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Claimed By The Possessive Twin Generals

Claimed By The Possessive Twin Generals

Author: : JESSICA KIRK
Genre: Sci-fi
I crash-landed on an alien planet where females are so rare they are treated as state property and biological remedies for violent male Alphas. When the medical scanner registered my human DNA as a "null" signal, I knew I was destined for the dissection table at a secret research institute. To survive, I faked severe amnesia and played the fragile, helpless girl to win the protection of the two powerful generals who found me. It worked too well. The Montgomery twins, Flynn and Enzo, became terrifyingly obsessed, turning my luxury villa into a heavily guarded fortress. But their possessiveness brought deadly consequences. Their aristocratic mother, furious that I was ruining their political marriage prospects with a royal princess, issued a chilling ultimatum. "If you will not remove this obstacle yourselves, then I will have it cleaned up." To protect me, the twins violently rebelled against their own blood, shattering their family legacy and bringing us to the brink of an all-out war. I watched them hide the shattered glass from their fight and lie to me with warm smiles, treating me like a delicate pet that needed constant shielding. But I wasn't just a prize to be fought over, nor a fragile doll waiting for men to solve my problems. I wiped the baking flour off my hands and looked at the darkening sky. If I wanted to survive the coming storm, I couldn't rely on their strength anymore. It was time to find my own.

Chapter 1 The Unknown Signal in the Ruins

UNKNOWN SIGNAL.

The red alert klaxon split the medical bay like a blade. On the holographic screen, four massive words pulsed - stark, impossible, terrifying.

The lead physician stumbled back, his face pale. "Majors... I don't understand. Her biological signal... it's not in any known database. Not registering as any known species - not even listed in the Imperial genetic archive. It's a null."

Flynn's world went red. "That's impossible!" He slammed his fist against the reinforced glass; spiderweb cracks raced across its surface. "Your equipment is faulty."

Enzo was more direct. He grabbed the doctor by the collar, lifting him off his feet. "Run it again. Backup system. Now."

Terrified, the physician scrambled to comply. The backup scanner swept over her again.

The result was the same.

UNKNOWN SIGNAL.

A dead silence fell over the room. She was a ghost. A phantom. A genetic null, in a universe where a biological signal was identity, worth, existence itself.

And yet - only hours ago, none of this had been real.

Hours earlier. Kytinn-7. The poison insect star.

The battlefield was a graveyard of scorched metal and silence.

"Anything?" Flynn's voice was a low rasp, cutting through the acrid smoke. His boot crunched on the charred skeleton of a fallen mech. The air was thick, a toxic soup of ozone and burnt flesh.

"Nothing," Enzo answered from behind. "The last of the beasts scattered an hour ago."

Enzo moved with a predator's grace his twin brother lacked, senses sharpened by their shared beast-form lineage. He tasted the air.

Then he stopped.

The shift was instantaneous. One moment, a soldier on patrol; the next, a hunter who had caught a scent. Faint, buried beneath the chemical stench of war - but there. His enhanced olfactory receptors flagged it immediately: an unidentified biosignature. The Imperial database had no match.

In a galaxy where every lifeform was cataloged down to its pheromone profile, "unknown" meant only one thing: either a weapon, or a trap.

"Unknown," Enzo breathed.

Flynn raised his rifle. "What is it?"

Enzo's golden eyes locked onto a deep impact crater fifty yards ahead. "Stay sharp."

They moved together - a perfectly synchronized unit of death. Back-to-back, they advanced. No sound but their own controlled breathing.

Flynn reached the crater first. He knelt, pushed aside a twisted sheet of durasteel. His breath caught.

Half-buried in rock and debris: an escape pod. Sleek, silver, foreign. The symbols on its hull belonged to no known star system, no registered civilization in the Empire's archives. No design known to the Aethelgard Empire or its enemies.

His heart pounded. Threat. Unknown.

