Chapter 192: Chapter 192: Medically offended
Dean turned his head just enough to look at him. “That,” he said, “is perhaps the least comforting thing anyone has ever said to me in a hospital.”
Nero barked a short laugh.
One of the physicians coughed into his hand in a way that was not especially convincing.
Arion did not move from where he stood, but his gaze held Dean’s steadily. “If I had been fighting with all my might, the session would not have lasted that long.”
Dean absorbed that.
Then he looked at his own bandaged ribs.
Then back at Arion.
“That is grotesque.”
“Yes,” Arion said.
Dean’s mouth twisted. “You say yes to disturbing things much too easily.”
“You ask disturbing questions very efficiently.”
“That is because I’m intelligent under pressure.”
“You are insolent under pressure.”
“I can be two things.”
Nero leaned back in his chair, openly entertained again now that the apocalypse had been downgraded to a deeply upsetting medical anomaly. “For what it’s worth, I don’t think the bond dropping made him more violent.”
Dean looked at him. “Then why, precisely, do I feel as though I was attacked by infrastructure?”
Nero’s expression sharpened. “Because you hit the nape gland.”
That quieted the room again.
A physician adjusted something at Dean’s IV. Someone in the hall rolled a cart past the glass. But the center of the room tightened.
Nero continued, less amused now. “You didn’t just interrupt his field. You hit one of the main output points directly and held it. His pheromones misfired at the source. That would have felt wrong even before the bond issue.” He paused. “After the bond issue, it probably felt worse.”
Dean looked back toward Arion.
Arion did not deny it.
The scientist, sensing an opening to make things more terrible through precision, said, “The telemetry suggests Prince Arion’s behavioral shift happened at the same time as the gland disruption and bond collapse, not after full cognitive processing. It looked reflexive. A threat-response cascade.”
Dean blinked slowly. “So your professional opinion is that I medically offended him.”
The scientist hesitated. “In simplified terms.”
“That is revolting.”
Sylvia spoke before Dean could continue spiraling into commentary. “What happened is this: you hit a biological source point tied to his pheromone output hard enough to destabilize the bond expression. His body read it as a real threat. He responded on instinct and stopped the second he understood your rib had gone.”
Dean lay there for a moment, digesting that through pain, exhaustion, and the deeply irritating fact that everyone in the room sounded annoyingly reasonable.
Then he asked, “Can the information be used for the infected?”
The scientist looked at him.
Then at Arion.
Then, very carefully, back at Dean, as though trying to determine whether answering would be rewarded with professional respect or immediate execution.
Nero leaned back in his chair with a quiet, vicious sort of interest. Sylvia shut her eyes for one second, opened them again, and looked like a woman watching inevitability arrive on schedule.
Arion did not interrupt.
That, more than anything, made the room hold its breath.
The scientist cleared his throat. “Possibly.”
Dean’s expression sharpened despite the swelling at his jaw. “That is not an answer. That is what cowards say before developing footnotes.”
The scientist’s jaw tightened.
Dean noticed, which was unfortunate for everyone because Dean, bruised, half-bound, and medically discouraged from enjoying himself, still retained perfect working vision when it came to other people’s pride.
“I am not being a coward,” the scientist said, with the careful dignity of a man trying not to sound like he had absolutely taken that personally. “I am being precise.”
Dean looked unimpressed. “That has never stopped people from being cowards.”
Nero made a low sound into his fist that might have been a laugh.
Sylvia closed her eyes briefly, then reopened them with the long-suffering expression of a woman whose life had become an endless sequence of competent disasters.
The scientist adjusted the grip on his tablet, squared his shoulders, and continued with the increasingly visible determination of someone who had decided that if he was going to be insulted from the bed of an injured royal-adjacent menace, he was at least going to be technically correct while it happened.
“What I mean,” he said, more crisply now, “is that we do not yet know whether Dean’s effect can be replicated by anything external, artificial, or mediated. It may be unique to his specific biological profile. It may require his exact dual-function interaction between local pheromone nullification and source-point interference. Or…” and here his pride, bruised though it was, lifted its head enough to sound almost defiant, “it may have analogues.”
That got the room’s attention.
Even Dean, who had been halfway to preparing another insult, stopped.
