DENNY:
TEN HOURS AGO.
Cars pulled into the lot. I drove in last.
The school year had officially begun. Both new and returning students are buzzing with excitement, fresh haircuts, cleaner uniforms, and ready to dive into another semester of boring lectures.
At Midville College, students are forced into uniforms and bound by rules, as if we’re still in high school. The most eyesore? The so-called lecture rooms are worse than high school classrooms. And yet, everyone seems to glow in this crappy environment.
Everyone but me. I hated it. And the rules? I’ve broken them all.
Yet, they keep me. The Management never lets me go. Like they know I’m doing everything I can to earn a no-returning letter, so instead, they hand me punishments that make sure I stay.
If only they understood how much it repulses me. The walls, the air, the pressure. It turns me into something I’m not. Every second behind this building feels like a thousand years in hell. And after what almost felt like a peaceful holiday, driving in here makes my skin crawl.
But home isn’t better. Especially after the news my father woke me up with.
“They’re back in town,” he barked. “No more lying around. It’s time to man up, Denny. The West must remain ours.”
The only name that has haunted my father’s existence is Corato.
The Coratos are the most powerful and wealthy hierarchy clan in the Territory. They own everything they lay claim to, forcefully or otherwise. Stories say their heir is even more brutal than his father; an Alpha who crushes anything that stands in his path.
The Coratos had been away for over fifteen years. Since they took over the South. But now that they are back, it means chaos. Not just for my father…but for me. I’ll be dragged into a power struggle I never asked for. Forced to match the heir of a dynasty I couldn’t care less about. A boy I haven’t even seen, but have spent years learning of his power-thirst.
And frankly? I wasn't up for the ache.
I was still brooding when a sharp jolt from behind whipped my head into the steering wheel.
There is no just one peaceful place for me. Not school, not home, not in my head, not even inside my freaking car…because who the shît just crashed into it?
“What the hell?!” I roared, slamming the door open and charging toward the idiot who’d bent over my busted taillight. “Did you lose your sight over the holidays?!”
The student looked up, and for a split second, I froze.
New face. Striking. Firm. Almost too put together to belong in this rundown school. And handsome…in the kind of way that makes your instincts stir before your mind even catches up.
“Hi,” he said, approaching closer. “Sorry. I’m terrible at driving.”
His voice? Spectacular. Rich with confidence.
And for a moment, I felt something pulse deep inside me. Something I’ve buried for a long time. Something I’ve spent the entire holiday trying to suppress.
“Then you shouldn’t be driving,” I snapped, though my voice came out softer than I meant.
Milder than everyone had anticipated.
The students around us had paused to watch. I’ve got a reputation, you know—the school’s undefeated bully, the unforgiving Alpha who doesn’t tolerate bûllshît.
And yet, I didn’t knock his tooth out. I just waved him off and turned back to my car.
No, you are wrong. I didn’t let him go because he made an impact on me. He didn’t… He isn't even my type. I am only trying to start the semester on a clean slate. That’s all.
“How do I fix it?” he called after me. “I should fix my mistake.”
“Don’t be a Samaritan.”
“I insist.”
I closed my eyes, trying to block out his voice.
Challenging. Persistent. That’s what he was. And if there’s anything I hate more than competition…it’s challenge.
I turned back at him, and he was standing, challengingly competitive. On an impulse, I lurched towards him, slamming my fist into his jaw. He blinked, stumbled, wide-eyed, to the ground.
“There,” I said flatly, ignoring the gasps around us. “Now you’ve fixed it.”
I returned to my car, grabbed my phone from the dashboard, and locked up, leaving my books behind without a care.
Then, just before walking off, I looked back at him, still sitting where I left him, calm and strangely unfazed.
“Happy new fvcking school year,” I smirked.
***********
Nothing thrills my father more than hearing I’ve caused trouble.
He celebrates when I hit people. Wants me to be feared. Be the predator and not the prey. To him, I’m the Alpha he never was. The force that will destroy the Coratos, their businesses, and their empire.
But the truth?
