로그인She thought she was a beta. Until she turned twenty-one. Her late presentation as an omega shatters everything she believed about her future. Overnight, the rules change. In a world where omegas aren’t allowed to live independently without an alpha sponsor, her family refuses to claim her, and the law gives her only one year before she’s reassigned to a guardian alpha she doesn’t choose. She refuses to let that happen. She’s smart, sharp-tongued, and has never waited for permission in her life. If the system demands an alpha, she’ll find one herself. A powerful one. A rich one. One who gives her security without taking her freedom. But alphas are a disappointment. The chemistry is wrong. The entitlement is worse. And then, on one reckless night, everything changes. A dark club. A stranger who radiates control. One encounter that leaves her body finally still… and an alpha who disappears before she can ask his name. When she secures a coveted internship at a corporation that temporarily sponsors unbonded omegas, she thinks she’s bought herself time. Until her first day puts her face-to-face with the man she can’t forget. Her CEO. Her alpha. And the last man who wants to bond. He doesn’t claim omegas. He doesn’t mix desire with obligation. And he refuses to become what the system expects of him. But she’s done being patient. If survival means seduction, she’ll do it on her terms. Even if he fights it. Even if the bond they’re resisting is inevitable.
더 보기The first thing the doctor said was, “You must have missed the signs.”
Which immediately told me she didn’t know me at all.
I didn’t miss the signs. I noticed when professors changed the tone of their emails. I noticed when baristas stopped remembering my order. I noticed when my roommate replaced the good toilet paper with the cheap kind and pretended it was an accident. Missed signs were for people who floated through life, trusting the universe not to pull the rug out from under them.
“I didn’t miss anything,” I said. “You’re just wrong.”
She smiled at me like I’d just said something brave and stupid, which made my jaw tighten. Then she tapped her tablet again, slowly and patiently, as if facts needed a moment to warm up before they could hurt me properly.
“It’s rare,” she said. “But not impossible. Late presentation does happen. Usually under stress.”
“Everyone is under stress,” I said. “That’s just being alive.”
She didn’t laugh. That should have been my first clue.
She turned the screen toward me, graphs blooming across it like a crime scene reconstruction. Hormone spikes. Scent markers. Compatibility indicators I had never bothered to learn about because they weren’t relevant to my life.
Or they hadn’t been. Yesterday.
“This explains the nausea,” she said. “The dizziness. The headaches.”
“That explains finals week,” I said. “Not a biological rewrite.”
Her smile thinned. “You’re presenting as an omega.”
I waited for the punchline.
None came.
“No,” I said. “I’m a beta.”
“You were a beta,” she corrected gently, which somehow made it worse. “You’re presenting now.”
Presenting.
Like my body had shown up late to a party it had actively declined to attend.
I stared at the white wall behind her head, the one with the motivational print about resilience. I wondered how many people had received life-altering news under that exact shade of beige.
“I’m twenty-one,” I said. “Isn’t that a little late for a surprise identity crisis?”
“It’s late,” she agreed. “But not unheard of.”
Twenty-one.
Old enough to drink, vote, sign contracts, and apparently lose my legal autonomy in a single afternoon.
“Your family will need to be notified,” she continued. “And you’ll need an alpha sponsor registered within twelve months.”
I laughed. It escaped before I could stop it, sharp and humorless.
“My family doesn’t have alphas,” I said. “We’re all betas. Aggressively average. You’re barking up the wrong gene pool.”
Her pause was brief, but it landed like a dropped plate.
“In that case,” she said carefully, “you’ll need to make alternative arrangements.”
Arrangements.
I left the clinic with a pamphlet in my bag and a ticking sensation just beneath my sternum, like someone had installed a countdown clock without asking permission.
The city looked the same, which felt personal. People walked past me with coffee and headphones, unaware that their bodies could betray them on a Tuesday. I wanted to grab a stranger and say, "Hi, quick question: do you know who owns you yet, or is that scheduled for later?"
Instead, I went home and called my mother.
She answered on the third ring. “Hi, sweetheart.”
“I’m an omega,” I said.
Silence. Then a sharp inhale.
“That’s not funny.”
“It’s not a joke.”
Another pause. I could hear the television in the background, my father’s favorite news channel murmuring about nothing important.
“You should get a second opinion,” she said. “Doctors are dramatic.”
“I already did.”
“Well,” she said, voice tightening. “You always did like attention.”
I stared at the crack in my kitchen wall, the one I kept meaning to fix but never did.
“They said I need an alpha sponsor,” I added. “Legally.”
“That won’t be us,” she said quickly. Too quickly. “We don’t want to get involved in… all that.”
“All what?”
“The bonding,” she said. “The expectations. It’s complicated.”
Something cold settled behind my ribs.
“I have a year,” I said. “After that, the state assigns one.”
She exhaled, relieved. “That sounds very official. I’m sure they know what they’re doing.”