The pod's damaged hatch hissed. With a violent pop, it blew outward, releasing a dense cloud of cryogenic gas. The freezing mist billowed, then dissipated, sucked away by the thin atmosphere.

Enzo's eyes pierced the thinning veil first.

His hands went slack. The rifle nearly slipped.

Inside the cramped pod, nestled amongst torn wiring and shattered panels - lay a woman.

She was unconscious, head tilted, a cascade of dark hair spilling over the cold metal floor. Her face was smudged with soot, but it couldn't hide the delicate curve of her cheekbones, the soft line of her mouth. Her lashes were dark and thick, resting against her skin like brushstrokes. Lips full and vivid as rose petals. Limbs long and graceful, even in repose. She was dressed in strange, thin fabric - utterly inadequate for this harsh world. She looked like a single radiant flower blooming in the endless night.

A female.

The thought struck Flynn like a physical blow. A female - here? In this galaxy, unmated females of childbearing age were the Empire's most guarded treasure - registered, tracked, protected by law. Every soldier carried a standing order: report any unregistered female to the Nexus immediately. This one had appeared. No registration. No history. No claim.

An unregistered female was not a rarity. She was a flashpoint. A target. If the authorities found her first, she wouldn't be processed - she'd be flagged, transferred to the Blackstone Institute for "identity retrieval." Flynn had seen those classified files. Enough to make any soldier's blood run cold.

They had to get her out. Now. Before anyone else knew she existed.

His comm unit buzzed - an unread message flagged "URGENT: FAMILY." He silenced it without looking. He already knew what it was about. The marriage obligation his mother had been pressing. That could wait. This - she - could not.

His gaze narrowed on her. His heart - a disciplined soldier's heart - stuttered. It hammered not with alarm, but with a primal, thunderous beat he had never felt before. A feeling he had never known, territorial and fierce, surged through him. Overwhelming. Painful.

Mine.

The thought was not his own. It was an instinct, a possessive, territorial command from the deepest part of his soul. He wanted to drag her from the wreckage, hide her from the universe. From his own brother's gaze.

Enzo moved first. He holstered his weapon, unclasped his heavy fur-lined cloak - still warm with his body heat - and slid down into the crater. He knelt beside her with impossible gentleness, wrapped the cloak around her, covering every inch of her. Shielding her from the cold - and from their hungry eyes.

Jealousy spiked through Flynn - pure, raw. He clenched his fists, forced the emotion down. Channeled it into action.

He activated his comm unit. "This is Major Flynn Montgomery. I am declaring a Code Omega. Scramble a medical rescue vessel to my coordinates. Highest priority. Now."

The dispatcher, accustomed to the calm, collected Major, stammered confirmation.

The wait was the longest ten minutes of their lives. Enzo prowled the crater's perimeter like a caged wolf, growling at every gust of wind. Flynn stood guard, a rigid shield, mind churning with strategies - how to keep her off the system's radar, how to buy time before the inevitable bureaucratic machine took notice.

When the medical frigate descended, its ramp barely touched the ground before Flynn was moving. He lifted her from the pod. She was impossibly light in his arms. Her head lolled against his chest; a soft, unconscious sigh escaped her lips.

Her scent - strange, clean, intoxicating - hit him like a physical blow. Rain on dry earth. Life in a universe of metal and ozone. His knees went weak.

A medical team rushed forward. "Major, let us take her."

"No." His voice was a blade. "I've got her."

He strode past them, up the ramp, refusing to let her go. Refusing to let anyone else touch her. The ramp sealed. The ship tore toward the heart of the Empire - Aethelgard Prime.

Now, they stood in the medical bay of Central Medical Center, staring at the same woman through reinforced glass. The same woman who had been so beautiful, so fragile in that crater. The same woman whose biological signal now refused every known database.

"Again," Enzo snarled, still gripping the doctor.

"I-the results are the same, Major. It's a null-"

A soft, steady beeping cut through the tension.

Beep... beep... beep...

Her heart. Steady. Strong.

