Chapter Two: The Predator’s Silence

1729 Words
Killian's pov Killian Blackwood lived his life in the quiet spaces between heartbeats. As the Alpha King of the Great North, noise was an irritant—a distraction from the sensory overload that came with being a werewolf in a concrete jungle. He could hear the hum of the city’s power grid, the frantic pulse of the thousands of employees in the floors below him, and the rhythmic clicking of keyboards that sounded like a million tiny insects. To survive the sensory barrage, he had built a fortress of ice around himself. He was the "Silent King," the man who ruled a trillion-dollar empire and a supernatural nation with nothing more than a lethal stare and a sharp nod. "The private lift is offline, Killian," Jax said, checking his tablet as they stood in the executive lobby. Jax was the only person who dared use his first name, mostly because they had shared a nursery as pups and because Jax was the only one who knew that Killian’s "icy" silence was often just a mask for profound social boredom. "Technical glitch on the 50th floor. We’ll have to take the public express. I’ve already sent the bypass code. I’ll clear the car for you." "I don't want a crowd, Jax," Killian rumbled. His voice was deep, a tectonic vibration that seemed to make the very floor tiles hum. "I know, I know. 'Crowds are loud, humans smell like fast food and desperation.' I’ve got it covered," Jax teased, tapping the 'Call' button. "I’ll pass the word through security. No one gets on until you’re at the ground floor. You’ll have four minutes of blissful, expensive silence." Killian stepped into Elevator 4. The doors began to slide shut, promising him the isolation he craved. He adjusted his cufflinks, his mind already drifting to the Pack Council meeting scheduled for that evening. He needed to be sharp. He needed to be the King. But then, the sensor tripped. A blur of movement, a frantic gasp, and the scent—oh god, the scent—hit him before he even saw her. A woman practically tumbled into the elevator, a chaotic whirlwind of paper, messy hair, and an aroma that bypassed Killian's brain and went straight to his soul. It was starlight. It was rain on hot pavement. It was the smell of a home he had never actually visited. Killian froze. His inner wolf, a massive, obsidian-furred beast that usually slept in the back of his mind, suddenly stood up and let out a howl so loud Killian was certain the glass mirrors would shatter. MATE. The word echoed through his bones, paralyzing him. He retreated into the corner, his body going rigid as he stared at the intruder. She was small—well, most humans were small compared to his six-foot-four frame—but she looked like she was carrying the weight of the entire world in her arms. Her hair was falling out of its clip, and her face was flushed a deep, rosy pink. "Hi," she squeaked. Her voice was like a bell, clear and sweet, despite the obvious panic in her eyes. "Sorry. I’m just... going to twenty." Killian couldn't speak. His throat had turned to lead. If he opened his mouth, he wasn't sure if he would say "Hello" or let out a predatory growl. He was the King of the North, a man who had faced down rival Alphas and hostile boardrooms without blinking, and yet, he was currently being held hostage by a girl in a slightly wrinkled blazer who was clutching a stack of folders like they were a life raft. He watched her reach for the buttons. He saw the way her hand trembled. His wolf whined, a pathetic, high-pitched sound that made Killian’s jaw tighten. She’s sick, the beast whispered. She’s hurting. Protect her. Killian’s eyes narrowed as he scanned her. He didn't need a thermometer to know she was running a fever. He could smell the slight change in her chemistry—the heat rising off her skin, the way her heart was thumping a ragged, exhausted rhythm against her ribs. He wanted to reach out. He wanted to tuck that loose strand of hair behind her ear and tell her to put the folders down. He wanted to pick her up and carry her to his private suite and call the best doctors in the world. Instead, he did what he always did. He stood there like a statue, staring at her with an intensity that he knew was terrifying. He saw the blush deepen on her neck. He saw her look away, her shoulders hunching as if she were trying to make herself smaller. Great job, Killian, he thought bitterly. You’ve been in the same room as your mate for thirty seconds and she already thinks you’re a serial killer. He thought about his assistant. Jax. I’m going to kill Jax. He said the elevator was clear. He said no one would be here. But even as the thought passed, a darker, more selfish part of him was glad. If Jax hadn't messed up, Killian would still be alone. He wouldn't be breathing in the scent of her. Suddenly, the