Chapter 414: His Focus
Chapter 414 of "Mated To The Crippled Alpha" starts revealing surprises: The frames of his glasses gleamed under the light, their edges catching a cold brilliance.... Read on!
The frames of his glasses gleamed under the light, their edges catching a cold brilliance. Behind them, his eyes held a weighty depth calm yet piercing, impossible to decipher. When our gazes locked, a shiver ran through me. My defenses, carefully built and painstakingly maintained, fell apart in an instant.There was no hiding from him. He saw through everything.
"You weaseled that answer out of me."
"I thought we were friends."
His expression barely shifted, yet there was a flicker of something that looked like disappointment. "In half a year," he began, his tone heavier now, "not once did you reach out. Not one message, not a single call either." I glanced toward the door and realized he had closed it quietly behind him, leaving me no way out.
"When did you figure it out?" I asked, my voice quieter than I intended.
"Elena," he said, almost incredulous, "I was your therapist for years. Did you honestly believe you could pull this off without me noticing? Why do you think I went along with exposing Anna as a fraud? Do you think I have nothing better to do?"
"Then why pretend not to recognize me?" I shot back, though my voice lacked conviction.
"At first, I thought it was too far-fetched to be real," he admitted, his tone measured. "I couldnât believe it. The idea was absurd. But the way you spoke, the way you moved it all reminded me of you. Still, it wasnât enough. So I started looking deeper. Over the last six months, Iâve traveled, gathered information, and connected the dots. Turns out, this sort of thing souls switching bodies is rare, but not unheard of."
I froze, caught between disbelief and resignation. A weak laugh slipped out despite myself. Leave it to Sergio to turn this into a full-blown investigation. I wouldnât have been surprised if he had charts, graphs, maybe even a presentation to back it all up.
"I dug into Rileyâs history," he continued, his voice sharp yet deliberate. "Then I watched you at the competition. The shifts in your emotions, the way you reacted it confirmed what I already suspected. The soul in that body doesnât belong there. But hereâs what really stings." He paused, letting the silence stretch. "Tell me, Elena, if your friend hadnât needed therapy, would you have come back at all?"
"I " The words caught in my throat. I didnât know what to say.
Back when the Morrigans family and Julian had pushed me to the brink, Sergio had been my anchor. He helped me piece myself back together, one session at a time. He even stayed while I painted, offering quiet encouragement when I couldnât find my way. Most of those works were still with him, though I hadnât thought about them in years. We were friends, yes but the kind whose closeness fades over time, not the ones youâd share every secret with. After my rebirth, every step had been a calculated risk. Trusting anyone, even someone like Sergio, felt reckless. And announcing my return? Impossible.
He stood and moved closer, his footsteps deliberate. His gaze held a weight I hadnât seen before, as though I had crossed some invisible line. There was no anger in his eyes only something heavier, something personal.
"Or maybe," he said, his voice low, almost a whisper, "I donât even qualify as a friend anymore. Is that it?"
"No," I blurted. "Itâs not like that. Iâve just been... busy." The excuse sounded feeble even to me.
He stopped in front of me, looking down with an intensity that made my skin prickle. A faint, icy smile curled his lips cutting and sharp. "Busy," he echoed. "Thatâs your answer?"
This wasnât the Sergio I remembered. He had always been composed and steady, a man of reason. But standing before me now, he seemed different. The change wasnât loud or obvious it was quiet, but undeniable. And it unsettled me in a way I couldnât fully explain.
I clutched the pillow as if it might shield me. "Iâve been busy, okay? And think about it my death wasnât exactly a quiet affair. If anyone finds out Iâm alive, I might not stay that way for long."
Sergioâs gaze didnât waver. His sharp eyes seemed to cut through my words, searching for cracks, for anything that didnât hold true. But this time, I wasnât lying. The hard set of his face softened, and for a moment, he looked like the Sergio I remembered.
"Elena," he said, his voice even, "are we still friends?"
"Of course," I answered without hesitation. "I havenât forgotten everything you did for me. Back then, you gave me the strength to keep going."
Guilt flickered across his expression, casting a shadow over his face. "But I couldnât save you in the end. I failed you. Iâm sorry."