Then - a flicker. Her eyelashes trembled. A murmur escaped her lips.

In an instant, the rage and denial vanished. Enzo dropped the doctor. They both shoved open the sterilized door and rushed to her side.

Her eyes fluttered open - a deep, uncertain brown, clouded with confusion. Her gaze drifted from Flynn's face to Enzo's. Lost.

Flynn held his breath. He forced his voice into a tone of impossible softness, a gentleness he didn't know he possessed.

"Are you in pain?"

Chapter 2 The Lie of Amnesia and the Territorial Dispute

"Where... where am I?"

The words came out as a dry, raspy whisper. Elara stared up at the ceiling, where a complex holographic star chart slowly rotated. The air smelled of antiseptic and something else, something metallic and strange. A steady, rhythmic beeping echoed in her ear, and she realized it was tracking her own frantic heartbeat. The numbers on the monitor beside her bed were climbing rapidly.

Panic, cold and sharp, seized her.

"It's alright. You're safe."

The voice was deep and steady. One of the men - the one with dark hair and eyes the color of a stormy sea - took half a step back. He held his hands up, palms open, a universal gesture of non-aggression. It was a calculated move, meant to soothe a frightened animal.

Elara tried to sit up, but a wave of dizziness washed over her. She fell back against the pillows, her head spinning. She spoke again, the words tumbling out in her native tongue, English. "What is this place? Who are you?"

A small, almost invisible device on the doctor's collar glowed faintly. The man with the golden hair and wilder eyes seemed to understand her perfectly. He stepped forward, his expression eager, almost boyish.

"You're in the Central Medical Center on Aethelgard Prime," he said, his voice a warm baritone. "I'm Enzo Montgomery. This is my brother, Flynn." He emphasized their surname, as if it should mean something to her.

Montgomery. Aethelgard. The words were alien, meaningless. But the insignia on their crisp, dark uniforms - a stylized predator's claw clutching a star - was not. It was extraterrestrial. Her mind, the mind of a scientist, a logician, raced, assembling the impossible facts. The strange pod. The alien language she was somehow understanding. She was no longer on Earth.

Then, another piece of the puzzle clicked into place. The doctor's panicked words from before she fully woke up. Unknown signal. A null.

They didn't know what she was. In a world defined by biological signals, she was an anomaly. A blank space. And science, in her experience, did not tolerate blank spaces. It dissected them. The Blackstone Institute - the name surfaced from half-heard whispers in the hall - was a tomb for blanks like her.

A new kind of fear, colder and more profound than the initial panic, settled in her bones. She was a specimen. A lab rat.

She had to act. Now.

She squeezed her eyes shut, a genuine tear of terror mixing with a calculated performance. She brought her hands to her temples, her fingers trembling. She was a scientist. She knew data. And right now, the only data that could save her was the story she told them.

"I... I don't remember," she choked out, her voice breaking with manufactured despair. "I can't remember anything. My name... how I got here... nothing."

She forced a sob, a ragged, painful sound.

Flynn's composure shattered. He saw her tears, and something inside his chest twisted violently. A surge of black, protective rage, so potent it made his vision swim, washed over him. He wanted to kill whatever had done this to her. The instinct that roared through him was older than thought - a territorial command to destroy anything that threatened what was his.

Enzo reacted with pure, physical fury. With a guttural roar, he slammed his fist into the wall, leaving a deep crater in the reinforced alloy. "I'll find them," he swore, his voice a low, vicious promise. "The bastards who did this to you. I'll hunt them down and tear them apart with my bare hands." The possessive growl in his chest was coded into his very DNA - a mate-guarding instinct that no empire, no law, could ever override.

The doctor, having finally picked himself up off the floor, scurried forward. "It's possible the patient sustained a significant cranial impact during the crash," he stammered, eager to provide a medical explanation. "It could have resulted in severe retrograde amnesia."

