NOVEL My Fated Alpha's Cruel Game Chapter 298 The Ground Removed

My Fated Alpha's Cruel Game

Chapter 298 The Ground Removed
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Chapter 298: Chapter 298 The Ground Removed

Marcus’s POV

I continue moving through the corridors, each step deliberate yet aimless.

As I approach the administrative wing, conversation drifts from an open office door. The discussion centers around a situation that would have automatically crossed my desk weeks ago. I recognize the case immediately.

My feet slow despite my intentions.

Not to eavesdrop.

Simply to assess.

Their approach impresses me. More than impresses, actually. They demonstrate the kind of measured consideration I once prided myself on, balancing multiple factors without unnecessary urgency. I linger too long before catching myself and moving forward, my heartbeat quickening for reasons I cannot easily categorize. ƒгeewёbnovel.com

This was your goal, I tell myself firmly.

This represents successful delegation.

When I finally reach my office, the certainty that I will not remain long already weighs on me. The space feels hollow, the desk surface unnaturally clear, the chair angled for someone who no longer needs to hover over every detail. I settle into it regardless, placing my palms flat against the wood, anchoring myself to something solid and recognizable.

Silence expands around me.

No interruptions come.

No crises demand my attention.

The understanding strikes with uncomfortable precision.

Relief eludes me completely.

Instead, I feel displaced.

This awareness develops gradually, settling like sediment in still water, and I remain motionless, resisting the urge to immediately transform this discomfort into actionable steps. That impulse itself creates part of my current dilemma. freewёbnoνel.com

Years of being indispensable have left me uncertain how to function without constant demand.

Eventually, Asher discovers me lingering in the threshold, studying the room as though weighing entry against retreat.

"You have been wandering," he observes.

"So it appears," I respond, surprised by the casual tone in my own voice.

His nod carries certainty. "Since dawn."

I move aside, allowing him passage, and we position ourselves along the desk edge, maintaining proximity without contact in our familiar dance of mutual consideration.

"I expected to feel unburdened," I confess.

"Instead," he encourages softly.

"Instead, it resembles having the ground removed without advance notice."

His expression remains serious rather than amused. He examines my features closely, absorbing the implications I have not yet voiced completely.

"Centrality is not a requirement," he states.

"I understand that."

"Your tone suggests otherwise."

I release a measured breath and focus on my hands. "Understanding came easily when it remained abstract."

"But now."

"Now the reality feels targeted."

The confession hangs between us, stripped of pretense, and my wolf responds with faint agitation beneath my skin, disturbed not by danger but by its conspicuous absence.

"My identity depends entirely on maintaining control," I say with quiet intensity.

Asher adjusts his position slightly, not yet making contact but close enough that his warmth becomes noticeable. "Your core remains unchanged. You simply are not constantly burning out."

A brief, hollow sound escapes me. "Constant crisis felt manageable."

"Constant crisis was destroying you," he counters.

We allow that truth to exist without immediate resolution, and I grasp with startling clarity that stepping aside did not conclude anything meaningful.

It merely revealed the emptiness beneath.

When he eventually extends his hand to my wrist, the touch remains light, providing stability without constraint, and I permit myself to accept the gesture without analyzing its full significance.

Later, after he departs to address genuine urgencies, I remain alone, positioned in the doorway, observing as the hallway functions perfectly without my oversight.

For the first time throughout this entire transition, external pressure has ceased to be the primary concern.

The real pressure emerges from the question I have been systematically avoiding.

Without the shield of necessity, what person do I choose to become?

This thought accompanies me as I extinguish the lights and secure the door, remaining unresolved and inescapable, lodging itself firmly in my consciousness with the quiet recognition that the work itself has not ended.

A different type of reckoning has only just begun.

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