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Taming the Wild Beast of Alamina-Chapter 101: Open the Windows
"Yours."
The word landed far lower in Dean’s body than it had any right to.
It was only one word. A smug one. A possessive one. A word delivered by a man currently attached to him like a decorative curse and smelling like an entire forest had decided to move indoors.
And yet.
Dean’s breath caught.
That was the first warning.
The second was subtler: a sudden weakness in his knees, not pain exactly, but that dangerous, liquid instability that came when Arion’s pheromones stopped being merely oppressive and started sinking past Dean’s irritation straight into biology.
Dean’s hand tightened in Arion’s hair.
Arion noticed immediately.
His expression changed before Dean could pretend nothing was happening. The lazy satisfaction vanished, replaced by sharp attention. His arms tightened and shifted in a single smooth motion.
"Dean?"
Dean exhaled through his nose, annoyed at the room, at Arion, and at his own body for choosing now to become melodramatic.
"Don’t," he muttered.
Arion’s gaze swept his face, then dropped, tracking the tiny hitch in Dean’s breathing, the flush rising at his throat, and the way Dean’s weight had subtly leaned into him because standing was suddenly a negotiation.
Without another word, Arion moved.
He slid one arm firmly around Dean’s waist and the other under his thighs, lifting him cleanly off the floor before Dean could protest with anything but a startled sound.
Dean grabbed his shoulders on instinct. "Arion—"
"Your knees bent," Arion said, already carrying him, voice low and far too calm for a man whose pheromones had just ambushed someone.
"They are temporarily reconsidering their loyalties," Dean snapped, cheeks hot. "Put me down."
"No."
Dean glared at him from the safety of his arms, which was an infuriatingly undignified position from which to be threatening. "I hate how often that works for you."
Arion’s mouth twitched, but his eyes stayed intent. He crossed the suite toward the sitting room and lowered Dean onto the sofa with a care that made the argument harder to sustain. Dean sank into the cushions, pulse beating too fast, the vetiver still thick enough to taste.
Arion crouched in front of him immediately, hands braced on either side of Dean’s knees, gaze lifted.
"Talk to me."
Dean stared at him for one beat, breathing shallowly because the room itself felt heavy. Arion’s scent wrapped around him from every direction - warm, dark, possessive, content - and Dean could feel his own body beginning to answer in ways that were not remotely convenient.
His throat went dry.
He pointed at the windows.
"Open them," Dean said, voice rougher than he wanted. "Now. Before my body decides this is a spectacular time to start a heat."
Arion stilled.
The hesitation was tiny.
Dean saw it anyway.
Dean’s eyes narrowed at once, his tone dangerously low. "Arion."
He knew exactly what that pause meant, and that was the problem. It wasn’t disobedience for the sake of it or Arion being stubborn. It was his alpha instinct, sharpened into a weapon in a dominant like Arion. Hold the omega closer. Deepen the claim. Flood the space with scent until the omega’s body answered. Push the heat lower and deeper, and drag the whole thing toward a bed before reason could interfere.
’MARK HIM NOW!’
Dean saw the thought pass through Arion’s face like a shadow he tried to hide and failed.
"Open," Dean repeated, each word precise. "The windows."
Arion’s jaw tightened.
For a split second, he looked like a man being torn apart from within, every instinct propelling him in one direction and Dean’s voice anchoring him in the opposite.
Then Dean watched the choice happen.
Arion rose in a single smooth motion and, before Dean could brace for distance, bent and lifted him again, one arm under his knees, the other firm at his back.
Dean made a strangled sound of outrage. "Are you serious?"
"I’m opening them," Arion said, voice rough, already moving. "I am not putting you down."
Dean glared up at him, breath ragged, one hand gripping his shoulder because his body had temporarily abandoned pride in favor of not falling. "You are deeply irritating."
"Yes."
The answer came so calmly Dean almost laughed.
Arion crossed the sitting room with Dean in his arms and stopped by the wall panel inset beside the tall windows, the one hidden in carved trim and polished metal so the suite could pretend to be old while quietly functioning like a sealed security unit. He shifted Dean’s weight with practiced ease and pressed his thumb to the sensor.
The panel lit beneath the decorative frame.
A soft chime answered.
Then the room changed.
Locks disengaged in a sequence of quiet clicks. The upper vents deepened with a low mechanical hum. One by one, the windows unsealed and cracked open automatically, then widened, letting in a rush of cool spring air that cut through the thick vetiver like a blade through smoke.
Dean closed his eyes for half a second and inhaled.
The relief hit so fast it was almost dizzying.
Dean felt his body begin to step back from the edge in uneven increments, his pulse still too quick, his skin still too warm, but the dangerous pull downward into instinct lessened as the suite finally stopped feeling like the inside of Arion’s lungs. Cool air threaded through the room, lifting the weight of vetiver and breaking it apart into currents instead of walls.
Arion didn’t move.
He stood there with Dean still in his arms, watching his face with the focused stillness of a man tracking a battlefield for signs of collapse.
Dean opened his eyes and found that gaze on him.
"Better," he said, voice rough with aftermath.
Arion’s shoulders loosened by a fraction.
He carried Dean back to the sofa and lowered him onto it with the same maddening care as before, one hand behind Dean’s back until the cushions took his weight. The other lingered at Dean’s knee for a heartbeat as if confirming he wasn’t about to slide sideways and pretend gravity was a diplomatic attack.
Dean should have made a comment. 𝑓𝑟𝑒𝘦𝓌𝑒𝑏𝑛𝑜𝘷𝑒𝘭.𝒸𝘰𝑚
He had several.
None of them arrived in time.
The crash came instead.
Now that the room was breathable and his body no longer needed to fight two instincts at once, the cost of holding himself together landed all at once. He’d spent the last stretch of time controlling his own pheromones as much as Arion’s, clamping down on every reflexive release that might have fed the spiral and driven Arion harder. He’d held his scent low, steady, soothing, and careful.
Dean leaned back, meaning only to rest for a second.
His limbs felt heavier than they should have. His bones had gone oddly loose. Even irritation required more energy than he currently possessed, and that was frankly offensive.
Arion was still crouched in front of him, close enough for Dean to feel the heat coming off him, but his scent was under better control now, restrained to a low, steady presence made bearable by the moving air.
"Dean."
Dean cracked one eye open. "If you ask whether I’m dramatic, I’ll bite you."
"I was going to ask if you’re tired."
Dean let the eye close again. "I resent how competent that question is."
A pause.
Then, quieter, "You’re dropping."
Dean frowned faintly without opening his eyes. "I am sitting."
"Your scent," Arion said. "And your focus."
Dean made a soft, irritated sound that was meant to signal ’I know’ and probably sounded more like ’leave me here to die.’
He was aware, distantly, of the open windows, the hum of the ventilation now running harder, and curtains shifting in the spring air. He was aware of Arion’s hand moving, coming to rest against the side of Dean’s calf, then his knee.
Dean exhaled and let his head tip back against the sofa.
The ceiling above blurred at the edges.
He wasn’t going into heat. He knew the difference. This was depletion: post-adrenaline, post-control, post-everything. His body had exhausted itself with regulation and was now complaining in the form of sudden, humiliating sleepiness.







