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Shadow Unit Scandal: The Commander's Omega-Chapter 181: Stubborn men
Max didn’t force Adam to stay the next day. He didn’t even try.
He did what he always did when a dangerous situation arose: he contained it, stabilized it, and ensured that the damage did not spread, then stepped back before anyone could accuse him of wanting more than control.
Adam awoke late, sore and warmer in the face than he’d like to admit, with the worst of the heat finally out of his system and the mark on his nape throbbing in that dull, intimate way that made denial seem pointless. Max had been in the room at some point - Adam could tell by the scent, the glass of water replaced, and the clean towel folded with irritating precision - but he was not present when Adam opened his eyes.
No looming. No hovering. No smug ’how do you feel now?’
Just silence, and a door that wasn’t locked from the outside.
When Adam walked downstairs, hoodie on like armor, Max was already dressed, composed, and halfway to the version of himself the world feared. He was at the edge of the sitting room, holding a tablet and speaking quietly to someone on the other end of a phone call, the type of conversation that sounded like decisions were being made in clear sentences.
He ended it the moment Adam appeared.
"Your manager knows you’re safe," Max said, and stopped there.
Adam blinked, suspicious by reflex. "That’s it?"
"That’s it," Max replied.
No apology for the night before. No discussion of the mark. No ’we should talk.’ Not even a warning. Just a calm, controlled acknowledgment that Adam was now upright and therefore back to being treated like someone who could choose.
Adam stared at him for a beat, then said, because he couldn’t help himself, "You’re very quiet."
Max’s green eyes met his. Unreadable. "I’m giving you room."
Adam’s mouth tightened. "I didn’t ask for—"
"I know," Max cut in, voice even. "That’s why I’m doing it."
It should have been infuriating.
It was. It was also... unsettling, because it felt like restraint rather than retreat. Like Max had decided the only way to keep Adam from bolting was to stop acting like a cage.
Max didn’t offer breakfast.
He didn’t offer a ride.
He didn’t offer anything resembling a leash.
He simply walked Adam to the door, stood aside, and said, "You can go."
Adam paused, but only for long enough for pride to despise itself for doing so.
Then he left.
No dramatic goodbye.
No promise to call.
Just the sound of the front door closing behind him and the mark on his nape aching like a reminder he couldn’t shake. 𝙧𝙚𝙚𝔀𝒆𝓫𝓷𝙤𝓿𝒆𝙡.𝒄𝙤𝓶
Max watched him go and said nothing.
Because what could he promise?
A bond, especially one formed in the fevered chaos of heat, wasn’t a contract Max could enforce without becoming the very monster Adam feared. And Adam’s eyes had made it painfully clear: he would cut the bond before he let himself be cornered into anything that felt like ownership.
Max could guard him.
He could stabilize him.
He could keep him alive.
But he couldn’t offer permanence to a man who already had a knife in hand pointed at the bond itself, ready to sever it the moment it started to feel like a trap.
So Max did what he did best.
He waited.
Days passed.
Then weeks.
Then the first time Adam’s heat circled again, it arrived like an unwelcome echo. Adam didn’t call softly. He didn’t call at all, not directly. The message came through his manager, short and clinical, as if admitting need was a logistical failure:
"Adam needs privacy. He’s safe. But he needs warding."
Max sent a car.
A room.
No questions.
No commentary.
Adam came, furious and pale and shaking with that stubborn refusal to be helpless, and Max met him the same way every time: controlled distance until the moment Adam couldn’t maintain it, and then stable containment without the humiliation of being pitied.
He never said ’mine.’
He never said ’stay.’
He never asked for gratitude.
He simply made sure Adam got through it.
Then he let him leave again.
The pattern solidified into something almost absurd.
Heat. Distance. Silence.
Rut hit Max once weeks later, and he found himself staring at the empty side of his bed with an anger he refused to describe. His own body was a blunt instrument in comparison to Adam’s. He could have taken a suppressant or drowned it in discipline, but the bond made denial more difficult now. The mark called for him like a siren, and Max could do little to nothing to control himself.
Adam arrived in the middle of the night without formalities, smelling like sleep and annoyance, eyes sharp even as his body reacted to Max’s scent.
They didn’t talk.
They didn’t make promises.
They survived the biology of it as if it were a natural disaster: intense, consuming, and followed by a quiet, exhausted aftermath in which both of them pretended nothing had happened.
Then Adam left again.
Weeks between. Sometimes longer.
Occasionally a glance across a venue corridor, Max was passing through a security briefing while Adam was dragged in the other direction by a manager and a sound tech. Sometimes a text that wasn’t really a text, just a timestamped update from Max’s office: "Wards upgraded." "Route changed." "Threat assessment lowered."
Sometimes nothing at all.
And yet the bond remained, humming quietly beneath everything, a thin line of awareness Max couldn’t cut without acknowledging how much he wanted to keep it.
He began to think - seriously, grimly - about offering Adam an out.
If Adam lived like the bond was a blade at his throat, then perhaps the most respectful thing Max could do was remove it. Set him free before Adam did something drastic in panic. Before resentment turned the mark into poison.
Max rehearsed the words in his head the way he rehearsed political statements and battlefield orders:
"I’ll release you."
"I’ll break it."
"You don’t owe me anything."
Each version sounded wrong.
He was still turning the phrase over in his mind one evening - standing in his study, the city lights outside the window blurred by late winter rain - when Alphonso appeared without sound, as if the manor itself had taught its staff to move like shadows.
Alphonso’s butler’s posture was as immaculate as ever, but something about his eyes was sharper than usual.
"My lord," Alphonso said, voice low, "a message has arrived."
Max didn’t look up from the document in his hand. "From where?"
Alphonso stepped closer and held out a sealed note.
The wax was familiar before Max even saw the imprint.
George Claymore.
Max’s fingers stilled.
That name didn’t belong in his evenings. It belonged in old debts, political decay, and family ties that never stopped tightening even after they were severed.
He took the message without expression.
Alphonso didn’t leave. He lingered, just long enough to confirm what Max already felt: this wasn’t a social invitation.
Max broke the seal.
Read.
His green eyes darkened.
And for the first time in months, Max’s mind stopped circling Adam’s bond and snapped back to the Empire’s older, uglier truth:
Some men never accepted the new regime.
They simply learned how to wait.
Max folded the note once, neatly, and looked up at Alfred.
"Prepare the car," he said.
Alphonso inclined his head. "Yes, my lord."
Max’s gaze shifted involuntarily to the faint pull in his chest, the bond humming like a warning system, a thread leading back to the one person he couldn’t afford to lose to George Claymore’s grasp.
Then he exhaled slowly, controlled, and added, quieter:
"And send a message to Adam’s manager. Tell her to keep him indoors tonight."