The scientist saw that and looked grimly vindicated by being useful. “During the session, we gathered a pheromone probe sample.”
Dean blinked. “You what?”
“One of the ring sensors was not just reading ambient expression,” the scientist said. “It was actively harvesting patterned data from the collapse zone. Not enough for reproduction, not nearly, but enough to analyze the disruption signatures around the targeted gland event.”
Nero leaned forward. “You built a probe without mentioning it.”
The scientist looked at him. “Had I announced it, you would have interfered.”
“That is fair,” Nero said.
Sylvia, arms crossed tighter now, said, “Define probe.”
The scientist visibly appreciated the question. Definitions were safer than personalities. “A synthetic pheromone-response scaffold,” he said. “Not an emitter in the crude sense. More like a calibrated receiver with limited feedback capability. It can sample active output fields, record instability patterns, and, in carefully controlled settings, attempt to mimic one narrow expression profile long enough to test whether a disruption effect can be induced in vitro.”
Dean stared at him through the swelling and fatigue. “You’re telling me you built a fake gland with delusions of grandeur.”
The scientist inhaled once through his nose. “That is a vulgar description of an extremely sophisticated instrument.”
“Which means yes.”
“Yes,” the scientist said before he could stop himself.
Nero laughed aloud.
One of the physicians turned away, shoulders moving suspiciously.
The scientist looked pained and pressed on. “The point is that the probe may help us determine whether Dean’s effect is strictly biological or whether some component of it can be modeled, reproduced, or at least approximated under laboratory conditions.”
Arion’s voice cut in. “Approximated how?”
The scientist’s posture changed slightly at being addressed directly by him. Straighter. More cautious. “We don’t know yet,” he said. “That’s the honest answer. We can test whether the collapse signature requires Dean’s exact contact radius. We can test whether gland-target disruption can be induced by artificial feedback fields. We can test whether the bond-expression collapse was a byproduct of local pheromone structure failure or something unique to Dean’s biology interacting with Prince Arion’s.”
Dean’s mouth twisted. “That remains a revolting sentence.”
“Yes,” Sylvia said. “But keep going.”
The scientist nodded once, grateful for permission to continue existing. “If the probe reacts to the captured pattern at all, it would suggest there are structural components of Dean’s skill that are not entirely untranslatable. Not reproducible at field strength, probably not without a living carrier, but perhaps measurable. Perhaps emulatable in fragments.”
Dean went still in the bed.
“So,” he said slowly, “you’re not saying you can recreate it.”
“No.”
“You’re saying you can test whether anything in the world besides me can even begin to imitate part of it.”
“Yes.”
“That,” Dean said, “is a much better sentence than possibly.”
The scientist’s pride, injured but still functional, seemed to rally at that. “That is because it is a better question.”
Nero made a delighted sound. “Oh, he’s fighting back.”
Sylvia looked at the scientist with new respect. “Careful. Encouraging yourself around him is how you end up working nights.”
Dean narrowed his eyes at both of them. “I don’t appreciate the conspiratorial tone.”
“No one asked you to,” Sylvia said.
The scientist glanced down at the tablet, then back up. “There is, however, a practical limitation.”
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 252: Don’t go yet.
- Chapter 251: Would you be my chief?
- Chapter 250: The Sahan Enigma
- Chapter 249: The Architecture of Violence
- Chapter 248: Positions
- Chapter 247: West
- Chapter 246: I will follow the protocol.
- Chapter 245: Fear
- Chapter 244: Battlefield
- Chapter 243: Wind him down.
- Chapter 242: Not tonight
- Chapter 241: Keep your promise.
- Chapter 240: Menaces
- Chapter 239: Autumn
- Chapter 238: Family Arithmetic
- Chapter 237: Bright and Charming
- Chapter 236: Loved
- Chapter 235: Before the Guests
- Chapter 234: Before the Party
- Chapter 233: Forget about everything but me.
- Chapter 232: Lost pastries.
- Chapter 231: Acquire mate.
- Chapter 230: Say it again.
- Chapter 229: Dark thoughts circling.
- Chapter 228: The ring.
