©Novel Buddy
Taming the Wild Beast of Alamina-Chapter 103: The Mask
Seven arrived fast enough to make it clear two things were true at once:
One, the palace system had flagged something.
Two, Arion had hit the emergency contact because pride only survived until biology started sharpening teeth.
The suite door was unlocked with a soft chime and a security override, which Alamina pretended didn’t exist behind classical panels and antique handles.
Then there was a pause because even Seven wasn’t insane enough to walk into a pheromone-saturated room unarmed.
The first thing Arion noticed was the faint click of a filter seal engaging.
The second was Seven’s silhouette in the doorway, gloved hands already adjusting a half mask over his nose and mouth.
A neutralizer, a type of personal respirator used for containment and high-dominance exposures, was intended to flatten scent signatures before they enter the bloodstream.
Seven’s eyes swept the room in one clinical, furious glance.
Windows open. Ventilation running. Curtains shifted in the winter draft, and still, the air was heavy enough that even the walls seemed scented.
Seven’s gaze landed on the sofa first on Dean.
A dominant omega asleep, like he had been unplugged. His body limp with real exhaustion, face softened, breathing deep and even in a way that screamed shutdown after output.
Seven’s eyes narrowed.
Then his gaze dropped.
To the Crown Prince of Alamina, kneeling at the omega’s feet, head in Dean’s lap, shoulders rigid, hands flat on the carpet as if in prayer, eyes too bright, too fixed, and too close to the edge.
Almost entirely feral.
"Arion," Seven said.
Arion didn’t lift his head. He couldn’t.
If he lifted his head, his mouth would be closer to Dean’s skin. If his mouth was closer, instinct would interpret it as permission. If instinct interpreted permission, the last threads of restraint would snap.
Arion’s voice came muffled against the throw over Dean’s lap. "He’s asleep."
"I can see that," Seven said, as if he were speaking to an idiot and not a Crown Prince. He stepped into the suite, and the door sealed behind him again, the lock reengaging with a soft click.
Boreas was not present.
That, at least, was one mercy.
Seven moved with cautious pace, angles chosen to avoid brushing too close to Arion’s pheromone field. Even neutralized, the mask could only do so much when a dominant alpha was bleeding pheromones into the atmosphere hard enough to overwhelm the suite’s filtration.
Seven’s gaze flicked once to the wall panel. The ventilation was already set to maximum.
"Good," Seven muttered. "At least you remembered your building has systems."
Arion’s fingers flexed once against the carpet.
Seven stopped two steps away, looking down at him with the blunt exhaustion of a man who had signed up to treat physiology, not whatever romance-adjacent disaster this was.
"You called me," Seven said.
Arion’s jaw tightened. "Yes."
"You were right." 𝕗𝕣𝐞𝐞𝘄𝐞𝚋𝚗𝗼𝘃𝗲𝗹.𝚌𝕠𝚖
Arion did not answer.
Seven’s eyes dropped to Dean again, taking in the slack hand curled near his chest, the slow rise and fall of his ribs, and the scent-thread of lemon-mint so faint now it was almost gone - like Dean had spent every last controlled molecule making sure he didn’t trigger what he was currently sleeping beside.
Seven’s stare sharpened into something like reluctant respect.
Then it turned back to Arion with immediate irritation.
"And you," Seven said flatly, "are on the verge."
Arion’s breath left him slowly. "I know."
"Do you?"
"I do," Arion said, voice rough. "I’m not touching him."
Seven’s eyes narrowed. "You’re touching him with your entire endocrine system."
Arion’s shoulders tensed.
Seven didn’t soften. He reached into the medical case slung at his side and extracted a compact injector - sealed and preloaded, the type used for quick compliance when a patient argues or delays.
Arion finally lifted his head just enough to look at it, gold eyes sharp even through the haze. "Can you move slower than this?" he asked, voice dry with irony - like he hadn’t just called Seven in the middle of a pheromone incident and then knelt himself into a shrine.
Seven stared at him through the mask and raised a brow that Arion couldn’t see.
"I can," Seven said flatly. "But then you’d have time to do something stupid."
Arion’s mouth twitched, humorless. "I’m already doing something stupid."
"You’re doing something contained," Seven corrected, and his gaze flicked once to Dean’s sleeping face before returning to Arion. "Contained is the best you get today."
Arion exhaled slowly, the sound tight. His fingers flexed against the carpet like he was anchoring himself to the floor.
Seven stepped closer.
"Shift your leg," he ordered, low. "Now."
Arion hesitated briefly, not out of defiance, but out of instinct, attempting to argue for one more second of pride.
Seven didn’t wait for it to become words.
He crouched, gripped the fabric at Arion’s thigh with two fingers, and pressed the injector directly into the muscle through the trousers.
Seven gave no warning beyond the click.
The device hissed and fired.
Arion’s breath hitched hard, shoulders jerking once. Vetiver spiked on reflex - hot, wild - then faltered as the inhibitor hit his bloodstream like a cold hand clamping down on instinct.
Seven withdrew the injector immediately and sealed it into a disposal compartment swiftly.
"Done," he said.
Arion’s head dipped again, controlled, as if he could physically bow rut down by force of will. His hands pressed harder into the carpet for one beat, then eased.
Seven stayed standing over him, mask and gloves and absolute lack of indulgence making him look like a man who treated princes the same way he treated emergencies.
"You’ll feel the drop," Seven said, purely clinical. "Ride it. Don’t compensate by flooding the room. If you flood the room, Dean’s body will respond in his sleep."
Arion’s voice came rough, muffled against the throw over Dean’s lap. "I know."
Seven’s eyes narrowed. "Good. And for the record, your sarcasm is noted."
Arion’s mouth twitched again. "Put it in my file."
"I will," Seven said, deadpan. "Right under ’thinks irony is an antidote.’"
A breath.
Then Seven glanced at Dean again - still asleep, face softened, hand slack in Arion’s hair like an unconscious claim - and his voice dropped, not gentler, but heavier.
"He trusted you," Seven said.
Arion didn’t lift his head. "I know."
"Then keep earning it," Seven said, and turned toward the wall panel to confirm ventilation remained at maximum. "Windows stay open. You stay medicated. And you call me the moment you feel yourself slipping again, before you convince yourself you can handle it alone."
Arion’s hand flexed once against the carpet, then stilled.
Outside the suite, the palace continued breathing.
Inside, the open windows pulled the last heavy waves of vetiver outward into cold air, and Seven stood guard like a man determined to keep biology from turning love into a crime.







