Taming the Wild Beast of Alamina-Chapter 81: Borderline

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Chapter 81: Chapter 81: Borderline

Arion stepped out of the dining wing’s corridor as if he had just stood up from lunch to answer a phone call, not as if he was about to fight.

One of his security detail was already approaching at a fast walk, tablet in hand, earpiece live, and a hard case tucked under his arm like it weighed nothing. The case was matte black with reinforced corners, with an orange blinking LED.

"Your Highness," the guard said, falling into step beside him without needing permission. "Route confirmed. Two hours from Roslew. High pheromone concentration area, border corridor between sectors..."

"I read it," Arion replied, not unkindly, just already moving faster. His hand closed around the case handle, and the latch clicked once under his thumb, recognizing his pheromonal signature.

Alamina did not have borders the way other empires did.

Saha had oceanic distances and naval lines and treaties drawn in ink. Palatine had mountains and parliament and the illusion that law could hold back violence if you wrote it in the correct font.

Alamina’s real borders were biological.

They were invisible thresholds where the air itself thickened, where the land carried too much saturation for a normal person to stay sane for long without training, suppressants, or a dominant presence sustaining them. The empire occupied its entire continent, which behaved like a living organism: volatile, overfed with pheromones, and restless under its own strength.

The concentration was in the soil and the wind. It seeped into stone. It settled into water.

It was why Alamina produced the highest percentage of dominant alphas and dominant omegas in the world, and why their awakenings were rarely gentle. Elsewhere, dominance was a rare flare.

Here, it was weather.

People grew up learning restraint the way other nations learned etiquette, because in Alamina, ’losing control’ didn’t mean scandal. It meant casualties. It meant entire rooms turning submissive or violent on instinct. It meant power bleeding out of a body like heat from a cracked reactor, and the empire didn’t pretend this was romantic.

They had a category for it. Several, depending on how politely you wanted to phrase it.

The public used ’beasts’ because it was easier than saying ’unstable dominant profile with deteriorating restraint and high environmental influence.’ The internal documentation used clinical terms. The military used threat ratings.

The truth lived somewhere in the middle: people who were born too strong, awakened too hard, or broke under the weight of their own biology until the line between person and weapon blurred into something ugly.

Arion’s guard continued talking, tone clipped and professional. "The path is a village route. If they shift east..."

"They hit the outer farms first," Arion finished, already turning down a service corridor that cut cleanly through the palace’s ornate skeleton. Alamina, too, hid its teeth under decorations. Behind gilded panels were reinforced doors. Behind marble was steel. Behind beauty was a system designed for containment.

Roslew, the capital, was proof of it: a city that looked like it was built to be admired and defended at the same time.

They moved quickly. Staff flattened themselves out of the way without a word. The third continent had been biologically volatile long before Arion was born, long before Otto inherited the throne, and long before modern diplomacy tried to pretend that global balance could be achieved by smiling for cameras.

The guard’s voice lowered as they reached a secured junction. "The entities appear non-human, sir. Not a dominant breakdown."

Arion’s gaze sharpened for real then, a shift so small it would have been invisible to anyone who wasn’t trained to notice predators.

"Class?"

"Alpha-variant fauna at minimum," the guard said. "Possibly Ability-Manifest. The field team reported abnormal coordination. Two injured, no fatalities. Yet."

Arion’s mouth went still. He didn’t like ’yet.’

Alamina was the only place in the world where the anomaly extended beyond humans.

Other continents had strong dominants. Other continents had dangerous people.

Only Alamina had animals that had adapted to the saturation and developed dominant-like traits.

Some were simply stronger, more resilient, faster, and capable of taking bullets like normal animals do rain. Those fell under the Alpha-Variant classification: heightened physical capability, endurance, and abnormal biological resilience.

The more complicated cases were worse. Ability to manifest fauna. Animals that didn’t just attack with teeth or claws but with pheromone influence, territorial responses so aggressive they could trigger panic in a crowd, predatory manipulation that made prey freeze instead of flee, and environmental shifts that didn’t make sense unless you accepted the fact that something non-human had learned to weaponize the atmosphere itself. 𝑓𝓇𝘦ℯ𝘸𝘦𝑏𝓃𝑜𝘷ℯ𝑙.𝑐𝑜𝓂

And then there were the rare ones.

Unclassified Threat Entities.

The type of incident reports that were not read aloud during staff briefings because no one wanted to instill that kind of imagination in a civilian’s mind. Such cases resulted in permanent quarantine lines drawn on maps that were never erased.

Arion had grown up with those maps like other children grew up with bedtime stories.

’Don’t go there.’

’Don’t ask why.’

’If you hear the sirens, go inside and lock the door.’

He reached the armory access corridor, where the palace stopped pretending to be a home and admitted it was also a fortress.

The case clicked open when he set it on the bench. Inside, neatly arranged: combat gear that had been assembled, adjusted, and maintained by a system that understood crown princes did not get to be fragile. Pieces designed for speed and protection. Reinforced gloves. A fitted vest with internal plating that could flex without compromising movement. A holster rig that sat close to the body. Tools that appeared surgical in their precision and brutal in their intent.

One of the guards held out a tablet. The live feed displayed a border grid, heat signatures, and movement patterns.

The red markers were too close to human routes.

Arion’s fingers moved with efficiency, slipping into gear like it was a second skin.

"Any civilians in the area?" he asked.

"Village warned," the guard answered immediately. "Evacuation in progress. Outer farms are being pulled back."

Arion nodded once. "Good."

He secured the last strap, lifted the case, and started walking again. His security detail followed, matching his pace, the palace’s hidden pathways bending toward the exit like veins guiding blood.

Two hours from Roslew.

Two hours from the city that looked like marble and history and drama, and yet lived under the constant agreement that the continent could bite if you forgot what it was.

Alamina’s strength was not free.

It never had been.

And Arion - who could smile like a civilized man at lunch and hold Dean like he was something precious - carried the other half of his country too: the half that knew how to step into violence without hesitation, because hesitation cost civilians, and Alamina didn’t forgive that.

As they reached the vehicle bay, the cold air hit him again, clean and sharp.

He thought, briefly, of Dean’s bare feet on winter stone.

Then he pushed the thought down, not because he didn’t care, but because care was not allowed to slow him right now.

"Notify the border unit," Arion said, voice calm. "I want containment first. Elimination only if it’s necessary."

"Yes, Your Highness."

The doors of the helicopter closed after them.