[b]Chapter Synopsis:[/b] In the aftermath of a life-altering bond, the fox begins to process what he's become. As medical protocol intervenes and Tulo departs, a new player enters: Duke, Tulo’s second-in-command. His calm confidence and unexpected gentleness pull the fox into yet another layer of submission—and belonging.

The warmth of the afterglow still lingered in the room.

The bond still shimmered, delicate as glass and unshakable as iron.

The fox had just started to relax again—chest rising and falling in slow, uneven breaths, his mind still floating, still trying to integrate everything that had just happened.

And then—

Chirp.

A small, chirping noise cut through the silence like a pin dropped in a cathedral.

The fox blinked toward the nightstand.

A phone. Sleek. Black. Military-grade, clearly. No logo. No branding. Just a small matrix of softly glowing lines.

The top one flashed blue.

He barely had time to wonder before the phone gave a sharper, more urgent trill—and more lights began flashing. Green. Yellow. One red.

The shift in Tulo was instant.

The wolf’s expression, once so tender, collapsed into something cold and mechanical. A battlefield mask—efficient and absolute.

He reached over without hesitation, plucked the receiver from its cradle, and pressed the topmost button.

His voice was clipped. Professional. Absolute authority.

“Twenty ccs of Slip-X to my quarters.”

A pause. Someone on the other end said something—too faint for the fox to hear.

“About ten minutes ago,” Tulo continued. “Yes, the subject is stable.”

Another pause.

And then the wolf looked at him.

Really looked at him.

And something pulled.

The fox’s body went rigid.

His breath hitched, sharp and panicked.

His mind was yanked sideways, as if the world had tilted under him. His vision tunneled, ears ringing. It wasn’t painful—but it was massive. Something ancient and powerful was inside him now, not physically, but truly, reaching across that psychic tether and pulling it taut.

Tulo.

The Alpha was inside his head—probing. Not cruel. Not invasive. But there. Testing. Measuring. Holding him open like a page of scripture, reading the spaces between the lines.

The fox gasped.

His whole body shuddered, not from pleasure or fear, but from the raw intensity of it.

Then, just as quickly, it ebbed.

Tulo turned his attention back to the phone.

“Connection is stable,” he said, voice quieter now. Measured. But undeniably thrilled. “Beyond our wildest projections.”

He looked back at the fox—eyes softening again, that rare warmth returning as he added:

“He’s perfect.”

The phone clicked back into its cradle with finality.

And then the wolf leaned down and kissed the fox’s confused, breathless face. Once. Twice. Lips brushing brow and cheek like nothing at all had changed.

Like everything was still right on course.

---

The fox barely had time to process the kiss before the door hissed open.

He tensed, spine locking rigid, muscles gone to ice.

The scene was undeniable.

Legs splayed. Knot deep. Body flushed and wrecked.

He looked down and immediately wished he hadn’t. He looked up and definitely wished he hadn’t.

A kangaroo stepped into the room, back straight and stride purposeful, a long lab coat flaring around his thick tail and clipped to perfection at the waist. No clipboard. No pleasantries. Just a satchel bag and an air of clinical detachment so pure it could have sterilized a scalpel from across the room.

The fox’s face blanched, ears twitching downward in a desperate attempt to hide behind themselves.

“Oh my god,” he hissed under his breath, cheeks blazing. “I look like—I look like a goddamn cheerleader—”

Tulo didn’t move.

Didn’t flinch.

His knot still locked tight. His body still inside the fox.

The kangaroo, for his part, barely glanced at the scene. He glided over, pulled up a sleek silver stool, and sat like this was a routine post-op check-in.

From his bag, he retrieved a vial of glowing blue liquid—Slip-X, presumably—and a syringe. He filled it with the same casual grace one might apply to pouring tea.

And without so much as a “this might sting,” he plunged the needle into Tulo’s ass cheek and pushed the plunger to the hilt.

Tulo snarled, jerking his head around in a flash of teeth and furious breath.

“Really,” he growled, voice thick with challenge. “Really.”

The roo just shrugged, capping the needle with a click.