Elara seized the lifeline he'd thrown her. She curled into a ball, pulling the thin hospital blanket up to her chin, making herself as small and non-threatening as possible. She looked up at them through her tear-filled eyes, the very picture of a broken, helpless creature. She clutched the edge of the blanket, her knuckles turning white.

Flynn's gaze fixed on her pale, trembling fingers. The last of his military discipline, his iron-willed control, crumbled into dust. The protective instinct he'd felt in the crater was no longer an instinct. It was a mandate. A sacred duty.

"She can't stay here," the doctor added, looking nervously between the two explosive Alphas. "The trauma to her system is immense. She needs a calm, secure environment to recuperate. The hospital is too... public."

Flynn didn't hesitate. He turned, his decision absolute. "She's coming with me. My private apartment in the city center has the highest level of residential security available. Until we clarify her identity status, she can't be exposed to public scrutiny. "

"Are you insane?" Enzo shot back with a cold, mocking laugh. "Your apartment is a glass box in the sky, surrounded by a billion people. She needs privacy. Real security. My villa is off the grid - no administrative database links, no automatic reporting to the Nexus. She needs real protection, not a penthouse target."

Flynn's eyes went cold. "A fortress run by an impulsive hothead who can't even control his own temper? You don't know the first thing about caring for someone so... delicate."

The word hung in the air between them. Delicate.

Enzo's smile vanished. He stepped forward, closing the space between them until they were chest to chest. "And you do, brother? You, who treats everything like a military operation? She's not a soldier to be commanded."

The air in the room crackled. The latent power simmering beneath their skin erupted, a silent, crushing wave of pure Alpha dominance. They weren't brothers anymore. They were rivals. Two apex predators fighting over a priceless, one-of-a-kind prize.

The medical monitors beside Elara's bed began to flicker and short out under the immense pressure. The lights in the room dimmed. Elara felt the energy as a physical weight, pressing down on her chest, squeezing the air from her lungs. It was hard to breathe. Her body - already anomalous, already a null - was responding to them in ways she couldn't control, ways she couldn't yet name.

A small, weak cry of pain escaped her lips. She clutched at her chest, her face growing even paler.

The effect was instantaneous.

The suffocating pressure vanished. The twins recoiled from each other as if they'd been burned. They looked at her, then at each other, their faces a mixture of horror and self-loathing.

Flynn was at her side in an instant, dropping to one knee by the bed. His face was etched with guilt. "I'm sorry," he said, his voice thick with remorse. "Forgive me. I lost my head." He looked like a knight begging forgiveness from his queen.

Enzo, looking utterly wretched, grabbed a cup of water from a nearby tray. He held it to her lips, his large, calloused hands surprisingly steady. The gesture was so gentle, so at odds with his wild appearance, that it was almost comical. "Here," he mumbled, avoiding her eyes. "Drink."

Elara took a small sip, her mind racing. She lowered her gaze, hiding the sharp, analytical glint in her eyes. They were powerful, these men. Volatile. But she had found their weakness.

It was her.

She handed the cup back. "I just... I want to wash," she said, her voice barely a whisper. She gestured to the grime on her hands. "I feel so dirty. I just want to be clean." She looked from one to the other, a subtle plea in her eyes. "Please. I don't want to be a bother to either of you."

The unintentional note of distance in her voice struck them like a physical blow. They had fought, and in doing so, they had frightened her. They had pushed her away. The thought was unbearable.

Defeated, Flynn stood up. "Of course," he said immediately. He turned to the terrified doctor. "Prepare the medical bay's private washroom. She'll use the facilities here. She needs to rest, not be paraded across the city."

Enzo, not to be outdone, was already on his military-grade comms device, his thumb flying across the screen. "I'm ordering clothes. Toiletries. The softest fabrics. The best quality. They'll be delivered before she's done."

He ran out of the room without another word, a man on a mission.

Elara watched them go, a small, weary sigh escaping her lips. She had bought herself a few moments of peace. A few moments to think.