I am no Alpha.
I am an Omega buried under years of lies, training, and muscle. A walking illusion. I’ve built this persona to survive, walked these halls pretending to be something I’m not, bruising people, dwelling in an undesirable sexual convoy, wearing confidence like war paint.
And I was counting down the days until I could escape. Finally, be free…live as who I really am.
But the Coratos are back…and that means no escape. Not now. Not ever.
“Denny,” Max said, snapping me from my thoughts. “You need to see this.”
I stood immediately, kicking my chair back so hard it smacked against the cupboard behind me.
Max isn’t special, not to me. Not really. Just another Omega, except he is hopelessly in love with me.
His feelings? Not my problem.
However, Max is a useful informant. And if he’s interrupting me, it must be serious, and I assure you, it is about to get physical.
I followed him out of the lecture room to the parking lot only to see my car in ruins. It was covered in paint. Obscene doodles. Dicks and splashes and insults smeared all over it.
“Let’s check the cameras,” Max offered, already furious.
“No need,” I growled, gazing into the distance. “I know who the fvcker is.”
No returning student would dare. This had to be him.
Max wasn’t at school during the clash. Guess no one told him about it. It is the first day of resumption, and many things will be happening everywhere and anywhere. Stories will sink other stories.
But one story will scale the headline today: News of a dead student.
I stormed through lecture rooms, scanning faces until I spotted him exiting the admin office like he owned the place. Hands in pockets. Face muscles tightened, giving a domineering vibe.
I grabbed him by the collar and yanked him into the empty restroom.
“Bâstârd!” I shouted, driving a fist into his gut. He crashed to the ground, groaning.
But he wasn’t scared. He looked right at me. Smiling.
I punched him again. And again. Drew blood from his nose, but he was still smiling.
Max burst in, eyes wide. “Let me handle this creep for you,” he said, taking over to grip the dîckhêâd on his collar.
I don’t need help to make the bâstârd pay for ruining my car, but Max always offers to help with anything.
“Oh? His lapdog now?” the dîckhêâd smirked, intending to provoke me or prove a silly point. “That’s cute.”
Whatever his intentions were, he succeeded because I am now very provoked.
“Leave,” I said to Max, my voice dark and low.
“Denny?”
“Go, take care of my car. I’ve got this.”
Max nodded slowly and left. I walked to the corner where the janitors keep their cleaning tools, pulled out a metal mop handle. Excellent beating pipes. And dragged it along the floor as I returned.
“What are you called?” I asked him, levelling the weapon.
He took out a handkerchief from his pocket and wiped his nose. “Jay,” he said.
“So, Jaden, you think I’m too weak to handle you.”
“Are you not?”
“We shall see about that.”
I lifted the rod.
But in a blink, he disarmed me. Fast. Too fast. The rod was at my throat, and I was pinned against his body like a dâmn ragdoll.
“Well, Denny,” he whispered in my ear. “It is not Jaden. It is Jason. Jason Corato. And happy fvcking introduction.”