We hung up not long after. I didn’t cry. I sat at the table and watched the light shift across the floor as it might explain itself.
The pamphlet was full of soft language and friendly colors. Omega welfare. Protective oversight. Guardianship, like it was a favor and not a leash. It talked about safety, the way people always do when they mean control.
I flipped through it once, then dropped it in the trash.
If the system required an alpha, then fine. I would choose one.
I wasn’t going to end up assigned to a stranger with a savior complex and a legal claim to my future. I wasn’t going to shrink my life because my body had decided to reroute itself without consulting me.
I showered. I dressed. I studied myself in the mirror, looking for proof that something fundamental had changed.
I looked the same.
Which meant the change wasn’t going to announce itself politely. It was going to show up sideways. In closed doors. Lingering glances. Rules were tightening when I wasn’t looking.
I grabbed my jacket and my keys.
If I needed an alpha, I was going to get one who was rich, powerful, and smart enough not to confuse ownership with entitlement. Someone who would sign the paperwork and stay out of my way.
The bar down the street was loud and dim, smelling of ambition and cheap cologne. I lasted fifteen minutes.
Alphas noticed me now. Not subtly. Not carefully. Like a problem they had already solved.
One leaned too close. One smiled like I belonged to him already. One asked if I knew how lucky I was.
I left before any of them could put a hand on me.
Outside, the air felt wrong. Thin. My head throbbed faintly, like my body was clearing its throat.
Compatibility mattered, the pamphlet had said. Fit. Resonance.
Great. Even my biology had standards.
I laughed softly to myself and headed for the train, the clock in my chest ticking louder now.
One year.
Plenty of time.
I wasn’t planning to waste it.
I followed the alpha through the club. He moved with quiet certainty, steady and unhurried, and the crowd parted for him without question. People shifted out of his way instinctively, as if they recognized authority even here.I had to weave around dancers to keep him in sight, my shoulder brushing past warm bodies as the music pressed in on all sides. He didn’t look back to see if I was following. He didn’t need to.He led me to the back of the club and through a set of padded doors. The music dropped instantly, reduced to a muted, rhythmic thump that pulsed through the walls rather than filled the air.We stood in a narrow hallway lined with the same padded material as the door behind us. The lighting was low and deliberate, casting soft shadows along a row of identical doors that stretched down both sides. Each one was closed. Each had a small number and a sleek keypad mounted beside the handle.The door closest to me bore a red 1.The air smelled wrong. Clean, but aggressively so,
The air was warm, scented with leather, perfume, and something sweet beneath it, a mingling of everyone’s presence without the sharp, aggressive musk that came with alpha posturing. Nothing here felt like a challenge. Nothing was trying to dominate the room.People stood in small, loose clusters, not pressed together the way they were in bars, but angled toward one another with deliberate intimacy. My mental image of a kink club was both right and wrong. Some people were dressed the way I’d expected, leather, harnesses, lace, skin on display. A woman knelt beside a barstool in a delicate set of lingerie, her posture calm and proud rather than ashamed. Others wore jeans and button-downs, looking almost out of place until you noticed the way they touched and were touched.I tried not to stare, but it was difficult not to. Toward the center of the room, a small stage had been set up, and a beautiful young man stood naked, restrained against a frame while someone delivered careful, rhythm
Finding the club had been an accident. I had gone into a bar down the street, but it only lasted a few minutes before the overwhelming scent sent me back outside, my head swimming and my skin crawling as if I had been submerged in something too thick to breathe through.I wanted the smell out of my nose and off my clothes, so I walked. I had always loved walking at night. The crisp air usually calmed me, and the city felt softer after dark. Strings of lights lined the streets. Voices drifted out of open storefronts and half-lit windows, a low murmur of other people’s lives continuing on without me. It had always been comforting.It used to be comforting, anyway.Being an omega changed that. Walking alone at night was dangerous in a way I had never known before. I’d been hit on plenty of times in my life, but now the attention felt sharper, uglier, the words stripped of even the thin veneer of charm.“Hey, little omega, I got a knot over here for you,” a man shouted from the mouth of a
If I were going to need an alpha, then logic said I should start by finding one.Logic, it turned out, was wildly optimistic.The first man I met smelled like expensive soap and entitlement. He had chosen the restaurant, the wine, the conversation topics, and by the time my drink arrived, he was already telling me what kind of omega he thought I was.“You’re lucky,” he said, smiling in a way that suggested he’d mistaken himself for a prize. “Most alphas wouldn’t be this patient.”“Patient with what?” I asked.“With you,” he said, as if that settled it.My body went cold, a quiet withdrawal I didn’t have to think about. Something in his presence felt wrong, not dangerous, just… grating, like a frequency that never quite resolved. The hairs on the back of my neck stood up.I finished my drink and told him I had an early morning.He texted me twice before I got home.The second alpha was better on paper. Polite. Wealthy. A good reputation. His scent was mild, almost pleasant, and that so






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