- Chapter 227: The Jeweler and the Case
- Chapter 226: The Month of Grace
- Chapter 225: Kiss for Dinner
- Chapter 224: Folding
- Chapter 223: Passed.
- Chapter 222: Threat.
- Chapter 221: Cruel
- Chapter 220: Keep it personal.
- Chapter 219: Memories.
- Chapter 218: Back to life.
- Chapter 217: Unbelievable
- Chapter 216: Greedy
- Chapter 215: The Pattern
- Chapter 214: Pleasure (2)
- Chapter 213: Pleasure (1)
- Chapter 212: Honesty
- Chapter 211: Cuddles
- Chapter 210: Right pay.
- Chapter 209: Out.
- Chapter 208: The true extent
- Chapter 207: Guard Dog
- Chapter 206: First step
- Chapter 205: Don’t blame me.
- Chapter 204: After the Silence
- Chapter 203: Alpha thing.
- Chapter 202: No more silence
- Chapter 201: Better.
- Chapter 200: No Room for Distance [Win-Win]
- Chapter 199: Finally clicking in place. [Win-Win]
- Chapter 198: Hurt
- Chapter 197: Palatine in Alamina
- Chapter 196: Informed Consent
- Chapter 195: Family Medicine
- Chapter 194: I should’ve stopped.
- Chapter 193: Probe
- Chapter 192: Medically offended
- Chapter 191: After the break
- Chapter 190: The limit.
- Chapter 189: No mercy, Arion?
- Chapter 188: Regrettable Architecture
- Chapter 187: Deal
- Chapter 186: Help
- Chapter 185: Summons
- Chapter 184: Pacing
- Chapter 183: Medical
- Chapter 182: What the Fuck Is Going On?
- Chapter 181: Late
- Chapter 180: Passed as Usual
- Chapter 179: Exam
- Chapter 178: Like him.
- Chapter 177: Pheromone Mutation Theory and Management (2)
- Chapter 176: Pheromone Mutation Theory and Management (1) [Win-Win]
- Chapter 175: Distance, Properly Managed [Win-Win]
- Chapter 174: Not an excuse for cruelty [Win-Win]
- Chapter 173: A son and father talk [Win-Win]
- Chapter 172: The Problem With Distance [Win-Win]
- Chapter 171: The first day passed.
- Chapter 170: Very few
- Chapter 169: Personal Assessment
- Chapter 168: Later
- Chapter 167: Ability
- Chapter 166: Romantic Deficiencies
- Chapter 165: Destructive hobby
- Chapter 164: Ask differently
- Chapter 163: Censorship
- Chapter 162: Departures
- Chapter 161: Summer Plans
- Chapter 160: Failed confession.
- Chapter 159: Break through
- Chapter 158: Dragged by duty
- Chapter 157: Witness Protection
- Chapter 156: My Part
- Chapter 155: Complicated matters
- Chapter 154: Luck
- Chapter 153: Eight
- Chapter 152: Evidence
- Chapter 151: Counterattack (2)
- Chapter 150: Counterattack (1)
- Chapter 149: Stupid
- Chapter 148: Civilian Packaging
- Chapter 147: Wings and fries
- Chapter 146: Residual Damage
- Chapter 145: Forbidden
- Chapter 144: Sigma
- Chapter 143: Frenzy
- Chapter 142: Stuck
- Chapter 141: Mark
- Chapter 140: Wet.
- Chapter 139: Containment [Win-Win]
- Chapter 138: Fix it. [Win-Win]
- Chapter 137: Which number?
- Chapter 136: Give me the phone
- Chapter 135: Away from humans
- Chapter 134: Networking
- Chapter 133: Don’t Panic
- Chapter 132: Don’t take the spotlight
- Chapter 131: To the gala at last
- Chapter 130: Trouble
- Chapter 129: The Engagement Gala
- Chapter 128: The Quiet After
- Chapter 127: No.
- Chapter 126: No Fear
- Chapter 125: Quiet
- Chapter 124: Jealousy
- Chapter 123: Old friends
- Chapter 122: The real chaos.
