The Librarian and Her Alphas: Chapter 2
The Librarian and Her Alphas: An Omegaverse Reverse Harem Romance
Waiting for my next kill has never felt so exciting.
Thunder rolls overhead, and rain falls in heavy sheets, drenching me to the bone as I stand outside the IT Solutions building. Itâs a miserable night, but my anger keeps me focused, my mind occupied with thoughts of killing him tonight.
The man, a waste of space, isnât innocent at all, and now itâs time to put an end to him. Water streams from my black hair, dripping onto my face and obscuring my vision, but it doesnât bother me.
I can still see the entrance to the building.
âWe finally tracked him down,â Max says, standing next to me, his bright red hair visible in the rain. âTook us long enough.â
Gunnar grunts in agreement, his steel-gray eyes gazing intently at the building. âNow that we know itâs him, heâs not getting away.â
My blood boils every time I think about the man who works inside these wallsâa child abuser, the lowest form of scum. My pack and I have been surveilling him for weeks, and tonight, weâll make sure he pays for his crimes.
A civilian had taken a risk and contacted us, hoping we could do what the police had so far failed to do.
âThe man youâre after,â he had whispered over the phone earlier in the day, âheâs not just another thug. Heâs running a trafficking operation thatâs tearing the city apart. Children have gone missing, and I can send you a photo of him.â
His voice quivered with fear and angerâhe knew what was at stake if this man was allowed to roam the streets.
My pack and I are ready for him. This is our livelihood, but I do it mostly for myself.
A roll of thunder sounds overhead, snapping me back to reality. I take a deep breath and steel myself for what is to come.
âCanât afford to make any mistakes,â I say. âWe need to confirm itâs him and that he matches the picture we have. I donât want anyone else to suffer because of this piece of shit.â
The human had provided us with valuable information, but weâve also hijacked the townâs police system, cross-referencing records to ensure the people weâre after are indeed criminals. Our pack only hunts those who deserve it, and we need to be sure weâre pursuing the correct targets.
âDonât worry, weâve double-checked everything, Damon. This guyâs got a record as long as my arm,â Max assures me.
âLetâs just hope he gets out soon,â Gunnar mutters, his gaze fixed on the entrance. âI think thatâs him.â
âOh yes, thatâs him,â I growl, fury coursing through my veins, heating my blood when I see him leaving the building. The stories Iâve read about this guy sicken me to the core. I clench my fists at my sides, my nails digging into my palms.
âHere he comes,â Gunnar murmurs, his voice low as Max stiffens beside me.
We all focus on our target. Heâs tall, broad-shouldered, moving with a confidence that sets my teeth on edge.
Thomas.
His name is seared into my memory from endless nights of research, a dark stain on my conscience that wonât be removed until justice is served.
I know without a doubt that itâs him.
âThatâs him. He looks exactly like his picture,â I say, my voice barely audible over the rain. My packmates nod, their faces set with grim determination.
Thomas walks toward his car, glancing around as if sensing somethingâs off. We still have the element of surprise, for now. I nod as he reaches for the door handle, and Gunnar moves like a shadow, ambushing him from behind. He clamps a hand over Thomasâs mouthâ â
âand Thomas explodes.
He slams Gunnar backward with brute strength, his eyes flashing amber, claws extending.
âFucking mutts,â he snarls, his voice a guttural growl that confirms what we feared: heâs not human. Heâs a rogue alpha.
Max lunges, catching Thomasâs arm before he can shift completely, but Thomas twists violently, sending Max crashing into a parked car. Metal crunches.
I donât hesitate.
I charge in and ram him into the building wall, snarling in his face. We grapple, claws slashing, our strength evenly matched in the downpour.
âYou came for me? You have no idea what youâre dealing with,â he spits, fangs bared.
âI know exactly what you are,â I snarl, ramming my knee into his gut. âAnd Iâve killed stronger.â
With Gunnar back in the fight and Max shaking it off, we overpower himâbarely. The three of us take him down hard, using every ounce of our combined strength to keep him pinned.
âYouâre making a huge mistake,â Thomas pants, his eyes wild.
âMess with someone your own size,â I snap. âYouâre the lowest scum on the planet preying on innocent children.â
We gag him, bind his hands in silver cuffs we brought for this exact reason, and haul him into the backseat.
âYou canât do this!â he growls, thrashing like a wild animal.
âShut him up,â I bark.
Gunnar shoves a rag into his mouth, and I gun the engine.
The drive to the quarry is a tense blur. Thomas doesnât stop moving, straining against his restraints with a strength that would tear a humanâs limbs out of their sockets.
âCareful,â Max mutters. âHeâs got fight in him.â
âLet him,â I say. âI want to rip it out of him when we shift.â
The rain intensifies as we reach the woods. Itâs the perfect place to finish this.
