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THE ALPHA KINGS •••**MIRA**••• "You made eye contact with them." My roommate said it the way someone says 'you touched a live wire'— like the damage was already done and she was just documenting it. Her name was Petra. Small, dark-skinned, natural hair pulled into a puff on top of her head. She had been sitting cross-legged on her bed when I walked in last night, looked me over once, and said 'you're the scholarship girl' with exactly zero judgment in her voice. I had b decided immediately that I liked her. Now she was looking at me like I was already dead. "I didn't have a choice," I said. "There's always a choice." She handed me a mug of something hot. "You could have looked at the ground like everyone else." "I don't do that." She stared at me for a long moment. "Yeah," she said quietly. "I can tell. That's what worries me." --- She explained it over breakfast. The way Apex Moon actually worked, underneath the uniforms and the stone buildings and the official academy handbook that said nothing about any of this. The school ran on rank. Pack bloodline, Alpha status, power level — it all fed into a hierarchy so old and so accepted that nobody even questioned it anymore. It was just the shape of things. The air you breathed. At the top of that hierarchy, uncontested and untouchable, were the Ravecrests. "Their father is Alpha Cassian Ravencrest," Petra said, keeping her voice low even though the table next to us was empty. Old habit, probably. "Strongest pack in three territories. When he sends his sons here, he's not sending them to learn anything. He's sending them to remind everyone else who they answer to." I turned that over in my head. "And the school just lets them...." "The school welcomes it." She gave me a flat look. "Half the faculty come from Ravencrest-allied packs. The headmaster has dinner with their father twice a year. Apex Moon doesn't just tolerate the triplets. It was basically built for them." I looked down at my coffee. "Each of them runs a different piece of it," Petra continued. "Kael owns the student council. Every rule, every decision, every scholarship approval..... " she paused just long enough for that to land — "runs through him. You want something official done at this school, you need Kael's name on it." "And Ronan?" "Combat training. Which sounds simple until you realize combat training is also where rank challenges happen. Where quarrels get settled. Ronan controls who fights, who wins, and what condition they're in afterward." She wrapped both hands around her mug. "Three students have been hospitalized since September. All of them were wolves who got above themselves." I said nothing. "And Lucien...." She stopped. Seemed to choose her next words carefully. "Lucien is the one you actually need to be afraid of. Kael will tell you directly if you've made an enemy of him. Ronan will put you through a wall. But Lucien?" She shook her head slightly. "By the time you know Lucien is coming for you, he's already finished." "Secrets," I said. She looked at me. "You said he controls secrets." "I said he collects them," Petra corrected quietly. "There's a difference. Secrets are just information. What Lucien does is figure out exactly what you can't afford to lose — and then he holds it." She paused. "He's been here two years and I have never once seen him raise his voice. Never seen him threaten anyone directly. But I've watched three students transfer out after conversations with him. One of them cried in the bathroom for a week first." The cafeteria was filling up around us. Noise building, trays clattering, the particular loud energy of wolves who had grown up never having to be quiet. I watched the room. "So everyone just accepts it," I said. "Everyone just survives it," Petra said. "Different thing." --- I was starting to understand what she meant about twenty minutes later. The cafeteria was at maybe three-quarters capacity when Ronan walked in. Not the triplets together — just Ronan, alone, moving through the room the way a storm moves. Not fast. Not aggressive. Just unavoidable. Conversations dropped as he passed. People shifted in their seats, turned slightly away, the unconscious body language of prey pretending to be furniture. He grabbed a tray. Got in line. The student behind him — a tall, broad-shouldered wolf who looked like he had never been afraid of anything in his life — reached past him for a drink and caught his elbow by accident. The cup went over. Cold water spread across Ronan's tray, his sleeve, the counter. The cafeteria went silent in about two seconds flat. The student who had spilled it looked like he was making peace with dying. "I....sorry, I didn't...." Ronan grabbed him by the collar and slammed him into the nearest table. Trays went flying. Someone growled and scrambled back. The table shrieked against the floor and the student hit it hard enough that the sound made my stomach clench. Nobody moved. Not the students nearby. Not the wolves who easily outweighed Ronan and could have intervened. Not the two professors standing by the far wall who were suddenly very interested in their own conversation. Nobody. Ronan held him there for a long moment — the student's hands up, breathing hard, smart enough not to struggle — and then he let go. Stepped back. Picked up a new tray like nothing had happened. The cafeteria breathed out. The student straightened up slowly, fixed his collar, and walked away without looking at anyone. I stared at the space where it had happened. 'Untouchable.' That's what Petra had said. I hadn't fully understood it until right now. It wasn't just that the triplets were powerful. It was that the entire academy had decided, quietly and collectively, that the rules simply didn't apply to them. That whatever they did existed in a separate category from consequence. Which meant there was no system here to appeal to. No authority above them. No one who would help. I picked up my fork and made myself take a bite of food I couldn't taste. Fine. I had survived things before without anyone's help. I could survive this. I just needed to stay invisible. Stay small. Don't look up, don't stand out, don't give them a single reason to remember my name. I was halfway through talking myself into it when the feeling hit. That prickling awareness, like a force on the back of your neck. Someone looking. I looked up without meaning to. Across the cafeteria, at a table where he sat alone with a book open in front of him, Lucien Ravencrest lifted his eyes from the page. And looked directly at me. Not around me. Not past me. At me, specifically, like he had been waiting for me to notice. He smiled. Slow. Deliberate. Like he knew something I didn't. Like he had already started. My wolf went very still inside me. Lucien leaned his head slightly, the same way he had in the courtyard yesterday, and then — without breaking eye contact — closed his book. Stood up and started walking toward me. Petra grabbed my arm under the table. "Don't react," she breathed. "Whatever he says — don't react." But he stopped two feet away, hands in his pockets, that smile still sitting easy on his face. Up close he was even more troublesome than yesterday. Something too calm in his eyes. Too patient. He looked at me for a moment like I was a puzzle he had already half-solved. Then he said, quietly enough that only I could hear it: "I looked into you last night, Mira Vale. And what I found was very, very interesting."
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