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Chapter Three: The Whetstone

Author: Joel Stephen
last update publish date: 2026-06-13 17:08:11

Elara dreamed of drowning.

Cold water filling her lungs. A guard's hand on the back of her neck. The taste of mud and copper. She woke gasping, hands clawing at silk sheets that weren't hers, in a room that smelled of pine smoke and something else—something warm and male and safe, which was the most terrifying thing of all.

The chain on her ankle was gone.

She sat up slowly. Her ribs ached. Her back throbbed. But the frostbite had faded to a dull pink, and the cuts on her feet had been stitched with surgical precision. Someone had spent hours on her.

Not someone, she thought. Him.

A tray waited on the bedside table. Bread. Cheese. A bowl of broth still steaming. And a fresh sheet of paper with a single line of jagged handwriting:

Eat. All of it. I'll know if you don't. — K

Elara stared at the note. No one had ever told her to eat. They had told her to starve, to beg, to crawl. Never to eat.

She ate.

The broth was rich with herbs. The bread was still warm. Halfway through, her stomach clenched—too much, too fast—but she forced herself to finish. She would not waste food. She had watched pups starve in the kennels. She had been one of them.

When the tray was empty, she swung her legs over the side of the bed. The stone floor was cold. Her bare feet—newly bandaged—flinched, but she stood. Dizziness washed over her. She waited for it to pass.

Then she walked to the window.

The view stole her breath.

A fortress sprawled below her, carved into a mountain cleft. Wolves patrolled the walls—not in human form, but furred and massive, their eyes glinting in the grey light. Beyond the walls, pine forest stretched to the horizon, endless and dark. Above it all, a sky the color of bruised plums.

The Nightshade Dominion, she remembered. His territory. His kingdom.

And she was his prisoner.

Or his mate.

She wasn't sure which was worse.

---

The door opened without a knock.

Kaelen Blackthorn filled the frame, same as before. Today he wore a leather tunic and vambraces, his black hair pulled back from his face. A fresh scar—thin, red, deliberate—ran from his eyebrow to his cheekbone. He hadn't had it yesterday.

"You're out of bed," he said. Not angry. Not pleased. Just observed.

Elara turned to face him. She pointed at his new scar, then raised an eyebrow.

He touched it absently. "Training accident. My second-in-command got lucky." A pause. "I broke his arm in return. He's fine."

She reached for the paper and quill she had left on the bedside table. Wrote: You're violent.

"I'm an Alpha." He said it like it explained everything. Perhaps it did.

She wrote: Why am I here?

He read the words. Then he crossed the room in three strides, stopped inches from her, and tilted her chin up with one finger. His touch was hot. Commanding. Her pulse jumped.

"Because you're my mate," he said quietly. "I don't want a mate. Never have. But my wolf chose you, and my wolf has never been wrong." His red eyes searched her face. "So here you are. Here we are. And we're going to figure out what to do with each other."

She pulled back. Wrote: What if I don't want a mate?

Kaelen's lips twitched. Almost a smile. "Then you'll tell me. And I'll listen. I'm not your uncle, Elara. I don't hurt people for speaking." He paused. "I hurt people for other reasons."

She believed him.

She also didn't trust him.

Those two things lived in her chest at the same time, tangled and thorny.

---

He took her to the training grounds.

Not the main ring—that was for his warriors, who stopped and stared as she limped past. An Alpha's mate, scarred and chained? Whispers followed them like crows. Kaelen ignored them. So did Elara. She had been stared at her whole life.

The private ring was behind the fortress, hidden in a cave warmed by volcanic vents. Sand covered the floor. Weapons lined the walls—swords, daggers, staffs, things she didn't have names for.

"Why are we here?" she whispered. The words came out as a croak, barely audible, but he heard.

Kaelen turned to face her. "Because you're weak."

She flinched. He didn't apologize.

"You're weak," he repeated, "because they made you weak. Not because you're a Null. Not because you don't have a wolf. Because they beat you down every day for five years, and no one taught you to fight back." He picked up a wooden staff and tossed it to her. She caught it—barely. The impact jarred her cracked ribs.

"I'm going to fix that."

Elara stared at the staff. Then at him. Then at the staff again.

She wrote on her paper: I can't shift. I have no speed. No strength. No healing. I'm human with black blood.

Kaelen read it. Crumpled the paper. Dropped it on the sand.

"I don't care," he said. "Speed can be learned. Strength can be built. Healing—" He shrugged. "Don't get hit. But here's what you do have, Elara. You have the thing that no wolf in this fortress possesses."

She waited.

He stepped closer. His voice dropped to a murmur.

"You have survived things that would have killed any of them. You walked three miles naked through a blizzard. You didn't beg. You didn't cry. You crawled into a log to die quietly, without asking for mercy." His hand closed around her staff, just below hers. "That's not weakness. That's steel wrapped in scar tissue."

Her throat tightened.

"I'm not asking you to be an Alpha," he said. "I'm asking you to be dangerous. Can you do that?"

Elara looked down at the staff. At her shaking hands. At the brand on her wrist—Ω-NULL—glowing faintly in the cave light.

She thought of her mother's bruises. Her father's blood. The twelve-year-old who had clawed her back for sport.

Then she lifted her head and met Kaelen Blackthorn's red eyes.

And she nodded.

"Good." He released the staff and stepped back. "Then we start now. Hit me."

She blinked. Wrote: With what?

"With the stick. With your fist. With your head. I don't care. Just hit me."

Elara hesitated. Five years of conditioning screamed at her: Don't fight back. It's worse if you fight back.

But Kaelen wasn't her uncle. He wasn't a guard. He was something else entirely.

She swung the staff.

He didn't dodge. The wood cracked against his ribs—and bounced off like she had hit a stone wall. He didn't even grunt.

"Again," he said.

She swung again. Harder. He caught the staff this time, wrenched it from her hands, and tossed it aside.

"Again. With your fists."

She punched his chest. It hurt her knuckles more than it hurt him.

"Again."

She punched his stomach.

"Again."

She punched his jaw.

"Again."

Her knuckles split. Blood—black, useless—dripped onto the sand.

"Again."

She screamed. No sound came out—her throat couldn't make it—but the scream happened anyway, somewhere deep in her chest. She swung. She missed. He caught her fist and held it.

"That's enough," he said quietly.

She was crying. She hadn't meant to cry. The tears just came—hot, humiliating, unstoppable.

Kaelen pulled her against his chest. His arms wrapped around her, iron and heat. He didn't shush her. Didn't tell her it was fine. He just held her while she shook.

"Tomorrow," he said into her hair, "you hit me three times before you cry. The day after, five. By the end of this month, you won't cry at all."

She pulled back far enough to write on his chest with her finger: What if I still want to?

He looked down at the invisible words. Then at her face.

"Then you cry," he said. "And then you keep hitting."

For the first time in years, Elara felt something that wasn't fear or pain or numbness.

It felt like the beginning.

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