I’ve been kidnapped.
There’s a sharp ringing in my ears and sothing wet trickling down my neck.
Blood, maybe.
Or sweat.
Hard to tell when your head’s pounding like a war drum and your body folded like an underfed gymnast at the Olympics.
I think I’m in a trunk.
A moving one.
The hum of tires, the bass of so awful music, and the occasional grunt from up front confirm that much.
My mouth tastes like tal and dirt.
My wrists are bound. Cheap rope, maybe zip ties. My fingers? Dead. Like overstuffed hotdogs.
And sohow, through the fog in my head, all I can think is:Dad’s going to be pissed.
Not because I’ve been kidnapped.
No.
Because I ignored him—again.
"Don’t leave without bodyguards," he always said."You’re the Pri Minister’s son. That makes you a target."
He wasn’t wrong.I just got tired of being followed like a toddler with a bomb strapped to his back.
But when I hit eighteen, I asked myself " Who actually cares about the son of the Pri Minister?"
And let’s face it—no one actually cared about .
Just about the bloodline.
The headlines.
The leverage.
So, gradually, I convinced my father to ease up the security around .
Not easy—he clung to control like a drowning man to driftwood.
But I made it happen.
I just followed whatever career path he chose for and we stayed out of each other’s lives. Maybe he would have taken an interest in if I was an alpha.
He was always so ashad his son was not only an oga but a toxic one at that.
Because of that, he couldn’t even marry off for political gains.
No one wanted a poisonous oga in their bloodline.
Not alphas.
Not betas.
The elites still clutched their pearls over secondary genders.They wanted ’weeds’—obedient, docile, fertile.
I was none of that.
Not soone who could accidentally put a man in a coma just by getting turned on.
I tried dating once.Tom. Sweet. Beta.
Thought he could handle .
We kissed.
He collapsed in my arms, foaming at the mouth.
An alpha professor had to drag off him.
Tom spent a week in intensive care.I spent a week getting beaten in the soundproof basent of our mansion.
But I survived.And I got smarter.
I took the Minister of People’s Affairs job in the Parliant at only 21 and I’ve never spoken a word about my second gender.
I did my job, I kept myself away from any romantic possibilities. My father actually started to treat more like a human being and less as a waste of his j-zz.
Of course, I tried a few clubs around to keep entertained. After all, I wasn’t a monk.
Sure, I couldn’t have an alpha as a partner and betas would be in danger of switching secondary gender if they caught a whiff of . But I always had ogas.
No laws against it.
Tonight was supposed to be one of those nights. Just a "date," if you could call it that.
No strings.
No risk.
I didn’t bring my guards. Never did.
If so alpha got handsy, I could always let out a little pheromone and watch them back off like whipped dogs.
Turns out you can’t really release pheromones when hit with a brick in back of your head.
Good to know.
Filing that under ’street smarts, too late edition’.
The car jolts.
I roll. My wrist might be broken.
I don’t know.
What I do know is: he knew what I was. That ans this isn’t random.
Either he knows who my father is or-
He knows about my flower.
No idea which is worse.
A sudden stop made roll and hit my head yet again.
I’d be lucky if I rembered my own na tomorrow.
Then—
Door slam.
Footsteps.
Barking orders.
The trunk pops open.
A flashlight burns through the dark.
I flinch. Squint. Kick. Hard.
A fist ets my jaw. Lights out.
If only I hadn’t skipped leg day so often.
I feel my feet dragging in the mud as I am carried by two n, my boots scraping through cold mud.
We were outside- sowhere remote.
I could sll wet dirt and rotting wood.
They yanked into a building—old, empty, maybe a warehouse.
The air stank of rust and mildew.
"Prepare him!"
"At least take out to dinner first!", I mutter.
If I gotta have my jaw dislocated, the least I can do is tire them out.
My father always said I had two neurons bouncing around like loose change—no reason not to weaponize them.
They ignored . Maybe they didn’t hear , maybe they were just frigid humourless jerks like my father.
I analysed my situation-
two n,a surgical table.
the stench of disinfecting chemicals.
.
No security.
Unable to use my pheromones.
"f--k!", I mutter.
Then the world tilted sideways—and went black.
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