The meeting place was neutral in the truest sense of the word.
No markers. No territory lines. Just an abandoned rail station swallowed slowly by grass and time, concrete platforms cracked open by weeds, rusted tracks disappearing into the trees on either side. The kind of place that existed between purposes. Between owners. No pack symbols carved into stone. No scent wards layered into the soil. Just emptiness that had learned how to last.
I arrived early.
That was deliberate.
I stood near the edge of the platform, hands tucked into the pockets of my jacket, boots planted on concrete that still held the chill of night. Cold seeped through the soles, grounding me in my body. The air smelled like damp metal and moss, old rain trapped in rusted seams. Somewhere nearby, water dripped steadily, patient and indifferent, marking time in a way that made everything else feel temporary.
I breathed it in and out, slow and controlled.
Ben stood a few paces behind me. Close enough that I could feel him without looking, a steady presence at my back. Far enough that this remained my meeting. My choice. My responsibility.
“You don’t have to do this alone,” he said quietly.
“I know,” I replied. “But I need to hear them without leaning.”
He did not argue. He never did anymore. He just nodded once and stayed exactly where he was, a promise without pressure.
The Alpha arrived without ceremony.
No entourage. No dramatic approach. Just a tall figure stepping out from the trees as if they had always been there, posture calm, movements controlled. Their scent reached me first, unfamiliar but steady. Not aggressive. Not probing. It carried restraint, awareness.
Observant.
“Savannah,” they said. Their voice was measured, neither male nor female dominant, authority worn lightly but undeniably. “Thank you for agreeing to meet.”
“You asked,” I said. “That usually means there’s something you want.”
A faint smile crossed their face, brief and honest. “Direct. That tracks.”
We faced each other across a strip of broken platform, the space between us deliberate. Respectful. Neither of us moved to close it. This was not a dominance exchange. It was an assessment.
The weight of it landed hard, heavier than any challenge ever had.
“This isn’t about power,” I said carefully. “If that’s what you’re looking for, you’re in the wrong place.”
The Alpha nodded once. “That’s exactly why we’re here.”
They spoke then of quiet alliances forming behind closed doors, not to seize control but to dismantle old protections. Of elders stepping aside without protest because they were tired of defending what they knew was broken. Of wolves refusing to return to packs that hurt them, choosing exile over silence. Of younger generations no longer willing to accept suffering as tradition or obedience as virtue.
They spoke of scale.
Of distance.
Of responsibility that stretched far beyond one territory, one Alpha, one solution.
By the time they finished, my hands were clenched tight in my pockets, knuckles pressing white against fabric. My heart pounded not with fear, but with something colder and heavier.

Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: The Omega and The Arrogant Alpha (by Kylie)
Very great read. Could have done with out the last few chapters....
Love the story. How can I read the remaining?...