登入{Ragna’s POV}
For a moment, I thought about stepping inside.
Not to shout. Not to cry. Not even to ask questions.
Just… to stand there and let them see me. Let him see what he’d chosen… and let her see what she’d taken.
She had mentioned earlier that she had seen me with my lowbond; Darian, outside the Arena and I had missed the warning label in that. Clueless and dumb me hadn’t known that that was the time this cruel attempt had been born.
My chest tightened now at the thought, my fingers curling slowly into my palms as something sharp pressed up against my ribs— anger, pain, or something uglier that didn’t have a clean name.
Inside, Selene laughed, soft and comfortable like nothing at all was wrong with her actions.
With that, my breath grew heavy, and for one reckless second, I almost moved.
Almost.
Then I exhaled slowly and stepped back… because there were ways to handle things like this. And I wasn’t about to be the girl who fought over a man.
Not even one I cherished.
Not even now.
And so I turned and walked away and didn’t look back.
Halfway down the corridor, my vision blurred just enough to be inconvenient, but I lifted the back of my hand to my eye, wiping quickly before anything could fall.
No.
Not here.
Not for him.
**
The walk back felt longer than it should have.
My ribs ached. My shoulder burned and my bloodied nose throbbed in quiet protest with every step I took, but none of it compared to the dull, steady pressure sitting in my chest.
That one stayed.
Persistent and unimpressed with distraction.
By the time I reached my kennel, I was exhausted in a way that had nothing to do with the fight.
A shallow bowl sat near the bars.
Dinner… if that was what we were calling it.
I crouched slightly, eyeing the contents. It looked like someone had boiled disappointment, skimmed hope off the top, and served what remained with milky water.
I dipped two fingers in it, tasted.
Paused.
“…right,” I muttered.
Apparently survival here came with strong tolerance and whatever this was.
I ate it anyway because hunger, unlike pride, didn’t negotiate. After that, sleep came eventually but not gently.
It just took me.
**
Morning came and it didn’t fix anything.
It just made it easier to stand.
My body still ached, my ribs especially reminding me of yesterday’s poor decisions, but the sharpest edges had dulled into something manageable.
Less pain. More memory; which, in its own way, was worse.
The Bone Yard was already alive when we arrived for the apparent morning training.
Sand stretched wide beneath our feet, and Iron Wardens stood at intervals around the space, arms crossed, expressions carved from experience and disinterest.
It wasn’t chaos this time around. This was structure.
Some fighters were moving in controlled pairs now, sparring under watchful eyes instead of tearing into each other unchecked. Blows landed and bodies hit the ground while instructions were barked.
Order.
Brutal.
Efficient.
“Today’s Arena matches,” one of the Wardens called, her voice cutting cleanly through the noise, “are not for fresh bloods.”
She looked tougher; leader-like, and murmurs rippled faintly at her words now.
“Older bloods only.”
A pause.
Then… “For which if your opponent yields, you stop. If they don’t…”
She made a head gesture and and the implication settled easily.
Kill.
Or be killed.
“And if they later surrender,” another Warden added with a dry sort of contempt, “they live.”
A beat.
“They just won’t be worth much after.”
Shame… worse than death, in a place like this.
As more instructions kept coming, I scanned the Yard without thinking. And then I saw her.
Selene.
She stood near the far edge, leaning slightly toward another fighter while whispering, her posture relaxed, her expression easy— like yesterday had been nothing more than a passing inconvenience.
She smiled now at something the girl said. Actually smiled; genuine and kind.
My fists clenched without my conscious intention and with that, something hot began to build in my chest.
“I challenge.”
The word cut through the Yard and through my thoughts, bringing me back to reality now.
I saw one of the Older bloods step forward, pointing across the space.
“You.”
Her target stepped out immediately, cracking her neck once, eyes already sharpening.
“I was hoping you would.”
“Finally, you’ve grown a liver!”
A ripple of anticipation spread along with wild grunts and then another voice followed.
Another challenge.
“I want to end you.”
Then another.
“You owe me blood, Becca!”
The energy shifted quickly— conversation dissolving into something heavier and raw. More grunts and aggression poured out now.
This wasn’t a training yard anymore.
This was death breeder ground, one where the Older blood reveled in and viscously signed the death warrant of one another.
It was chaotic and brutish in every way and in the peak of it, I stepped forward…
It took a second for anyone to notice.
And another for them to understand.
