."

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Killian looked down at her, his breath coming out hot and fast against her face. 

He stayed silent for five agonizing seconds, then finally relented, a heavy exhale escaping his chest. He tapped his phone, transferring the encrypted keys to her device. It was the mandate she needed.

Claire sat at the master terminal in the study. She cross-referenced Adrian's energy collapses with Killian's surveillance blind spots. "This location... It's a blind spot in your security grid, Killian. Maybe this is where the Suture is stitching." 

An abandoned bio-specimen processing room. 

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The industrial district smelled of rust, stagnant water, and the sharp, chemical tang of formaldehyde. 

Three matte-black SUVs sat idling in the mouth of a narrow alley, their hazard lights pulsing like a slow heartbeat. 

Leon stood by the lead vehicle, his hand hovering near his holster. 

"The perimeter is set, Alpha," Leon muttered. "The thermal scan shows six... six non-human signatures inside." 

Killian stepped out of the vehicle. He was wearing a tactical black vest over his henley, his sleeves rolled to his elbows to reveal the silver scars on his forearms. 

"Stay in the car, Claire," Killian commanded, his voice dropping into a lethal, final register. 

"No," Claire said, her boots hitting the gravel. 

"I found it. I'm seeing it through. I'm a researcher, Killian. I don't analyze from the parking lot." 

Killian's nostrils flared, but he didn't argue. He knew the anchor was no longer drifting; she was leading. 

The processing room was a nightmare of shattered glass and peeling

 linoleum. 

The air was thick with the scent of burnt sulphur and rotting flowers—the scent of the Suture. 

Killian led the way, his movements liquid and silent. 

In the center of the room stood a series of stainless-steel tables. 

Claire stopped, her hand flying to her mouth. 

Human tissue—flayed and grey—lay preserved in glass vats. 

The walls were covered in runes—jagged, angular symbols etched in what looked like dried, black blood. 

"It's a factory," Claire whispered, her voice trembling. "They're not just experiments. They're... they're a production line." 

Killian walked to the furthest table, his hand brushing the stone surface. 

"Runes of integration," he muttered, his upper lip pulling back to reveal sharp, white teeth. 

"They're trying to stabilize the marrow without the filter. They're trying to make themselves... permanent." 

He turned toward the inner chamber, a heavy steel door that stood slightly ajar. 

"Leon. Take the left flank. Clear the remaining threats. I'm handling the inner lab." 

He looked at Claire, his amber eyes burning with a protective, desperate intensity. 

"Stay in this corridor, Claire. Do not move. Do not breathe until I come back out." 

He didn't wait for an answer. He moved through the door like a dark wind, the sounds of snapping bone and wet tearing echoing from the inner room seconds later. 

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The corridor was silent. 

The only sound was the rhythmic dripping of a broken pipe and the heavy, frantic thud of Claire's own heart. 

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She gripped the small thermal comms unit in her hand, her knuckles white. 

The shadows at the end of the hallway seemed to thicken, stretching toward her like oily fingers. 

A voice drifted from the darkness. 

It was low. Sandpaper-rough. Stripped of its billionaire polish. 

"Claire... Claire, don't... don't run around." 

Claire froze. Her spine struck the cold brick wall. 

"I'm... I'm on my way back to you. I'm on my way." 

The voice was a perfect replica of Killian's morning farewell. The exact cadence. The exact frequency of his devotion. 

A silhouette detached itself from the gloom. 

It was tall. Broad-shouldered. It wore a dark coat that looked exactly like Killian's charcoal cashmere. 

The figure stepped into a sliver of gray moonlight. 

Its face was a blur of grey, featureless skin, but its eyes... its eyes were a mocking, luminescent amber. 

Claire couldn't breathe. The monster shifted, its posture mimicking Killian's effortless grace, but its movements were jerky, as if being puppeteered by a broken logic.

The steel door swung open. 

The real Killian stepped out. 

He was covered in dark, non-human blood, his tactical vest shredded, his eyes still glowing with the gold of the beast. 

"The nest is cleared," he said, his gaze fixed on her, eyes glowing with a protective, burning intensity. "Claire, where are you? The sector is still unstable, I need to know you're safe—"

And then, his gaze shifted to the thing standing three feet behind her.

Claire stood paralyzed, a thin thread of cold sweat tracing her spine. Her phone buzzed in her palm—a text from the real Killian, displayed on the screen: "Claire, I'm coming to your position. Stay back."

She stared into the void-eyes of the monster, watching it tilt its head in an exact, chilling imitation of Killian, and realized with a sickening clarity: it wasn't just imitating his voice.

It was reading her. 

It was pulling the shape of its mask directly from the marrow of her own memory. 

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