Taming the Wild Beast of Alamina

Chapter 223: Passed.



Chapter 223: Passed.

Sylvia looked at him. "That was not a compliment."

Dean kept walking. "It was not inaccurate either."

She stared at the side of his face for another second, then gave up with a faint, helpless exhale that almost became laughter but did not quite dare. Perhaps because Andrea was still behind them. Perhaps because the corridor still remembered the shape of Dean’s threat. Perhaps because there were moments, very rare and deeply inconvenient, when even Sylvia understood that mockery needed to wait until blood had fully returned to the room.

They entered the examination hall under the strained politeness of every adult present.

Dean took his seat.

The ring stayed visible.

The first paper was set before him.

And because Dean was, at his core, a man who did not like people mistaking absence for weakness, he destroyed it.

He read the questions with the calm focus of someone who had spent recovery half-propped against pillows with a tablet balanced on his knees, Sylvia beside him with notes spread across every available surface, and Arion appearing at inconvenient intervals to explain the more complex intersections of pheromone theory, combat physiology, beast corruption patterns, and the frankly insulting difference between academic classification and field reality.

Arion’s explanations had been, unfortunately, excellent.

They had also been delivered in the low, unhurried voice of a man who thought Dean glaring at a diagram of pheromone diffusion was attractive.

That had made studying difficult.

Not impossible.

Dean had persevered because he was proud, stubborn, and unwilling to let injury, university politics, or Arion’s unnecessary cheekbones ruin his academic record.

The first exam dealt with dominant pheromone interaction models, suppression response curves, and the stability thresholds required when multiple high-grade signatures overlapped in enclosed spaces. Dean answered with clean precision, citing field exceptions where the standardized theory had long since become decorative nonsense.

The second moved into applied containment: beast response to pheromone-based disorientation, corrupted human aggression patterns, and the difference between panic output, dominance output, and predatory chemical mimicry.

Dean nearly smiled at that one.

Arion had explained the predatory mimicry portion three nights earlier with a combat report open between them and one hand resting on Dean’s ankle, thumb moving absently against the skin above his sock as if he had any right to be soothing while discussing dismemberment statistics.

Dean had remembered every word.

Out of spite, mostly.

Also because Arion had been right.

By the time the final written portion ended, the head proctor had checked Dean’s responses twice with an increasingly careful expression.

Sylvia, seated two rows away, finished her own paper with a quiet triumph that made Dean look at her and know she had done well. Not perfectly. Sylvia did not need perfection to enjoy victory. She needed improvement, proof, and the satisfaction of having dragged herself through the material while occasionally threatening to set Dean’s notes on fire because his handwriting became ’aristocratic murder’ when tired.

She caught him looking and lifted her brows.

Dean gave her the smallest nod.

Her smile came fast, bright and proud, before she hid it behind a more acceptable academic expression.

It warmed something in him.

Annoyingly.

The oral review came last.

A panel of three faculty members, all composed, all professional, all pretending with admirable incompetence that they had not already heard at least fragments of the corridor incident. They asked questions with the faint caution of people who had remembered too late that Dean was not merely a student catching up after absences.

He answered with the clean, calm competence of someone who had genuinely studied, genuinely understood, and genuinely resented the possibility that anyone might attribute his results to privilege rather than work.

When one professor attempted to soften a question by adding, ’given your adjusted attendance,’ Dean looked at him with such pleasant stillness that the man cleared his throat and rephrased.

Sylvia, waiting near the wall, looked as though she had personally received a gift.

The grades came back before they left.

High. Very high.

Dean looked at the official notification without surprise, though with a quiet satisfaction he did not bother hiding from Sylvia.

Sylvia received hers a minute later.

Her eyes widened, just slightly.

Then her shoulders lifted as if she had taken in too much air at once and did not know what to do with it.

Dean glanced at the display. "Good."

Sylvia stared at the grade, then at him. "Good?"

"Very good," Dean corrected.

Her smile broke through then, too bright to be contained by dignity. "I passed the applied section."

"You did more than pass it."

"I passed the applied section well."

"Yes."

"I hate that section."

"I know."

"I wanted to bury that section in an unmarked grave."

"I also know."

Sylvia looked back down at the results, and for a moment all her usual sharpness gave way to something more open, more pleased, almost young. "I did well."

Dean’s mouth softened before he could stop it. "You did."

She turned that smile on him. "And you did disgustingly well."

"Thank you."

"That was an insult."

"I accept admiration in all its forms."

"Then treat me with lunch somewhere fancy but with wings and fries on the menu."

Dean looked at her.

Sylvia looked back with the grave dignity of a woman who had survived exams, university politics, Andrea, and several hours of pretending not to enjoy Dean’s public threats too much.

For once, Dean found no flaw in her logic.

"You want crystal glasses and chicken wings."

"And fries."

"With proper service."

"And sauces." She said with a hungry glint in her eyes.

Dean sighed. "Fine. Multiple sauces."

"And dessert."

"You are abusing success."

"I passed the applied section."

Dean paused, then nodded. "Fair."

They left the examination wing side by side, the morning’s tension finally loosening around them. No one stepped into their path. No one offered commentary. No red-haired omega appeared beneath an arch with unresolved rage and couture trauma.

The university had chosen survival.

"How disappointing," Sylvia said.

Dean glanced at her. "You wanted an encore?"

"I wanted academic consistency."

"You are dangerously entertained by conflict."

"Only when you’re winning."

The university grounds spread before them in clean lines of stone paths, winter-green hedges, glass lecture wings, and older buildings that had been polished into relevance by money and institutional arrogance. The front courtyard was busy but not crowded, guarded discreetly enough that most people could pretend the royal presence had not altered the shape of security around the building.

Dean took one breath.

The air outside felt better.

He rolled one shoulder back, trying to ease the stiffness from sitting through exams and the lingering strain that his body still punished him with whenever he spent too long upright.

Sylvia caught the movement. "Pain?"

"Annoyance."

They moved down the steps together, still talking, when Sylvia’s gaze shifted past his shoulder and her expression changed.

Dean frowned, already expecting a lecture about pain management and his ego. "What?"

Sylvia’s mouth curved slowly. "Your day is about to become supervised again."

Dean froze.

Then he turned.

Arion stood near the edge of the courtyard beside one of the black palace cars, speaking with two members of the university research department. Even from a distance, he was impossible to mistake. Tall, broad-shouldered, dark-haired, with the calm, severe presence of a man who had never once needed to raise his voice to make an entire room reorganize itself around him.

His coat was open over dark formal clothes, the cut simple and expensive, the crown prince’s insignia at his collar catching the light only when he moved. One researcher held a tablet and was speaking quickly, almost nervously, while the other nodded too often.

Arion listened with terrifying patience.

Then, as if feeling Dean’s attention from across the courtyard, he looked up.

Their eyes met.


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