And so silence poured in as many heads turned and brows furrowed. There was hostility and disapproval at once but I wasn’t fazed by that.
“I want to challenge someone.” I announced…
…
There was nothing for a moment.
Then a short laugh from somewhere to my left sounded before more joined.
It soon became a sea of laughter and with that, the Iron Warden closest to me glanced at me, unimpressed.
“Step aside, fingerling. Older bloods own the sand today,” she said flatly and I ignored the fact that she had now officially made fingerling my nickname.
“I said,” I repeated, “I want to challenge someone.” I spoke even louder
That got attention.
The Head Warden turned to me this time, her gaze settling on me with something colder than irritation.
“Did you lose your hearing?” She said slowly, her voice deep, “Today is not for weaklings trying to impress themselves. So return to your cradle.”
Another wild wave of snickers followed.. but I ignored them.
“I mean no disrespect,” I said, holding her gaze, “but I can’t step aside because someone here crossed a line last night.”
A ripple of confusion and curiosity rose now, chatters spreading
Now they were listening.
“She didn’t know how to keep her hands to herself,” I continued, my voice steady.
“So she took something that belonged to me.”
A pause.
“Well,” I added lightly, “not anymore. He downgraded himself yesterday already.”
That earned a few laughs.
Good.
Let them laugh.
I clenched my fists.
Let them enjoy it. I need them to.
I raised my hand and pointed now.
“Her.”
A moment passed and then every head turned.
Meanwhile, Selene straightened slowly and then stepped forward smirking.
Of course she did.
I faced her. “You’ve probably figured out that I saw you two, so what do you have to say?” I asked her directly and she stared with amusement, studying me like this was interesting and not serious.
“Your lowbond?” she said, her voice smooth. “He wasn’t satisfied.”
A few murmurs.
She smirked. “So I helped.”
There it was.
I felt anger build up so suddenly at that but then I curbed it. For now.
“That was kind of you.” I said softly.
Her smile widened.
“Of course. Someone had to help you fix things.”
“Right. Then I’ll return the favor by fixing you,” I said, my voice sharpening just enough. “I challenge you.”
The Yard reacted.
Louder now.
Amusement. Disbelief. Interest— a fresh Blood challenging an Older blood.
Selene’s gaze flicked over me once now, assessing.
“Be mindful of your words. “I won’t hold back for you.” She said gently.
Then, quieter, “Fingerling.” She added with a smirk and the word landed…
… and burned.
“My choice is made,” I said. “Unless you are the fingerling and are scared of a little beating.”
That broke the tension as laughter came, real this time.
Selene’s eyes flashed for a moment. Then she smiled.
“Fine,” she said. “I accept.”
Good.
I let my anger build then.
{Ragna’s POV}Recognition spread faster than fire.One person pointed. Another looked. A third stopped walking altogether, and before long voices were passing my description from mouth to mouth until I was no longer standing in the middle of a street.I was standing inside a rumor that had suddenly remembered it possessed a face.“The Arena girl.”“The demonic female.”“The one who survived the Bloody Gnai.”“The one that killed the King’s Beast.”People weren’t simply looking anymore.They were gathering.Some edged closer out of curiosity while others kept their distance, their fear obvious enough that I briefly wondered whether they expected me to start breathing fire.I looked at Milena.“Do you know what we do now?”Her eyes darted nervously between the growing crowd.“…What?”I drew one slow breath.“Now we run.”Then I ran.The crowd erupted behind us.“Catch her!”“Don’t let her escape!”“Seize the demon!”“Someone call the guards!”Milena hesitated for only a heartbeat before
{Ragna’s POV}For one spectacularly stupid moment, neither of us moved.The shattered statue lay scattered across the polished floor while the first guard remained sprawled among the rubble. The second guard hung limply against me, his weight threatening to pull us both to the ground, and from somewhere beyond the intersecting corridors came the unmistakable sound of boots striking stone.Not walking.Running.“…I’ll kill myself here,” Milena whispered, growing out her claws. “I genuinely think this is where I—”I smacked the back of her head.She yelped.“Pull yourself together.”Rubbing the back of her head with an injured expression, she glared at me.“You keep doing that.”“I’ll keep doing it if you keep announcing your death before anyone else has the opportunity.”Another burst of footsteps echoed toward us.Closer.I looked once at the unconscious guard leaning against me, then at the one buried beneath broken marble. My gaze swept across the corridor in search of anything usef