- Chapter 121: Weakness
- Chapter 120: Too many in the palace
- Chapter 119: Less than one
- Chapter 118: Greetings
- Chapter 117: Burgers and Royalty
- Chapter 116: Lunatics
- Chapter 115: Conscience [Win-Win]
- Chapter 114: Bite [Win-Win]
- Chapter 113: Tent pole [Win-Win]
- Chapter 112: Desperation [Win-Win]
- Chapter 111: Escalation [Win-Win]
- Chapter 110: Fair Game
- Chapter 109: The Crown Prince Joins the Chat
- Chapter 108: Group Chat Warfare
- Chapter 107: Serious talk
- Chapter 106: Powerful family
- Chapter 105: The last farewell
- Chapter 104: Decontamination
- Chapter 103: The Mask
- Chapter 102: At His Knees
- Chapter 101: Open the Windows
- Chapter 100: Barnacle is officially dating
- Chapter 99: Loss of control
- Chapter 98: Yours
- Chapter 97: Tactical Retreat
- Chapter 96: Secondhand
- Chapter 95: Sylvia
- Chapter 94: Inhibitors
- Chapter 93: Physician
- Chapter 92: Confuse the alpha
- Chapter 91: Confuse the omega
- Chapter 90: Pout
- Chapter 89: Barnacle
- Chapter 88: Sleep
- Chapter 87: Restraint
- Chapter 86: Saturation
- Chapter 85: Late.
- Chapter 84: Lies
- Chapter 83: Contamination
- Chapter 82: Helicopter
- Chapter 81: Borderline
- Chapter 80: Duty
- Chapter 79: The Friend
- Chapter 78: Lunch
- Chapter 77: Even asleep
- Chapter 76: Closer
- Chapter 75: Comfortable
- Chapter 74: Long life
- Chapter 73: The route to his wing
- Chapter 72: Priorities
- Chapter 71: Off the Leash
- Chapter 70: Stop masking
- Chapter 69: Something missing (2)
- Chapter 68: Something missing (1)
- Chapter 67: Tell Lucas.
- Chapter 66: No drama.
- Chapter 65: Arrival (2)
- Chapter 64: Arrival (1)
- Chapter 63: Mess
- Chapter 62: Relieved
- Chapter 61: Two
- Chapter 60: Eight
- Chapter 59: No drama.
- Chapter 58: Basic knowledge
- Chapter 57: Quiet
- Chapter 56: Dead
- Chapter 55: The Former Emperor
- Chapter 54: Ruin lives
- Chapter 53: Terms
- Chapter 52: Mutual
- Chapter 51: Before the engagement
- Chapter 50: He is ruining you.
- Chapter 49: Last moments (2)
- Chapter 48: Last moments (1)
- Chapter 47: Collar
- Chapter 46: Summoned
- Chapter 45: News
- Chapter 44: Change of plans
- Chapter 43: Heirloom
- Chapter 42: Contract (2)
- Chapter 41: Contract (1)
- Chapter 40: The face
- Chapter 39: For you
- Chapter 38: Everyone has a price
- Chapter 37: Apologies and laughs
- Chapter 36: Bold
- Chapter 35: Let’s begin. (1)
- Chapter 34: Revenge (3)
- Chapter 33: Revenge (2)
- Chapter 32: Revenge (1)
- Chapter 31: Stubborn
- Chapter 30: Red flags and arson
- Chapter 29: Damage Control
- Chapter 28: Secrets
- Chapter 27: Egos
- Chapter 26: Morning at the Fitzgeralt manor
- Chapter 25: Regret
- Chapter 24: Soft orders.
- Chapter 23: The side of him (2)
- Chapter 22: The side of him (1)
- Chapter 21: Obedient
- Chapter 20: Breakthrough
- Chapter 19: Kiss
- Chapter 18: Backlash
- Chapter 17: Terms and Witnesses
- Chapter 16: Apologies
- Chapter 15: Admit
- Chapter 14: Rage
- Chapter 13: Meeting (2)
- Chapter 12: Meeting (1)
- Chapter 11: Information
- Chapter 10: Tame the beast
- Chapter 9: Clear
- Chapter 8: The future
- Chapter 7: Borders
- Chapter 6: What it takes.
- Chapter 5: Idiot
- Chapter 4: My omega.
- Chapter 3: Again
- Chapter 2: Still in trouble
- Chapter 1: Hated by fate