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Caught by the Mad Alpha King-Chapter 478: Hearing distance
"That depends on the guests," Chris said. "Some improve with structure. Others merely become more creative inside it."
Nero did not hear every word.
Not clearly. Not the way a fully manifested adult with mature secondary traits might have. His rut had not come yet. He was still too young for full expression, and whatever he was becoming had not settled into its final shape.
But Nero had never been ordinary.
He caught more than he should have at that distance. Not sentences in perfect detail, but fragments. Tone. Cadence. The dangerous softness in Chris’s voice when he was being polite on purpose. The pause before Caelan answered. The tiny shift in his father’s body that looked like stillness to everyone else and looked, to Nero, like contained violence.
It was enough for him to know that whatever was happening at the host end of the table was not merely formal.
Beside him, Zion noticed the change at once.
"What?" he asked quietly.
Nero kept his expression neutral. "He’s pushing."
Zion followed his line of sight. "That much I can see."
"No," Nero said, lowering his voice further. "I mean he’s doing it carefully."
That made Zion go still.
Across the room, Caelan’s posture remained immaculate, his attention resting on the royal couple with the sort of elegance that passed for civility until one had the experience to recognize deliberate pressure.
Zion could read that much easily enough. He did not need heightened senses for it. But Nero was reading something else too. The way his father had gone was too controlled. The way Chris had answered too smoothly. The way the air itself seemed to tighten between one sentence and the next.
Then Caelan’s gaze shifted toward them.
Zion felt it immediately. "He’s coming here."
Nero’s mouth flattened. "Yes."
At the far side of the room, Arion also noticed. His head lifted once from whatever Sebastian had been saying, his eyes cooling as he tracked the movement without making it obvious. Sebastian followed a breath later and looked, very briefly, like a man considering early retirement.
Dean’s absence, for once, was a public service.
Nero set down his fork.
Zion did the same.
Neither looked at the other.
"Can you tell what he said?" Zion murmured.
Nero made a face and leaned back in his chair. "It doesn’t matter, but I think we are the new targets."
Caelan arrived three breaths later.
Zion rose first.
He was sixteen, crown prince, and too well trained to let dislike interfere with posture. He stood gracefully, one hand leaving the table edge, shoulders straight, expression composed enough that only someone who knew him would notice how deliberately controlled it was.
Nero stood a second later, slower, his face already gone flat in the dangerous way it did when he disliked someone on instinct and had not yet learned to hide it beautifully.
"Your Majesty," Zion said.
"Former Emperor," Nero added, barely holding his grin under control. The older man refused to acknowledge the greeting.
Caelan’s gaze rested on Zion first and stayed there.
That, more than anything else, made Nero’s spine tighten.
’How lovely,’ Caelan thought, or rather seemed to think in the polished cruelty of his expression, ’that Zion had been seated here tonight instead of farther down in the military section with Arion and Sebastian, where the defense and command discussions had been concentrated earlier in the summit.’ That would have required a different posture, a different kind of competence, and perhaps, implied or nearly implied, a sharper mind.
Instead, here Zion was.
Besides Nero, a twelve-year-old child, who was too young for half the room.
Caelan let his gaze slide once between them, then back to Zion.
"I had expected," he said mildly, "to find you nearer the more serious section of the summit."
Zion did not move, but Nero could see his eyes going empty as he was dissociating to keep his calm. "My schedule was here tonight."
"Yes," Caelan said, with a faint nod that managed to look approving while insulting everyone involved. "I noticed."
Nero felt the nature of the insult before it landed.
"You are still young," Caelan continued. "Of course. There is no shame in being placed where demands are lighter, conversation simpler, and expectations more... manageable."
Zion’s fingers stilled beside his plate.
Nero looked up. The old man was implying that Zion was stupid and therefore was put at the children’s table.
Zion heard it.
Nero heard it.
Half the room, likely, heard enough of it to reconstruct the rest later.
Zion inclined his head once. "I’m sure the summit team placed everyone where they considered them most useful."
Caelan’s mouth shifted by the smallest degree. "I’m sure they did."
Nero’s grip on his fork tightened, knowing that was not the end of it.
Caelan glanced briefly toward the military cluster farther down the room, where Arion and Sebastian sat in their own colder, more technical orbit, then returned his attention to Zion.
"Arion has always preferred more demanding company," he said.
Zion went very still.
Nero was not going to have it. A grin looking disturbingly familiar with that of Dax formed on his lips. "We should ask Arion if we want his opinion, Former Emperor." And he signed to Arion.
Arion looked up almost immediately.
He had been watching enough already that Nero’s signal only confirmed what he had clearly suspected: that Caelan had stopped prowling around the host end of the table and had chosen a weaker target in appearance only.
Sebastian saw it too and closed his eyes for one brief second, the expression of a man realizing that the evening had officially moved beyond elegant discomfort and into documented incident territory.
Caelan did not turn at once.
That, more than anything, revealed that he had heard Nero perfectly and disliked having it made visible.
Nero kept smiling.
At twelve, he was still too young for the full horror of what he would become, but there were moments when the old blood in him showed around the edges. In the unsettling ease with which he could choose the worst possible weakness and touch it with a clean hand.
Zion felt it beside him and, for one fleeting second, wanted to kick him. He murmured a prayer and stomped his foot on Nero’s.
To his credit, Nero only smiled brighter. "Arion, do you consider Zion or me beneath you?"
Zion went still in pure, concentrated horror.
Sebastian looked like a man watching a small child pull the pin from a grenade and then ask, with genuine intellectual curiosity, what happened next.
Arion, who had stopped beside their table with all the warmth of a winter border post, turned his head slowly toward Nero.
For one terrible second, Zion thought he might actually answer the wrong way.
Caelan, meanwhile, said nothing.
Nero kept smiling.
Zion, still crushing his foot into Nero’s shoe beneath the table, said through his teeth, "Take it back."
"No."
"Take. It. Back."
"It’s a useful question."
"It’s a catastrophic question."
Arion’s gaze slid briefly downward, not enough to reveal he had noticed the under-table violence, then lifted again to Nero’s face.
"No," he said.