We kill the engine, and I bark, âLetâs get this done.â
We strip and shift, our massive wolf forms towering in the shadows. Thomas doesnât flinchâhe smirks.
Then he shifts.
A monstrous silver wolf now stands before usâlarger than we expected, scarred and wild-eyed.
He bolts into the woods.
âGo,â I growl, launching after him.
Thomas is fast, agile, and experienced. Every now and then, we catch his scent, then it vanishes again, lost in the rain. But heâs bleeding from earlier, and thatâs what gives him away.
Gunnar howls. Heâs spotted him.
We converge, fangs bared, muscles surging with power. I catch sight of Thomas ducking under a branch, but Iâm faster. I leap, slam him to the ground, and my teeth sink into his neck.
He fights like hell.
His jaws snap at me, claws raking my side, but Max and Gunnar dive in too. We tear through fur and flesh until thereâs nothing left of him but blood and broken pieces.
Together, we tear the abuser apart, limbs reduced to oblivion. When the attack is over, Thomasâs lifeless body lies in pieces before us, and the red haze covering my vision begins to disappear as my heartbeat returns to normal.
Justice has been served.
We shift back into our alpha forms, but a long, eerie siren pierces the air, stopping us from congratulating each other on a job well done. We freeze, recognizing the sound as a tornado warning.
Shit.
âGuys, we need to find shelter now,â I growl through clenched teeth.
Iâm covered in blood, and Max and Gunnar are no better off, but we wonât survive out in the storm. The rain seems to fall harder, washing some blood off my skin. I can think about what weâve done later, but we need to get somewhere safe right now.
âAgreed,â Gunnar says, scanning the area. âWe canât stay out here.â
âLetâs grab our clothes and get moving,â Max suggests, urgency lacing his voice. We wash ourselves haphazardly in the rain, trying to clean as much blood off our skin as possible before grabbing the spare change of clothes from the car and changing into them.
âArenât we going to get rid of the body?â Gunnar asks.
âI donât give a fuck about that,â I reply darkly. No one would ever track us down, and it looked like a wild animal had gotten to Thomas.
The storm is picking up, the wind whipping around and causing the trees to sway wildly. It wonât be long before the tornado arrives. I glance at the sky and hurriedly gesture to the car, pulling open the driverâs side door.
âEveryone in,â I order, climbing back behind the wheel.
âSure thing,â Gunnar replies as he and Max quickly pile into the car to prevent their clean clothes from getting soaked. The engine roars to life, and I push my foot on the accelerator, getting us moving.
We drive through the darkened forest and onto the main road just outside the quarry in search of refuge. The storm is worsening, and at this point, any building with a basement will doâeven a shopping mall.
Itâs almost impossible to see anything beyond the windshield.
As we head back into town, the mile markers blur, and I squint, trying to make out landmarks along the road. My pulse races, a mixture of adrenaline and anxiety coursing through my veins from our recent execution and the storm. Itâs almost poetic justice that we killed Thomas on a night like tonight.
The bastard didnât deserve any better.
âHey, thereâs a building with a light on over there,â Max points out, his voice snapping me from my thoughts. âMaybe we can wait out this storm there.â
âAh, the library,â Gunnar says slowly, his tone tinged with excitement. âI met the librarian earlier today. Sheâs⦠interesting, to put it mildly.â
âOh really?â Max smirks, raising an eyebrow at Gunnar. âSo you read books now?â
âI guess so,â Gunnar says, lost in thought. I can tell his mind is elsewhere as he thinks about this mysterious woman. âThereâs just something different about her, all right?â
âLike what?â I ask, intrigued despite myself.
âWhen our hands touched, I felt a spark. It was strange, but it felt like fate,â says Gunnar after hesitating.
Iâm surprised by Gunnarâheâs usually the most serious of us, so for him to say something like that must mean the experience jarred him.
I scoff at the idea but remain silent. Mating with a human would be impossible, especially for our pack.
We havenât had a mate in years, and itâs unlikely one would just walk into our lives like that. But as the rain continues to pelt down and the wind roars, rocking the car from side to side, I shove my skepticism aside. We need shelter, and we need to find it now.
The tornado is fast approaching.
âFine, weâll go there,â I say, turning toward the library. Itâs a short drive, and soon enough, Iâm approaching the building. I cut the engine, and we hurried out of the car, slamming the doors behind us as we sprinted toward the front door.
I bang on the door again, ready to break it down and barge inside, when the door swings open to reveal a small, pretty woman in a blue dress.
Her eyes widen in shock at the sight of us, and she moves to close the door immediately upon seeing us.
âWait!â I call out, quickly stopping the door with my boot.
As soon as I see her face, Iâm captivated by this woman, even more so than Gunnarâs story had led me to believe.