Keeping My Alphas at Bay

Keeping My Alphas at Bay

By:  Divine Vacivity  Ongoing
Language: English
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After all the hardships of high school, Cecilia has finally settled into a normal life. Her goals are simple: keep her scholarship, get into med school, then graduate and live a quiet, happy life as a vet. Most importantly, however, she’ll need to make sure nobody finds out the reason behind her avoidance of hospitals. However, a supposedly normal homecoming parade interrupts her happy dreams of normalcy. The mysterious football player who keeps staring at her and the restaurateur who looks exactly like him seem to have very different plans for her than she does for herself. As the two brothers approach her in different guises, she begins to suspect their true intentions. Slowly, Cecilia begins to discover a world beyond anything she’s ever imagined before, one that gives her more answers about her past existence than she ever could have found on her own.

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16 Chapters
1. Homecoming Chaos
I think, if I’d known what I was getting into, I’d sooner have moved across the country than stay. Moving around the country for the first fifteen years of my life worked out well enough—I should have known better than to think that I could settle down for more than a few years here. Or maybe, just maybe, this all could have been avoided if I’d stayed behind in that lab. It started like this: despite my better judgement, I let Lily coax me outside into the autumn afternoon. Lily is my partner in our Intermediate Medical Lab Sciences class, and she’s normally pretty responsible with classwork. Homecoming weekend, however, is apparently where she draws the line. We had a lab section earlier this afternoon, and I tried to linger around afterwards, but it’s Friday, and the homecoming parade is tonight, and Lily practically got an aneurysm when she realised I wanted to stay after-hours. We’re just undergrads, so we don’t have access to the lab on the weekends, and the assignment write-u
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2. A New Job
Just as soon as I realise that the man who saved me from the crush of the crowd is the same man who minutes earlier had stared me down by the practice field, he bends slightly and heaves me into a fireman carry, perched precariously over the uncomfortable plastic of his football shoulder pads. I yelp and hang on until I’m set down beneath the canopy of a massive sycamore. Number 07 says nothing, not even as I steel myself and catch his gaze. I was right—his eyes are that terrible, tempestuous blue-grey and, even though I tried to prepare for it, I’m still struck dumb by its intensity. The world disappears from around us, the din of the parade crowd fading as if we’ve gone under water and the amber light of the setting sun seeming to coalesce around him, around my saviour. He’s no longer wearing his helmet, so I can make out his features more clearly. Something about him seems familiar in a strange way, like something deep within myself recognises him somehow. His skin is perfectly
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3. Breaking the Ice
“Hey Rob,” Emily calls out, starting towards the football coach again. “This is Cecilia Thornill, my new assistant. Cecilia, this is Robert Harris, the football coach.” The coach is a fit man in his mid thirties, not a single grey hair and only the barest hint of crow’s feet when he smiles. He’s probably only recently retired from professional play; I remember hearing something about the coach being a former major league player. “Just call me Rob,” he says, extending his hand. I smile at him in return as we shake our hands. “I’m surprised they found another one so quickly,” Rob comments, then turns away to holler, “BOYS!” To my mortification, all of the football players immediately stop, looking our way. “New med assistant,” Rob tells them. “Her name is Cecilia.” I give an awkward wave. A couple of them call back greetings, but number 07—Emeric, apparently—barely glances at me before he turns away again. I don’t know why, but it leaves me feeling strangely empty. I almost wish
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4. Dangerous Gossip
As time-consuming as my new position as a med assistant is, the next few days pass by without much incident. Emily seems perfectly willing to take on the brunt of interactions with the football players, so I manage to more or less avoid Emeric entirely.By the time Friday afternoon practice lets out, I feel better than ever about my decision to sign up with the sports med team. I even work up enough courage to ask Emily if she can let me know about my probationary status with the student med team ahead of time. “It’s just, I’ve still been picking up shifts with my part time job, and if I can quit, I’d rather do that sooner than later,” I explain to her. Emily looks up from her clipboard, startled. “Hmm? Oh! No, of course. I’m supposed to give them weekly reports about your probationary status, but it’ll mostly just be a formality. You were excellent with the boys’ physicals on Wednesday, and you did well with Jessica today.” She walks over to the other side of the cramped office, s
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5. A Moonlit Rendezvous
Emeric also seems to be frozen, staring intently into my eyes. It’s just as intense as before, but maybe because I’m already used to the effect he has on me, and maybe because he’s been so much nicer this time, it feels a little different. I’m still utterly captured by him, but the fear isn’t as strong as the fascination, and it feels less like I’m being peeled apart layer by layer, but more like his presence has seeped into my very core—cold and stinging like seawater, but also strangely invigorating, like moonlight and a chill breeze on a summer night. I don’t have to look away this time. Emeric breaks away first. Silently, he takes my fallen book bag and shuts it into the storage compartment on his bike. A warm helmet is jammed brusquely onto my head and I’m lifted bodily into the seat of the motorcycle. “Hang on to me,” he says as he slides into place in front of me. I come back to myself. “Wait, what are you—” I squeak as the rumbling beneath us becomes a roar, hanging on for