A nurse arrived with a wheelchair. As she was pushed down the sterile corridor, away from the intense battlefield of the twins' devotion, Elara's gaze lingered on a wall-mounted data terminal as they passed. Unlocked. Accessible.

She filed the information away.

Her life depended on this performance. The curtain had just gone up on the most important role she would ever play.

Chapter 3 Worldview in a Washroom

The wheelchair glided to a halt before a simple, white door. The medical bay's private washroom. It was a functional space, designed for hygiene and efficiency, not luxury.

Flynn stepped forward, his intention clear. He was going to lift her from the chair and carry her inside. But Enzo, returning with a sleek, metallic case, moved faster. He positioned his body between Flynn and the chair, a subtle, challenging block.

The air began to crackle again.

"I can walk," Elara said, her voice quiet but firm.

The tension broke. Both men froze, their hands hovering uselessly in the air. A flicker of hurt crossed their faces before being quickly suppressed. They stepped back, giving her space.

Enzo placed the case on the floor by the door. "New clothes are in here," he said, his voice low. "And other... things. If you need anything, just call. We'll be right outside."

Elara gave a small nod of thanks. Using the doorframe for support, she pulled herself to her feet. She stepped inside the washroom and, without looking back, pressed the control panel. The door slid shut with a decisive, satisfying click, locking her in and them out.

Outside, Flynn and Enzo exchanged a look. It was a look of shared frustration, raw possessiveness, and an unyielding determination that they would, one way or another, win her. Neither spoke. Neither needed to. The competition was already declared.

Inside, the moment the door sealed, Elara's facade crumbled. She leaned her back against the cold metal, her legs giving way. She slid to the floor, her breath coming in ragged gasps. The mask of the fragile, amnesiac girl fell away, and the scientist emerged. Her eyes, no longer wide and fearful, were sharp, focused, and icily calm.

She pushed herself to her feet and took in her surroundings. The washroom was small but functional - white tiles, a compact shower stall, and a simple sink. But it wasn't the fixtures that caught her attention. It was the medical data terminal embedded in the wall beside the mirror. A standard feature for monitoring patient vitals, it also provided access to the medical center's information network.

She walked towards it, her bare feet silent on the cool floor. She reached out a tentative finger and touched the screen.

The terminal shimmered to life. A glowing interface materialized, displaying the emblem of the Aethelgard Empire and a search bar. It was connected. Not as powerful as a dedicated data console, but it was access.

Her heart leaped. Information was power. And she was starving for it.

Her fingers, still trembling slightly, moved across the screen. She typed in the two words she had clung to: "Montgomery" and "Aethelgard".

The results flooded the screen. Images of Flynn and Enzo in full military dress, decorated with medals. News articles detailing their heroic exploits in the Outer Rim wars. They weren't just soldiers; they were decorated war heroes, Majors, and the heirs to one of the Empire's most powerful and ancient military dynasties.

A cold knot formed in her stomach. She was entangled with apex predators at the very top of the food chain.

She kept digging. "Biological Signal". "Female". "Mating Heat".

She read with the speed and precision of a researcher cramming for a final exam. The world's bizarre social structure began to crystallize. Females were not just rare; they were the biological key to evolution for the male population. Their very presence could soothe the violent, energy-induced "mating heat" that periodically drove males into a state of homicidal madness. They were revered, protected, and treated like priceless treasures.

This explained the twins' intense, almost pathological reactions to her. It wasn't just attraction. It was biological imperative.

She scrolled further. "Female Protection Bureau." The results appeared - a government agency with sweeping authority over unregistered females. Transport, registration, assignment. Her stomach tightened. She had a leash around her neck, and she didn't even know who held it yet.

Her hands trembled as she typed her final, most critical search query: "Genetic Null".

The results were sparse, heavily redacted. But she found what she was looking for. A handful of historical case files. Individuals whose biological signals were unreadable, unclassifiable. Each case ended the same way. The subject was transferred to a secure, off-world facility known only as the "Blackstone Institute." There were no records of anyone ever leaving. The subtext was clear: they were dissected, studied, and disposed of.

