Caught by the Mad Alpha King-Chapter 477: Dinner

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 477: Chapter 477: Dinner

The first official dinner of the summit began exactly on time, which in Chris’s opinion was proof that the universe had no respect for personal chaos.

The state dining hall had been set up with the kind of brutal elegance that could only be created by people with terrifying budgets and contemporary royal institutions.

The room was long, high-ceilinged, and lit in warm gold from recessed architectural panels and suspended sculptural chandeliers that looked minimalist until one noticed they were probably worth more than smaller embassies. Glass walls along one side reflected the city lights back at the room, turning the entire space into a polished box of power, money, and curated diplomacy.

The central table arrangement had been abandoned in favor of several connected formal sections, allowing conversation, cameras, and strategic proximity to coexist without anyone having to admit that seating charts were now a recognized weapon of statecraft.

At the host position sat Dax and Chris.

Perfect, naturally. 𝐟𝚛𝕖𝚎𝕨𝗲𝐛𝚗𝐨𝐯𝐞𝕝.𝐜𝗼𝗺

Chris had changed back into formalwear, though with far less enthusiasm than before. His dark omega robe was simpler than the one from the opening reception and softer at the lines, easier to sit in for longer stretches, though still cut with enough precision to make him look regal from every angle. The diamond collar remained at his throat, glinting in the low light each time he turned his head. Dax stood beside him, looking exactly like the kind of king on whom cautionary political theory was based: broad, elegant, perfectly tailored, and carrying himself with the radiant composure of a man whose day had gone exceptionally well and whose private life had somehow improved prior to dinner.

That last part, Chris thought, was the issue.

Because Dax was being subtle.

Subtle for Dax, which meant most people would only notice that he was sitting a little closer than usual, that his hand found Chris more often, that every glance returned, inevitably, to him.

But it was visible enough to be dangerous in a room full of clever people.

Across the room, Nero noticed almost immediately.

He was seated two positions down in the principal heir cluster, one chair nearer Zion than protocol strictly required, and looking deeply unbothered by that fact.

Tonight’s arrangement had placed the younger generation in deliberate lines of relation: Nero and Zion close enough for cameras and whispers, Arion farther down the table in his own designated section, separated just enough to signal independence rather than exclusion, and speaking only to Sebastian with a contained coolness that made it impossible to tell whether he was bored, guarded, or simply too disciplined to give the summit what it wanted for free.

Dean was absent, which was probably best for regional stability.

Nero, however, had stayed.

And because he was Dax’s son, he noticed things that should not have been noticeable and got suspicious with alarming speed.

He had been half listening to Zion say something dry about one of the day’s strategy panels when his gaze flicked toward the host end of the table and stayed there a fraction too long.

Zion noticed that too.

"What?" he asked quietly.

Nero did not look away at once. "Something’s off."

Zion followed his line of sight.

At the head of the room, Chris was speaking to a minister on his left with perfect calm, one hand resting near his water glass. Dax was speaking to someone on his right. Nothing obvious. Nothing publicly strange.

But Nero knew his parents.

And Dax, while always territorial around Chris, had developed a more controlled, constant vigilance. He was tracking Chris’s plate, Chris’s glass, Chris’s posture, Chris’s breathing between conversations, all while continuing to host with the same seamless authority as before.

To anyone else, it read as attention.

To Nero, it read as something happened.

He narrowed his eyes slightly.

"Your father is looking at your other father like someone tried to poison the air around him," Zion murmured.

Nero’s mouth twitched once. "That narrows nothing."

"Fair."

Nero finally looked at Zion, then back toward the table ahead. "He’s not just hovering. He’s editing the room."

That was true too.

Servers approached Chris first now. Wine had not been poured for him. The place settings around him had shifted subtly, as though someone had made adjustments after the guests were seated and had done so with enough quiet authority that no one had challenged it.

Zion’s gaze sharpened. "Did something happen?"

"I don’t know."

And Nero disliked not knowing.

Usually, in matters concerning his parents, he had either excellent instincts or immediate access. Tonight he had neither. Chris looked composed. Dax looked delighted with life and one second away from biting anyone who tested him. Both, unfortunately, could mean almost anything.

Still, Nero had no time to pursue it properly, because Zion was beside him, Caelan was present, and the room was full of diplomats who would gladly turn one poorly timed expression into a cross-border analysis piece by breakfast.

Which meant, naturally, that Caelan decided to interfere.

Chris saw him coming first.

Caelan rose during the second course with the kind of composure that made staff subtly re-evaluate floor space around him.

Dax saw him three steps later.

Chris, without looking at his husband, said under his breath, "Behave."

"I am behaving."

"You say that every time just before you become historically irritating."

Dax’s mouth moved by a fraction. "That sounds exaggerated."

"It’s documented."

By then Caelan had reached them.

He stopped at the host end of the table with immaculate timing, catching the room’s peripheral attention without ever demanding it outright. That was one of the things Chris disliked most about him. Caelan understood spectacle well enough to avoid appearing theatrical while still ensuring everyone important noticed where he stood.

"King Dax," Caelan said.

Dax turned toward him with the perfect, warm expression of a host greeting a valued guest and not a retired emperor he had spent the day professionally antagonizing. "Former Emperor."

Chris almost admired the restraint in that opening strike.

Caelan’s gaze flicked once to Chris. "Consort Christopher."

Chris inclined his head. "Your Majesty."

Caelan accepted it without visible reaction and placed one hand lightly against the back of the empty chair nearest their section, though he did not sit. "I thought I should congratulate you."

"For what?" Dax asked pleasantly.

Caelan’s mouth shifted by the smallest degree. "On an exceptionally efficient event. It is always instructive to watch ambition dress itself as statesmanship."

A nearby minister stopped pretending not to listen.

Chris kept his posture loose. Dax did not move at all.

"Thank you," Dax said. "I’m glad you’re finding it educational."

Caelan tilted his head in a manner that looked gracious if one did not know it was mocking. Dax’s right hand twitched once.

"Indeed," Caelan said. "Let us hope the rest of the event remains as entertaining as the first day."

Chris felt that twitch more than saw it.

He set his glass down with grace and said, before Dax could answer, "That depends on the guests. Some improve with structure. Others merely become more creative inside it."

RECENTLY UPDATES
Read Reborn As Lucky Star
RomanceSlice Of Life