{Ragna’s POV}The dungeon erupted behind us.Voices chased us through the corridors long before the guards ever could.“You damned females!”“Get us out too!”“You can’t just leave us here!”“Come back!”The shouting dissolved into curses, pleading, threats, and laughter until it became impossible to distinguish one voice from another. Somewhere in the middle of it all, a familiar male voice continued roaring louder than everyone else.The guard.The one currently tied rather securely to the bars of our former cell.Milena hurried beside me, still looking as though her mind had failed to catch up with her feet.“You tied him to the bars.”We rounded another corner, neither sprinting nor slowing, moving as quickly as caution allowed.“You actually tied him to the bars.”She looked at me in open disbelief.“How did you—”She broke off as we reached an intersection leading toward the upper passages. Raising a hand, I motioned for her to stop, and we both flattened ourselves against the c
{Ragna’s POV}The guard stopped.Slowly, he turned toward me, his face tightening with something that looked suspiciously like wounded pride.“Do you think I’m afraid of you?”“No.”I met his glare without moving. “I think you’re foolish.”The words landed exactly where I wanted them to.His jaw clenched.“You stand there talking trash because you think you’ve accomplished something,” he spat. “In a few hours they’ll drag you out of this dungeon, slaughter you in front of the Kingdom, and leave your worthless body for everyone to see!”I watched him while he spoke. Not because I particularly cared about his opinion.Because he was closer now.Not close enough though.“You hear me?” he snapped.“I hear you.”“Then perhaps reality is finally settling in.”“I doubt it.”His nostrils flared.“You’re the miserable one here!”“I’d still rather be me.”That seemed to confuse him more than anger him.“What?”“I’d rather die,” I said with a shrug, “than spend my life standing in the same corri
{Ragna’s POV}The dungeon had become considerably louder.Not because anything had changed down here.Because everything had changed somewhere above us.The screams still drifted through the stone ceiling in waves. Some were distant enough to sound almost unreal. Others arrived sharp and sudden before disappearing beneath the barking of orders and the thunder of hurried footsteps racing across the Palace.The attack had reached the Kingdom.That much was obvious.Milena was now pacing the length of the cell, looking upward every few seconds as though staring hard enough might somehow allow her to see through several layers of stone.“So it’s true,” she whispered. “The Blood Mothers are real.”She turned another restless circle before looking at me.“This is the end.”I remained where I was, listening. Not to her. To everything else. The Palace sounded frightened.That was different from sounding attacked. Milena crossed the distance between us in three hurried steps.“They’re here,”
{Liam’s POV}Loud voices guided me toward the western battlements long before I reached them.The Palace had abandoned every trace of its usual composure. Generals crossed courtyards at a run, shouting fresh orders before disappearing into different formations. Stable hands struggled to calm restless warhorses while servants hurried frightened citizens away from the outer walls. Everywhere I looked, discipline fought a losing battle against urgency.Beyond the gates, thousands of warriors were already assembling.Rows upon rows of armored males stretched across the Palace grounds as standards bearing the crest of the Reigns snapped violently in the afternoon wind. Generals rode along the formations issuing final instructions while captains adjusted ranks with clipped, impatient commands. Brutality flashed beneath the sun as countless claws extended and retracted in restless anticipation.The army was enormous.It should have been reassuring.Instead, the mood surrounding it bordered o
{Ragna’s POV}For a moment, nobody moved.The corridor seemed to shrink around us as the King’s gaze settled on our little group, drifting from my father to me and then back again. The shock on his face lasted only a second, but it was enough. It was enough for me to understand that he had recogniz
{Ragna’s POV}“Is that your father?”Milena’s question hung between us, but I didn’t answer it. My attention remained fixed on the man standing a short distance away while a dozen unwanted thoughts crashed into each other inside my head. Some were angry. Some were confused. Most were things I had s
{Ragna’s POV}The carriage rolled steadily away from the Arena while silence settled between Milena and me.For a while, neither of us spoke. The only sounds came from the horses pulling us forward, the rhythmic turning of the wheels beneath us, and the occasional creak of wood whenever the carriage
{Ragna’s POV}The second horn blast faded through the kennel corridors, yet nobody seemed interested in speaking again.Or arresting me.Or setting me on fire.Which, considering how the last few hours had gone, felt like a refreshing change.I remained where I stood while the silence stretched acro