“Sure,” he said dryly. “Big tough alpha. Doesn’t need protocol. Just a little Slip-X raw to the glutes to stabilize a brain-deep metaphysical tether and a full-blown omega psychic sync during first-cycle bonding. Totally casual.”

The fox’s mouth dropped.

His eyes snapped to Tulo, who had gone very still—his lips pulled back, his glare enough to strip paint.

But the kangaroo didn’t blink.

Didn’t care.

And somehow, the fox knew.

Knew with bone-deep certainty that this roo was one of maybe three living beings who could jab Tulo with a needle mid-knotting and live to sass about it.

Which begged the question:

Who the hell were these people?

---

The effects were almost instant.

The knot, once unyielding, began to soften, pulsing slower until it gently deflated. The stretch released with a slick, wet tug that drew a sharp gasp from the fox—half pain, half reluctant relief. His body felt empty now, aching in a way that had nothing to do with injury and everything to do with absence.

Tulo exhaled once, low and steady, then rose.

Just like that.

He peeled himself away from the bed, his presence seeming to fill the room even more in motion. The wolf crossed to a wall panel and a door hissed open, revealing a walk-in closet that looked more like an elite quartermaster’s dream. The lights flicked on with a soft hum, illuminating sleek rows of suits, boots, and gear so precisely arranged it bordered on obsession.

Tulo didn’t hesitate.

He selected a suit of matte black—subtle gleam, no tie. The kind of tailoring that didn't beg attention; it demanded it. The fabric hugged his massive chest, his arms stretching the sleeves just enough to suggest tension, restrained only by the man's willpower. His presence was like gravity in a vacuum. Impeccably dressed gravity.

Behind him, the roo had finished packing up. No goodbye. No nod. He left the room with the same clinical silence he’d arrived in.

And then the wolf was back.

Tulo approached the bed one last time, fixing the cuffs of his sleeves, now transformed from primal force to composed commander. He leaned down.

Pressed a kiss to the top of the fox’s head—firm, affectionate, undeniably his.

“I’ll be back soon, Vix.”

His voice was warm, but brooked no argument.

“Stay put.”

Then he turned, long coat catching the breeze from the subtle air circulators. The door hissed open once more. Then it closed.

And the fox was alone.

The sheets still smelled like them both. The air still hummed with bond and pheromone.

But the wolf was gone.

And the silence rang like a bell.

The quiet became suffocating.

Not because it was loud—but because it wasn’t.

The absence of Tulo was a presence in itself. A silence with weight. The bed still radiated his heat. The sheets clung to the fox’s fur. The room still smelled of sex and sweat and Alpha.

But the fox… didn’t move.

Not at first.

He sat there, body aching, thighs still trembling faintly from what they’d done. From what had been done to him. And with each breath he took, with each quiet second that ticked by, something kept brushing the edges of his awareness.

Not the bond.

Something closer.

His name.

He tried to think it.

Really think it. The one he’d carried since he was young. The one he’d told coffee shops and landlords and that single, catastrophically bad date who chewed with his mouth open.

It formed behind his eyes.

Hovered on the tip of his mind’s tongue.

And then… faltered.

Bent.

It didn’t fit anymore. Like trying to wear a shirt that had shrunk two sizes too small overnight. It wasn’t that he didn’t remember it. It was that it no longer belonged to him.

Vixen.

The word slithered in, uninvited. But not resisted.

And that disturbed him more than anything.

He pulled himself upright with effort, legs weak, every muscle made of cotton. The cool air licked across his bare skin, dragging goosebumps up his arms. He padded quietly across the room, toward one of the internal doors.

He tried the first—some kind of sealed panel, flush with the wall.

Nothing.

No hiss. No recognition. Just a red blink of light.

The second: same.

The third: sealed.

Only the bathroom door slid open with a soft hum, the motion-sensor lights flaring to gentle life.

He stepped inside.

It was beautiful. Like the rest of the suite—curved edges, dark steel, ultramarine accents. Sleek. Minimal. The shower was a glass alcove embedded into the wall, rainfall head recessed into a panel above. The mirror stretched across one side of the room, touch-controlled, waiting.

He caught his reflection.

And froze.

The fox looking back at him was him—but not.