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Interlude 1: The Other One (Bas)
I’ve long since resigned myself to being mistaken for Emeric. Friends, teachers, cousins—even our parents, they all assume both the best and worst of him. Me? I’m just there. Some part of me has given up hope that anyone will see me as anything more than just “Emeric’s twin.” What’s worse is that, growing up, whenever anything went wrong, it was always a safe bet to blame Emeric. He always messed everything up for me. Don’t get me wrong—I did the same to him, probably. Actually, I probably fucked with him on purpose far more often than he did likewise. Maybe it’s part of why I was so frustrated about it—the fact that Em was almost never doing it on purpose, that I had to go out of my way to return the favour. But I guess that this, too, is something that I’m used to. He’s doing his reading homework right now, completely ignoring the fact that Cecilia could be coming downstairs any moment now. I wonder why he’s being so unreasonable about it all. He and I got into such a big fight
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6. Missing Data
Though I end up getting to the clinic on time after all, I spend the entirety of my volunteer shift completely distracted. Dr. Monaghan, the vet, hasn’t said anything about it, but I can tell she’s starting to get frustrated. I guess the problem is that I just can’t get over how different the twins are. --------------------“I’m Sebastien, by the way, but you can just call me Bas,” the nicer one told me as he served breakfast. “I’m so sorry about last night. Everything happened so quickly that I didn’t get a chance to introduce myself.” Looking back, I realise that what he said was a bit strange. Everything happened so quickly? We’d spent a good five minutes together on a speeding motorcycle! Everything only happened so quickly because At the time, however, I was so charmed that I could only say, “No, no, please don’t apologise. You’ve already done so much.” I gestured awkwardly in the direction I thought downtown might have been. “You know, back at The Caspian. Thank you.” Emer
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7. Cafè Mocha
I back immediately out of the conversation with this strange, unknown number, feeling as if my soul has left my body. Not three seconds later, however, I tap back into it to reread the message: I’ve got your USB stick. Nope. It’s definitely real. I lock my phone and set it on the table, sitting down in a daze. Someone has my thumb drive. Is it that redhead after all? Is he going to blackmail me? I have your data so let me drive you home or I’ll tell everyone about it. I almost laugh at the absurdity. If someone had it, if they saw and understood what was in it, they wouldn’t try anything so benign as blackmailing. Bzzt. I stare at my phone. Bzzt. I pick it up. Two notifications from the same unknown number as before. I unlock my screen just as another notification pops up. I navigate into the conversation and physically feel the adrenaline leave my bloodstream as I read through the messages. Cecilia? Do I have the right number? It’s Bas, by the way I found this near our po
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8. College Rivalry
I must have had my phone volume too loud, because Sebastien offers to give me a ride to campus immediately after I agree to go.The idea of going on the motorcycle again is scary, but I nod. Callie sounded pretty panicked, and I’d feel awful if I got there too late to help. It takes all of seven minutes for Sebastien and I to get to campus, and it’s mainly because Sebastien speeds. “I don’t know how I didn’t notice last night,” I gasp after Sebastien helps me down from the seat. “I must have noticed, then blocked it all out for the trauma.” He doesn’t look at me, instead opening up the storage space beneath the seat of the motorcycle. “Notice what?” he asks. “What do you mean, ‘Notice what?’?” I exclaim. “You were going twenty miles over the speed limit!” He grins, handing me my book bag. “Shh, don’t worry about it. It’s an emergency!” I sling the bag over my shoulder and peer through the fence to where the football and cheer teams seem to have gathered. There are several footbal
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9. Beneficiary
“…disproportionately along the following hiking trails: Bethelbury Falls, Katoma Ridge South, Marlborough Hills…” I tune out the voice for a bit so I can double check the data points that I’ve been entering. Most of the listed hiking trails are way west of where I live, so I should still be safe biking to the bus stop. For now. This true crime podcast that I’m listening to isn’t a very good one. They’ve tracked down all the data about missing persons for the local hiking trails and made some interesting observations, but they don’t seem to have an answer for it at all. The podcaster is a local, though, and just a high school student at that. I guess I shouldn’t expect too much from him—not like he can do a proper investigation. “But what’s even more strange, dear listeners, is the time of last contact. Now, there is reliable data about the last known locations of just over half of our victims. Usually, this information comes from cell phone texts or other forms of digital communica
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