Back in the classroom, Elliott had slipped right back into her dignified-if-aloof persona when River entered for her afternoon class. The boys were waiting for her with a stool reserved and she relished the opportunity to breeze right past the alpha without a second look. She looked, though. River could feel her eyes on her from door to desk.
It tickled her skin; it remembered her.
Too bad. She and the boys had a project to work on and it was currently well behind schedule. The greetings and small talk were rushed along by Ilex, who must have had the same concerns. Everyone was well, no major life updates, the girls were their standard selves.
Their professor bustled about, pretending not to assist but asking leading questions and poking holes in points he didn’t see the point of. By the time he scooted past their table they at least had enough on paper to appear like they hadn’t spent almost a week doing nothing.
“Mmm, and where exactly are you citing this from?” he asked, tapping at Sky’s screen. “Hmm. I’ve not seen another academic try to stretch an entire essay out of that statement…” he hinted to Rowan. “Have you nothing more recent to pull from?” he grumbled in Ilex’s ear, watching him search for a printout to explain a quotation he planned to use.
When he reached River he stumbled back half a step and nodded without comment, a little flustered behind his glasses, and hurried to another table. The boys attempted to hide their sighs.
“So, our project is garbage,” Sky summarised under his breath.
“That’s not what he said,” River said soothingly. “And anyway, we’re in the earliest stage, so the fact that he didn’t totally rip it to shreds shows we’re on the right track for this point in the process.”
Ilex sunk his face into his hands. “We need a study night in the diary asap.”
“That’ll all depend on when little miss socialite is free,” Rowan teased.
River rolled her eyes and dug her diary out of her tote bag. It was decorated with dried flowers she had pressed herself, and the pages were scruffy and dog-eared.
“I’ve got coffee with some friends after this class, but could squeeze some time into the evening,” she mumbled as she slid her index finger along the days’ events laid out in a variety of ink colours. “Tomorrow I have a morning lecture.” She sighed. “Then I’m going to the gym with the rowing club…” The boys tittered and she could see them shaking their heads in her peripheral. River was not a member of the rowing club. “I’ve got pieces to finish painting and I’d planned to work on them after that.” She flipped to the next pair of pages: Thursday and Friday. “Assigned reading in the library Thursday morning… maybe we could double that up… Then afternoon lectures and an Art Society meeting.” She perked, tapping at the almost-empty Friday page. “No classes this Friday, and nothing to do during the day.” She had a house party to go to in the night.
“Friday?” Rowan offered to the table.
“Friday’s good with me,” Sky answered. Ilex nodded, too. No one retrieved planners or diaries. River scribbled the plan in and put hers back.
They continued to plug away at the project until the last quarter-hour of class when Rowan murmured into the centre of the table, “She’s staring.”
“Who?” River whispered back.
“Your scenter,” Rowan grunted, prompting the other two guys to peek behind them in the direction of Elliott’s group.
River’s cheeks burned, and she took a minute to compose herself before turning, too.
Elliott didn’t flinch, blatantly observing from her table as though River were a creature in a tank that amused her. Her group didn’t bother to try and steal her attention back. River tilted her head, and earned a smirk that felt dirty, not that she could explain why. Call it a scent sense…
“It’s fine,” she told her friends. She swivelled back to their work. “Don’t worry.”
They raised no more complaints, and she was grateful for it. It wasn’t like she had any control over the alpha and what she did. There was nothing she could do if they didn’t like the way Elliott was behaving.
Divvying up the work to be done between now and their study day, it was impossible not to notice that River was handed the lightest load. They refused to re-distribute, and she had a sad feeling in her chest that they still felt guilty at having watched her get scent-marked. Without being able to disway them, she decided to try and feel grateful that she would have more time for everything else on her plate.
Speaking of her full plate - she had to get to a coffee shop on the other side of campus and meet Emerald and Honeysuckle. River packed her bag and power-walked from the room the moment they were dismissed, well-ahead of the student surge.
As she hurried through the building, she tried to prepare herself for the inescapable topic that would be on the tip of her friends’ tongues this afternoon: her new scent. She’d had this coffee catch-up in the diary for a while, but there was no way they wouldn’t use it to grill her on all-things-alpha. Emerald and Honeysuckle were both in her fine art class, and she was pretty sure she’d received notes from them in their last lecture together - the kind with nosey questions. They were also both in the choir, and not above using any excuse for an attempt to coerce River into joining.
She sighed out her nerves and pushed one of the double doors to the outside world, re-filling her lungs with fresh, crisp air.
A handful of steps from the exit, large feet crunched over the light frost on the path behind her. River didn’t peek over her shoulder, if she couldn’t smell their unique scent, she knew exactly who it was.
“Now that you’re in your right - sober - mind,” Elliott began, swooping in at her side and falling into step with her, “I need to know how you’ve been describing our arrangement to people.”
“Good afternoon to you too,” River said.
Elliott grinned, but didn’t allow her to sidetrack from the question. She was unfortunately very beautiful, and the smile worsened that fact.
