Dominant alphas and dominant omegas form biological bonds that remain permanent for as long as both partners are alive. These bonds cannot be dissolved or replaced while both parties live. If a bonded partner dies, the surviving dominant alpha or dominant omega can eventually form a new bond. While rare and psychologically complex, it is biologically possible.
Dominant omegas are significantly rarer than dominant alphas. Because of this imbalance, a single dominant omega may be required to stabilize multiple dominant alphas. Under standard circumstances, the functional limit is two alphas; in rare, extreme cases, three. Although biologically viable, this places continuous strain on the omega due to the constant pheromonal regulation of multiple instinct systems.
When multiple bonds exist, legal and political control mechanisms are put in place. Dominant omegas assigned to stabilize several dominant alphas are fitted with state-authorized collars. These cannot be removed safely by the omega or their bonded partners. The collar defines bond hierarchy, prevents violent disputes, and stops dominant alphas from attempting to forcibly monopolize the omega.
Exclusive one-to-one bonds are rare and typically reserved for individuals with the highest global authority, like rulers, heads of state, grand dukes, or comparable power holders. Securing exclusive stability is recognized as a strategic geopolitical advantage.
Dominant omegas can conceive and carry children without forming a bond. This biological independence increases their strategic importance. As such, legal protection is severe. Any dominant alpha who mistreats, endangers, or abuses a dominant omega risks maximum penalty, including execution. The reasoning is simple: destabilizing a dominant omega threatens regional or even international stability via their dominant alpha partner or partners.
However, bonds and reproductive considerations are not exclusively national concerns. Dominant alphas and dominant omegas fall under international monitoring systems. Their existence, health, bond status, and movement are registered globally. Nations are not permitted to hoard dominants freely. Through negotiated treaties and global oversight, dominant omegas and dominant alphas are distributed as evenly as possible across regions to maintain balanced global stability and prevent catastrophic concentration of power or risk in a single state.
This system is controversial. Officially, it is described as coordinated security management. Unofficially, many acknowledge it functions closer to an international custody and allocation program, treating dominant individuals as protected but regulated assets.
In short, bonds are legally enforced, politically negotiated, and internationally monitored mechanisms designed to keep nations and the world stable.