"Donât," I said, shaking my head. "What happened wasnât your fault. Donât blame yourself."
Before he could respond, the door swung open. Whitney stood in the doorway, her face calm but her presence commanding. "Dr. Zimmer," she said, her voice steady, "your methods donât seem to be working."
Sergio adjusted his glasses, his emotions slipping behind a mask of professionalism. "Then weâll need to try something else."
Whitneyâs eyes darted between us before settling on me. "Maybe if she stays with me, Iâll feel more comfortable."
I almost laughed at the absurdity. Did she honestly think Sergio would hurt me? It felt more like an excuse to keep me under her watchful eye. For someone who was supposed to be my little sister, she had a way of making me feel like the reckless one.
Sergio didnât argue. He motioned for us to follow him into the treatment room.
I knew his methods well. When I had sought his help, I was fully aware of my struggles and ready to face them. Whitney was a different story. She refused to acknowledge she needed help and fought every step of the way. When Sergio attempted to use hypnosis, it became a clash of wills. She didnât just resist she pushed back, trying to dismantle his techniques and turn them against him.
This wasnât therapy.
It was a duel.
Whitney might appear delicate, but her will was forged from something unyielding a lifetime of surviving things most people never faced. Every instinct in her had been sharpened into a weapon, and she didnât know how to set it down.
Watching their silent standoff, I decided to intervene. "Maybe we should grab some lunch and continue later?" I suggested. After all, we were mostly here for show, killing time more than anything.
Sergio straightened and nodded. "Iâll arrange it. Ms. Morrigan, do you have a preference?"
"Vegetarian," she replied without hesitation.
"Noted. Take a moment to relax." He left without another word.
The moment the door clicked shut, Whitney moved quickly, her eyes scanning the room. Once she was satisfied there were no cameras, she leaned closer and lowered her voice. "You shouldnât share so much about yourself. The more people know, the more power they have over you. That doctor isnât right his focus isnât on me. Itâs on you."
"Yes, he figured it out. He knows who I am," I said, keeping my voice steady, though unease crept beneath the surface.
Whitneyâs eyes widened. "Then what do we "
"Relax," I cut in, leaning forward slightly. "Iâve known him for years. The bed youâre lying on? Iâve been there plenty of times. If he wanted to harm me, heâd have done it long ago. Heâs helped me more than once."
She pressed her fingers to her temples, exhaling slowly. "Sorry. Maybe I overreacted. Itâs just... I donât trust people the way you do."
"I understand," I said, softening my tone. "Look, if youâre not comfortable with therapy, just treat this as downtime. A chance to breathe."
"Alright," she said quietly, though her eyes remained fixed on mine. "But I canât shake the feeling somethingâs off about the way he looks at you. I hope Iâm wrong."
"Itâs probably nothing more than seeing an old friend again," I said with a small shrug, trying to let the thought go.
After lunch, we lingered for a while before leaving. On our way home, we swung by the hospital to check on Whitneyâs cold. The doctor ran a few quick tests and handed her prescriptions for antibiotics and cold medicine. It seemed routine, but Whitneyâs guarded expression never wavered.
As we stepped out, Luther appeared with a calm demeanor that felt anything but coincidental. "Ms. Morrigan, what a coincidence. Everything alright?"
"Just a cold," Whitney replied, her tone clipped and her face unreadable. She gave him a short, dismissive answer before turning away.
I glanced over my shoulder as we walked off Luther was still standing there, his gaze locked on Whitneyâs retreating figure.
"Are you absolutely sure youâve never seen him before in the organization?" I asked.
Whitney shook her head without hesitation. "I donât remember him. But I was injured once. There are things Iâve forgotten. Either way, anyone from that place isnât worth remembering."
"Then let it go," I said. "No point dwelling on it."
We got into the car, the dayâs weight pressing down on both of us. At a red light, a sleek black Porsche Cayenne sped past, its windows tinted just enough to hide most of the driverâs face but not all of it.
I caught a glimpse. Sergio was behind the wheel, heading down the road that led only to the hospital.
"Is he hurt?" I murmured, my thoughts swirling as the car disappeared from view.