His fur was tousled. His lips swollen. His neck marked. His belly flushed. His eyes—

God.

His eyes looked claimed.

Like something had happened behind them.

Vixen.

The word surfaced again, and this time it didn’t crawl.

It curled.

Warm and familiar, but also cold and foreign.

The juxtaposition weighed on the fox.

He gripped the edge of the counter with trembling paws and stared at his reflection, the silence pressing in again.

What had he become?

And why did it feel like exactly what he’d been waiting for?

Still standing in front of the mirror, gripping the edge of the sink like it was the only thing keeping him upright. His reflection stared back—mussed, flushed, marked.

Vixen.

Goddammit.

He flinched when the door hissed again.

Footsteps padded across the smooth floor—unhurried, heavy, and confident.

And then a voice. Deep. Lazy. Warm like whiskey left too long in the sun.

“Well, you’re prettier than I expected,” it said.

The fox turned quickly—too quickly. His knees nearly buckled again, and he had to brace against the sink to stay standing.

The Rottweiler who entered might have looked relaxed—might—if not for the thick leather shoulder holster that cut across his bare chest, hugging muscle like it was part of his skin. The pistol tucked into the holster looked well-used. Not polished. Functional. Like it’d been fired recently.

But his eyes—

Red-rimmed. Droopy.

High as hell.

He carried a silver tray, domed with a sleek black cloche, and sauntered into the room like he belonged there.

He set it down on a nearby table, tugged the dome off with a flourish that felt more like a taunt than an offering, and revealed what looked like a nutrient-dense, high-protein meal arranged with surprising care.

The canine grinned, wagging his blunt tail once.

“Name’s Duke,” he said. “I’m Tulo’s second.”

He gestured vaguely to the room around them.

“We’re gonna be spending quite a bit of time together, little one.”

The fox blinked.

Duke’s tone was easy. Friendly. But beneath it—beneath the weed-glazed eyes and the wagging tail—was something sharp.

Not threatening.

But serious.

Like a soldier who’d already chosen what hill he’d die on—and this suite, this moment, this bonded fox, was part of it now.

Duke didn’t wait for permission.

Didn’t even look for it.

The fox had barely processed his presence when the Rottweiler grinned, stepped forward, and tugged him gently but firmly out of the bathroom. One powerful arm slung over his shoulder like they were old drinking buddies.

“C’mon, you’ve been vertical long enough,” he said, voice low and easy, like they weren’t navigating the aftermath of a metaphysical bond-forging mating ceremony.

The fox didn’t resist. He was too stunned to resist anything right now.

Duke led him straight to the master bed—the same one that still smelled like Tulo, like sweat and sex and claiming. He sprawled out like it was his own, wide legs kicking up onto the mattress with practiced ease.

The fox stood at the edge, unsure.

Duke reached up, grinning again—just a little too familiar—and pulled.

A surprised yelp escaped the fox as he was drawn into the dog’s lap, slotted between thick, muscled thighs and a chest that felt like warm, armored concrete. The Rottweiler settled behind him like he’d always been there.

“Relax, little one,” Duke said, voice soft now, almost fond.

“You have no idea how lucky you are,” the big dog’s chest rumbled into the fox’s back, the tone of his voice hovering on reverence.

The fox opened his mouth—but Duke kept talking.

“Tulo’s been searching for years,” he said. “Doesn’t talk about it. But I’ve seen him go cold on operations, spacing out like he was listening to something no one else could hear. Like a wire was waiting to connect.”

He nuzzled lightly against the fox’s temple, surprisingly gentle.

“Turns out, it was you.”

Then, as if the weight of that truth wasn’t enough, Duke reached under the bed with one hand and came up with a silver case. Click. It opened to reveal a pre-rolled joint and a weathered lighter.

He sparked it without flourish, inhaled deep, and let the smoke trickle from his nose like incense.

Then, without a word, he brought the joint to the fox’s lips.

Held it there.

The ember glowed like a small sun.

The fox hesitated.

The bed still smelled like Tulo. The room still hummed with bond.

And here was Duke, muscle and smoke and dangerously warm, offering not answers, but a breath.

A chance to float.