“I’ve mostly been avoiding it,” River admitted. “Or saying that it was an accident.”
Elliott laughed under her breath. “Great. You’re feeding them prime rumour fodder.”
“I am not! I was trying to be vague for both of our sakes.”
“And when you decide you want more?”
River scoffed. “I’ve had quite enough of you, Elliott.”
Elliott slowed, smiling still. “That’s the first time you’ve called me by my name.”
“And you hardly deserve it after calling me little and weak.”
“You’re more than welcome to show me how big and strong you are.”
River rolled her eyes and sped up. Elliott followed.
“Well? I’m waiting, petal.” Again with the nickname that felt like a caress.
“What do you want me to tell people, then?” She forced herself to look up and meet her eyes. “What have you been telling people?”
“I’ve been telling them to mind their damn business.”
“Okay, well I’m not doing that.”
“I figured.” She chuckled like River was predictable. Like she knew her too well.
“It will fade soon,” River assured herself. “I can wait it out and then no one will care anymore.”
“Sure.” There was a glint in Elliott’s eyes that told River she did not want to know what she was thinking. But at least with that final word she stopped following, although River could feel her eyes on her back all the way to the next turn.
×
“Alpha Elliott,” Honeysuckle cooed over her coffee. “And where did you meet that fine woman?”
Emerald giggled at her side, sprinkling brown sugar over her cinnamon latte.
“Art History,” River answered. There was no meet-cute story to tell, they shared a class, she smothered her in her scent, happily ever after.
“Ugh, I should have done the combined option like you,” Emerald whined. “Maybe there’s still time for a swap?”
Honeysuckle swiped her shoulder playfully. “Em!”
“What?”
“You can’t change your degree because of one hot alpha.”
“She’s the only hot alpha!”
They laughed together, clinking their cups in solidarity to Elliott’s hotness.
“If only I’d known,” Emerald sighed. “All this time I assumed tall, dark and stunning was stalking across campus to study Law or something serious like that.”
“Medicine,” Honeysuckle tacked on. “Or politics.”
“Art is serious too!” River bleated.
Honeysuckle rolled her eyes. “We know, we wouldn’t be spending a small fortune on fine art degrees if we didn’t take it seriously.”
“Knowing she’s into art is even better,” Emerald said dreamily, completely ignoring River’s indignation. “Do you think she likes music too?”
River wanted to sink her face into her hands. “I can see exactly where your mind is wandering, Em, and I can assure you Elliott is not interested in joining the choir.” She sipped her hibiscus tea and willed the time to pass quicker. She usually enjoyed a catch-up with them, but she was tired of talking about Elliott. Not because she didn’t fascinate her, too, but because it irked her to see them salivate over her.
Emerald giggled. “Maybe I just want to serenade her.”
“Okay, you’re going too far now,” Honeysuckle scolded over the rim of her cup. She sucked carefully at the rim of the steaming hot Americano. “That’s her mate.”
“Sorry, River, I’m only being silly.”
“It’s fine.” River smiled. It wasn’t. “But I wouldn’t say we’re mates… just…” She laughed awkwardly. “It’s complicated.”
The women nodded, nursing their drinks with thoughtful expressions.
“Well, I hope it works out.”
“Thanks, Honeysuckle.”
“I hope it works out but if it doesn’t that she decides to transfer to our major.”
Honeysuckle groaned. “Girl, if you don’t get laid and stop acting like a fool-”
“So, how is the choir going?” River asked, her smile tight.
“Oh, don’t get me started!” Emerald laughed.
She had no idea how much River wanted her to start on any topic that wasn’t her desire for the alpha whose scent coated her throat. Anything. Talk for hours in tangent after tangent about anything but her.
“In short: it’s a mess.” Honeysuckle shook her head. “The sheet music got misprinted for the show we’re doing with the local retirement choirs.”
“So we all have slightly different versions,” Emerald added.
“And then that guy who swears up and down he is a tenor-”
Emerald scoffed. “He’s not.”
“-is trying to steal this solo part out from under this shy kid who’s actually really good.”
“But he’s a submissive beta!”
“And Mr Not A Tenor is a dominant beta.” Honeysuckle gave up on trying to skim the top layer of her coffee and put it to the table to let it cool properly. “So it’s becoming more a battle of social positioning than good vocals.”
“Oh!” Emerald hurriedly slurped at her cup between excited outbursts. “And tell her about that new rule they made up.”
Honeysuckle explained the bulldozing of a new choir master at a school they often collaborated with and his ad-libbed rules. Then a tale of a terrible voice crack mid-performance. And River listened and nodded and let them run through every remotely interesting thing they could think of until their cups were empty and the sun was setting. The Elliott topic did not return, thankfully, and they walked her back to her house share chattering about their personal painting projects.
That was top of River’s list for tomorrow. Art. That thing she was supposed to be immersing herself in for three years. She would prioritise her painting… after the gym and her lectures, that was. She flopped onto her bed and sighed, another full day on the horizon.
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