world turned violent. A horrific, metallic thud shook the elevator, followed by a screeching sound that set Killian’s sensitive ears on fire. The cables groaned, a sound of heavy steel snapping under too much tension. The car dropped six inches, then jerked to a violent halt that threw the woman off balance. "Oh!" she cried out, her folders slipping from her arms. Killian didn't think. He didn't calculate. His body moved on instinct—the blurred speed of a predator. He caught her before her knees hit the floor, his large hands wrapping around her waist to steady her. She felt like fire in his arms. The heat of her fever soaked through his suit jacket, and for a second, the world narrowed down to the sensation of her small frame pressed against his chest.Then, the power died. The emergency lights flickered once, twice, and then vanished, plunging them into a thick, suffocating darkness. "Is... is everyone okay?" her voice came from the dark, small and trembling. She was still in his arms, her hands clutched against his chest. He could feel her fingers bunching the fabric of his expensive shirt. Killian’s heart was hammering against his ribs like a trapped bird. He should let her go. He should step back and maintain his "icy" professional distance. But in the dark, with the scent of starlight filling his lungs and her heart beating against his, the King found himself unable to move. "Stay still," he managed to rasp out. It was the first time he had spoken, and his voice sounded like dry leaves crushing together—deep, rough, and dangerously close to her ear. "I... I think the elevator broke," she whispered. He could feel her breath on his neck. It was hot. Too hot. "I’m Aria. I work in... I work on the twenty-sixth floor. I'm sorry I fell on you. I think I’m just a little dizzy." Killian didn't answer. He couldn't. He was too busy trying to keep his wolf from taking over. The beast wanted to nuzzle into her neck, to scent-mark her, to claim her right there in the dark between the twentieth and twenty-first floors. "Are you still there?" she asked, her voice hitching. "It's really dark. I can't see anything." "I'm here," he said, his hands tightening slightly on her waist. He felt her relax just a fraction at the sound of his voice.He realized then that they were going to be here for a while. The sensors on the building's main frame would have alerted security, but a mechanical failure of this magnitude would take hours to fix safely. Hours. He was trapped in a ten-by-ten box with his mate, a woman who didn't know he was her boss, didn't know he was a king, and currently thought he was just a very quiet, very warm stranger in the dark. "Sit," he commanded, his voice softening. He didn't want her standing if she was dizzy. "What?" "The floor," he said. He guided her down, his hands never leaving her shoulders until she was safely seated against the back wall. He sank down next to her, his massive frame taking up most of the space"My phone is dead," she muttered, and he could hear the sound of her patting her pockets. "And it’s so cold in here. Why is it getting so cold?" It was the building’s climate control. Without power, the industrial AC was venting the last of the chilled air into the shaft. For a normal person, it was a nuisance. For someone with a rising fever, it was dangerous. Killian looked at her through the darkness. To her, it was pitch black. To his wolf-vision, he could see her perfectly. He could see the way she was shivering, the way her eyes were fluttering shut. He reached out, his hand hesitating for a fraction of a second before he pulled her toward him. "What are you—" "You're shivering," he said, his voice a low, commanding rumble. "Lean on me. I’m warm."It was the understatement of the century. His body temperature was a steady 103 degrees. To her, he must have felt like a furnace. She didn't fight him. She was too tired, too sick, and the darkness was too heavy. She let her head fall onto his shoulder, a small sigh escaping her lips. "You're really warm," she murmured, her voice trailing off into a daze. "Like a big... heater." Killian leaned his head back against the mirror, staring into the dark. He could hear Jax’s voice in his head, teasing him about his silence. He could hear the Pack Elders talking about duty and bloodlines. But as the girl on his shoulder shifted, her hand instinctively tucking into the crook of his arm for warmth, the Trillionaire King realized that for the first time in his life, he didn't want to be anywhere else.He was the King of the North, but in this dark, broken elevator, he was just a man holding the only thing that mattered. "Sleep, Aria," he whispered into the silence, the words a promise she wouldn't remember. "I've got you."
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