A chill, colder than the cryogenic gas from the pod, washed over her. She stared at the screen, and for a moment, the scientist in her wanted to understand - to know what made her different. But the survivor in her knew better. Some questions were luxuries she couldn't afford. The only question that mattered now was: how do I stay alive? Her lie was no longer just a strategy; it was the only thing standing between her and a vivisection table.

Protect the lie. Expand the lie. Become untouchable. The thought was cold, clear - a survival instinct honed sharper than any blade.

She knew she had to cover her tracks. Her fingers hovered over the terminal, her heart pounding. She'd never used a system like this before. The interface was intuitive but alien. She fumbled through the menu options, her first attempt pulling up a diagnostic screen instead of the settings. She bit her lip, forced herself to breathe, and tried again. After two more wrong taps, she finally found the system settings. Her hands were shaking badly now. She selected what she hoped was the right option - data management - and hesitated. What if clearing the history itself triggered an alert? She had no choice. She tapped through the confirmation prompts, her finger slipping once and nearly canceling the process. When the screen finally displayed "Local Cache Cleared," she let out a breath she didn't know she'd been holding. She wasn't sure if she'd gotten everything. But it was the best she could do.

Only then did she allow herself to move towards the shower. She turned the dial, and a stream of perfectly heated water cascaded from the ceiling. She stepped under the spray, the water washing away the grime of the crash, but it couldn't wash away the cold fear that had taken root in her soul.

She had to control the twins. She had to make them her protectors, her shield. She had to bind them to her so tightly that they would defend her against their own world.

Outside the door, Flynn leaned against the wall, his arms crossed. He could hear the faint sound of the water running. His throat felt tight, his jaw clenched. He imagined the water sluicing over her pale skin, and a possessive heat coiled low in his gut. He closed his eyes, trying to etch the sound into memory. It was irrational. It was primal. He didn't care.

Enzo stood a few feet away, his eyes closed. He was trying to catch her scent through the thick door, but all he could smell was the sterile air of the hospital. It was maddening. His fingers twitched at his sides - the urge to simply open the door, to see her, to ensure she was real, was almost overwhelming. He forced his hands still.

Twenty minutes passed. The water shut off. Another ten minutes of silence. Flynn checked his chronometer for the third time, a muscle ticking in his jaw. Enzo paced the corridor like a caged animal, his boots making soft, impatient sounds on the polished floor.

"She's taking her time," Enzo muttered.

"She's recovering," Flynn replied, his voice clipped. "Let her be."

The brewing tension was cut short by the soft hiss of the door's lock disengaging.

They both snapped to attention, straightening their uniforms, their expressions shifting from hostile to eagerly expectant in a fraction of a second.

The door slid open.

A cloud of warm, steamy air wafted out, carrying her scent. And then she appeared.

She was wearing the clothes Enzo had ordered - a standard-issue, black military-style tunic and pants. But on her, they were anything but standard. The tunic was far too large, the wide collar dipping low to reveal the delicate, snow-white curve of her collarbone. The sleeves were rolled up, showing slender wrists. The pants were so long she had to cuff them multiple times, exposing slim, bare ankles. Her dark hair was damp, clinging to her neck and cheeks.

She looked small. Lost. And devastatingly beautiful.

Flynn's breath caught in his throat. His carefully constructed walls of self-control threatened to turn to rubble.

Enzo's heart hammered against his ribs. He stared at the droplets of water clinging to her eyelashes, his mouth suddenly dry.

Elara paused in the doorway, pretending not to notice the way their gazes devoured her. She tilted her head, a picture of innocence, and offered them a small, shy smile that didn't reach her calculating eyes.

"So," she asked, her voice soft and sweet. "Where do we go now?"

The question hung in the air - a test, a provocation, a beginning. Flynn and Enzo looked at each other, then back at her. In that moment, neither of them realized that they had already lost. The real question wasn't where she would go. It was how far they would follow.

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