Taming the Wild Beast of Alamina-Chapter 53: Terms

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Chapter 53: Chapter 53: Terms

By the time the doors opened, the palace had already decided what it wanted the moment to look like.

Palatine didn’t do simple vows. It did spectacle with rules so tight they could pass for mercy. It did ceremony the way it did everything else: slow, controlled, and designed to leave no room for anyone’s emotions to become inconvenient.

The hall was white stone and gold light and breath held behind fans. The air carried layers of perfume, polished wood, old money, and the quiet, disciplined restraint of dominants who understood they were being watched. Somewhere above, cameras clicked. Somewhere nearer, someone whispered Dean’s name as if it was a prayer and a warning.

Dean entered from the south hall exactly as the planner had promised.

Gold and black caught the light with every step, the suit cut so perfectly it looked like it had been built around his spine rather than his body. And at his throat was the gold mesh against skin, amber at the center like a captured piece of sunlight that had learned how to command a room.

It did what it was meant to do.

The air shifted around him. People who might have leaned in held back. People who might have smiled too familiarly swallowed it.

Dean kept his face controlled, in that Fitzgeralt way that made it clear he was present by choice, not being carried by the current.

Sebastian stood where he’d been placed, to the left, posture rigid and expression solemn in the specific way people looked solemn when they were in fact plotting several future murders. Trevor and Lucas were farther back, eyes tracking every movement with the calm attention of men who’d spent years learning how ceremonies could be used as traps.

Sylvia was there too - elegant, glittering, and vibrating with restrained ferality, as if the only thing keeping her from biting a noble was the fact that she’d done her hair.

At the front waited Arion.

Black uniform, heavy mantle, medals catching the light like restrained arrogance. He looked too composed for a morning this full of witnesses. The only tell was in his eyes, golden and steady, fixed on Dean with a focus that made the rest of the room feel secondary.

When Dean reached the marked point Arion didn’t break Palatine protocol the way everyone had quietly expected him to. He waited for the signal like a man choosing control as a statement.

Then the officiant spoke. Formal words. Old lines that sounded romantic until you listened closely enough to hear the architecture of power beneath them.

The exchange began.

Palatine called them vows, but everyone in that room knew what they were: terms. Clauses spoken aloud so history could pretend it had a heart.

Dean’s voice didn’t shake when it was his turn. It carried, clean and sharp.

"I acknowledge the alliance," Dean said, gaze steady, "and I acknowledge the person it binds me to."

A small ripple went through the crowd, approval from some, surprise from others. In the front row, Ethan’s face didn’t soften, but his eyes did, the way they always did when someone refused to be decorative.

Dean continued, measured, the words sounding like contract language until you noticed the way he didn’t look away from Arion while he said them.

"I will not offer obedience as love," Dean said. "I will offer honesty. I will offer loyalty when it is earned. And I will offer my presence as long as my autonomy is not treated as a negotiable part of the agreement."

A hush settled so deep it almost became sacred.

Because that was the line every dominant omega in history had wanted to speak out loud without being punished for it.

Arion’s turn came. He kept his hands still, posture formal, voice low enough that it felt intimate even while it carried.

"I, Arion of Alamina, acknowledge Lord Dean Fitzgeralt," he said, measured and deliberate, with phrasing that could be recorded without losing its edge. "I accept the alliance as set forth. I accept the bond it creates. And I accept you as the person who stands at its center."

Arion’s gaze remained fixed on Dean, the gold in his eyes seeming to warm with each measured word. He let the silence stretch just long enough for the weight of his acknowledgment to settle before continuing.

"I will not demand obedience as proof of devotion," Arion said, his voice a low resonance that cut through the stillness. "I will offer trust as it is proven. I will offer respect as it is maintained. And I will offer my protection as long as your will is not treated as a concession to my authority."

The hall remained suspended, the air thick with the unspoken challenge of two dominant souls refusing to be reduced to ceremony. Then, with a precision that felt both intimate and absolute, Arion reached out took Dean’s hand.

Dean’s fingers curled slightly, a subtle acknowledgment before he withdrew, his expression unreadable but his posture unchanged. The officiant, sensing the moment had passed its peak, raised their voice to conclude.

"By the terms stated and the bond acknowledged, the alliance is sealed. Let none question its validity, nor the strength of those who uphold it."

The officiant’s words echoed once against stone and gold, then faded into the hush they’d created.

For a heartbeat, the hall held still, like even Palatine, for all its hunger and choreography, had to respect a vow spoken cleanly in front of witnesses.

Then the formalities resumed, because Palatine never let a moment stay purely human for long.

A clerk stepped forward with the treaty pages, thick paper, layered seals, ink that looked too dark to be decorative. The officiant guided the sequence with practiced precision, the kind that turned politics into ritual.

"Sign," the officiant said, and it wasn’t a command so much as an inevitability.

Dean took the pen first.

There was a pause, brief, where the hall leaned in without leaning in. The cameras clicked. The nobles watched his hand as if they could read the future in the angle of his wrist.

Dean didn’t hesitate. He signed, the collar at his throat caught the light when he bent forward, amber warming against his skin like it was alive.

Arion signed second.

He did it with the same calm certainty he’d spoken with, the kind of hand that never shook because it had been trained not to. When he placed the pen down, he didn’t look at the crowd. He looked at Dean.

The clerk accepted the pages as if they were sacred.

Sirius rose when protocol required him to rise.

His expression didn’t change, but the room shifted anyway, because the Emperor’s attention was the most important thing one could gain. Ethan stood beside him, perfectly still, eyes sharp in a way that made even seasoned nobles swallow their comments before they formed. Trevor and Lucas remained quiet, watching, letting Palatine see that the Fitzgeralts were supporting the union.

Sebastian stayed in place like a weapon disguised as a brother.

Sylvia looked bored on purpose, which was her version of war.

The officiant lifted their hands for the final line.

"By witness and seal," they declared, "this engagement is recognized under Palatine law, and under the terms agreed by both houses."

A pause.

"May it hold."

The hall exhaled. Applause rose - polite first, then real as people surrendered to the fact that it had happened, that the contract had teeth, that the collar on Dean’s throat had already rewritten a dozen assumptions.

Arion did not smile for the crowd.

He inclined his head in the exact degree expected of him, then turned slightly toward Dean as the planner’s invisible grip directed them into the exit formation.

Dean’s eyes flicked sideways once, catching Arion’s profile.

The smallest hint of satisfaction crossed Dean’s mouth, so brief it might have been imagined.

Arion saw it anyway.

The doors opened. Light shifted. The ceremonial hall released them into corridors full of controlled movement: attendants, guards, photographers repositioning like chess pieces, staff murmuring cues into discreet devices. Palatine’s machinery kept turning.

Dean’s family closed around him the moment protocol allowed it.

Lucas’s hand landed at the back of Dean’s shoulder. Trevor’s gaze swept the corridor with the quiet threat of a man who would ruin anyone who looked too long. Sebastian leaned in just enough to murmur something that made Dean’s mouth twitch, and Sylvia appeared at Dean’s side like she’d been teleported by spite.

"You survived," she whispered brightly.

Dean murmured back, "Barely."