DENNY:I appreciated Mr. Corato’s help, but I needed to get away. My business in the South was finished. I had to return to the West, to think about my trip to the North.Going to the North…to the Unions…was now inevitable. I couldn’t hide anymore, even if I wanted to. Before leaving the wedding, doubting my compliance and another disappearance, they injected a substance into my body.“It is harmless,” Theophilus said, catching the fear in my eyes as they pressed the needle in. “It will only reveal your location if you fail to appear.”“Isn’t this a track device?” Jay asked on my behalf.“It isn’t,” Theophilus assured. “It will only activate in two months. And deactivate once he steps into our council.”The moment the Unions left, I hurried to the auto court. Without a word, Jay and his men, Luo and Max, followed. In their respective cars, we drove out.It’s been four days since, and I still haven’t settled. The fear has faded, but anger and anxiety linger.It sounds ridiculous, but i
DENNY: My breath came haggard. My hands trembled. My mind went blank.It was pathetic…to feel this way after practising multiple times, reminding myself that I must remain fearless when the Unions came. But look at me.~Mama?~Oh, my baby.~I am fine, little one~Fine? I was shaking inside out.It was almost fair that the Unions hadn’t come before now—when the wedding news spread, I half expected them sooner. Mr. Corato had kept them away with his covening power…he sealed his mansion until this morning. But once he lifted the cover so other Alpha clans could find the house for the wedding, they found us, too.Even with all that protection, fear clawed me raw. My heart pounded like a war drum, louder than the cheering that had just died.~I am here, Denny~Jay’s voice sank into my head, but I was too gripped to believe him this time.~No, mama!~TA’s sudden panicked cry sliced into me. My eyes shot toward their place in the crowd—my mother cradling my little one, already moving quickl
DENNY:White Omega? True Alpha? All those grand titles meant nothing to me now. Maybe one day they might matter, but today, the Unions were already far ahead.I had once believed the Breeden was safe. That the Unions would never step foot there. I let myself relax, thinking I could stay hidden until the day I returned to the world with a grown TA—someone strong enough to shield me from the Unions—while I, hardened by time, would finally take revenge on Jaden.But that future was nothing more than a fragile dream.TA’s vision shattered it. On the wall, I saw the Unions invading the Breeden, slaughtering those who had sacrificed their homes to shelter us. Innocent people, whose only crime was showing kindness, butchered.The Breeden we once thought untouchable, the land the Unions had deemed too filthy for their “marvellous” feet, invaded at last.“It makes sense, Denny,” my mum had said when I argued the vision. “You’re nowhere to be found across the territories. Do you think the Union
JAY:Preparations began. We returned to the South.As a Corato heir, custom demanded my wedding be held in the South. But if Denny had wished otherwise, even my father would have bent the supremacy and carried every last guest to the West.Denny hadn’t cared. He, however, wanted a private and noiseless wedding…the only thing way out of my control. Corato weddings had never been quiet. Before the official invitations were even sent, gifts flooded the Southern mansion.To many, my marriage was a cause for celebration. At last, the godforsaken Alpha was subdued by the White Omega. No more Omegas would tremble under threat of being claimed by me…forcefully or not. Alphas are no longer threatened. All they had to do was avoid the White Omega, fear the person whom I was most afraid of.To family and those who still clung to scraps of love left for me, it was a tragedy. They knew they had lost me. Bound in marriage to the White Omega, I was no longer theirs. My hierarchy would be only if Den
JAY:I ran out of the patio, shoving the door open into the living room. And he was there. In Becky’s disguise, sitting in my house as if he had never left.Max was there. My two most crucial enemies framed together: one glaring at me with contempt and rage, the other…just calm. Too calm. Denny’s voice in my head had been full of amusement, but now, looking at him, his face pinched nothing—there was no rage, no thirst for revenge. He was unreadable, and that was far more terrifying than Max’s barely contained hatred.“Denny,” I breathed.That name was a star in the house, among my men. In fact, it had become a star across territories, among the Regions themselves. His face, too, was well known—but with Becky’s features, he was unrecognisable. It was safer that way. Dressed as Becky, no one could identify him until he reached his destination. Yet the moment his name left my lips, my men saw through the disguise. They saw his true self, and their once-stirred, cautious stares narrowed,
JAY:Months of endless groans and frustration. Weeks of loneliness, losing passion and focus. Days of regret and sadness. Yet nothing changed. I was still the same.My father had sent countless messages, ordering me back to the South. There were businesses to run, projects to oversee, and power to exercise. But none of it interested me anymore. My only interest, my only obsession, was waiting for Denny. He said he would come for me. And when he did, there was only one place he would look: the West. So I remained here. Waiting.But the boredom was unbearable. I had unbelievably survived weeks indoors without going insane, but I was close. I needed to breathe now. I needed something…anything disastrous enough to keep me alive until Denny arrived.And then, the idea came.The Breon Sovereignty over the West had been withdrawn. No one has dared to take over. Fear of the White Omega. The fact that he was still alive and roaming somewhere paralysed everyone. Even my father lost interest in