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Three Lives, Two Mates, One Enemy
Three Lives, Two Mates, One Enemy
Author: Kola De

CHAPTER 1

Author: Kola De
last update publish date: 2026-04-09 09:08:27

Amara

"His feet are cold," my mother said from the doorway. "Build the fire up."

I had my hands in the dishwater, and it had gone cold an hour ago, but I didn't say so. I dried them on my skirt and crossed to the fireplace and knelt on the stone where I had knelt a hundred times before.

I could have built this fire in the dark. I broke the kindling small, the way it liked, fed it slow, and I didn't mention the cold coming up through my knees, because mentioning it wouldn't my mother attitude towards me.

Behind me the chair creaked as she settled in beside him. Gareth murmured something I couldn't catch, and she laughed, soft.

The fire caught. I stayed there a second longer with the heat on my face, and I let myself have that one warm thing.

"Amara." Gareth, from his chair. I didn't turn around.

"Yes."

"Sweep the hall when you're done. And don't use the good broom. Make use of the other one."

There were two brooms in the corner. They were the same broom. They had always been the same broom. I'd asked once, years back, which one was good, and he'd looked at me like I was slow, so I never asked again. I took the one on the left, swept the hall, and said nothing.

I made dinner after, and I set two places, because it was always two.

"This is cold in the middle," Gareth said when I brought it out.

"I'll warm it."

"Don't bother. Just don't do it again."

It wasn't cold. I'd tasted it. But there was no use saying so, so I went back to the kitchen and ate standing up at the basin, out of the pot, with the spoon I'd cooked with. In the other room they talked about people I'd never meet and money I'd never see, and nobody called me in.

Here's the thing you need to know, and I need you to hear it right.

I am nineteen years old. But I am not nineteen.

I've done this before. Not this kitchen, not this floor, but a house like it, and a family like this one, in a life that ended badly. And before that, another. I remember all of it... the good parts, which were small, and the rest, which was not.

In my first life I still believed that if I was quiet enough and useful enough, someone would choose to keep me. I was wrong, and I learned it slowly, and then all at once. In my second life I was harder. I had a father who taught me how to read a room before I walked in, how to find the door before I sat down. Then he died, and there was no one, and then there was a man.

His name is Corvus.

He's the reason both of those lives ended. He found me the first time and he found me the second, and both times he looked at me. He didn't hate me. That was the part I couldn't make sense of for the longest while.

Now I'm here again. Same world. Same name... the one my mothers keep giving me without knowing why. Same Corvus, somewhere out in the dark, doing whatever it is he does.

I'm not trying to be good enough this time. I learned how that ends. Twice.

This time I have a plan.

I lay awake most of that night fitting the pieces against each other, looking for the version that didn't get me killed. By my count I had three days. Three days to finish it and be gone.

I was wrong about that, too.

I heard the voices before I reached the kitchen the next morning, and I went still in the hall the way my body had learned to go still, before my mind even caught up.

Gareth first. Low and careful. Then a stranger. A man, older, his voice gone flat.

"The day's been moved up," the stranger said. "He wants her this week."

"This week." Gareth said it slowly, like he was weighing it. He wasn't. I knew that voice. He'd already decided. "And the rest stands? Everything we talked about?"

"Everything you were promised comes when she does. Not before."

There was a pause, and then Gareth again, careful, like he was picking the word up off the floor to look at it. "She won't give you any trouble. She's manageable."

Manageable.

I stood in the hall and let the word settle on me, and I waited for it to hurt, and it didn't.

"This week," the stranger said again. "Have her ready."

I went back to my room without a sound and sat on the edge of the bed and held what I'd heard, turning it over. He hadn't even come himself this time. He'd sent a man with a flat voice to strike a deal with my stepfather, and my stepfather had said manageable, and whatever small thing Corvus had offered for me, it was worth more to Gareth than I was.

That evening I did everything that was demanded of me, slow and easy, like a girl who knew nothing.

My mother found me banking the kitchen fire for the night.

"You'll do the door?" she said.

"Yes."

"Make sure to latch it twice. There's been wolves at the Harrow place."

I looked at her. There were always wolves. We were wolves. But I knew which kind she meant.

"I'll latch it twice," I said.

She nodded and went to bed without saying goodnight.

I latched the door. I checked it. I checked it again, because she'd said twice.

Then I lay down on top of my blankets with my boots still on, in the dark, and I did not close my eyes.

Three days. I didn't have three days. I had this week, and this week had already started, and somewhere out past the cold fields the man who had killed me twice was coming to do it a third time.

So I would move first. An hour before light, while the house was deepest asleep.

I had it all laid out behind my eyes, every step of it, and I was halfway through running it for the last time when I stopped.

Because I'd checked that door twice. I knew I had.

And I had just heard it open.

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  • Three Lives, Two Mates, One Enemy   CHAPTER 89

    ZaneIt said three words to us and then it didn't say anything else for what might have been a year.You'd think silence from a monster would be a relief. It wasn't. It was the silence of someone who's said an honest thing by accident and is now mortified about it, and I know that silence, I've lived inside that silence, I am the king of saying a true thing and then needing four jokes to climb back out of having meant it.So I did the thing I do. I talked to it."You're not going to out-quiet me," I told the dark, the weight, the old tired thing held between the three of us. "I want you to know that going in. I have made grieving men laugh at their own father's grave. I once talked a guard named Toller into liking me while bound at the wrists. You are not the toughest audience I've had. You're just the rudest, because at least Toller eventually said something back."Nothing."Fine. I'll go first. My name's Zane, you've technically known me since you wore Corvus and called me by it lik

  • Three Lives, Two Mates, One Enemy   CHAPTER 88

    AmaraThere's no time behind the door. I want to say that plainly, because I spent what might have been the first hour or the first decade trying to find the edges of it and there aren't any, and once you stop looking for edges that aren't there, it gets easier, a little, to just be.We're not cold. That's the first thing I'd tell anyone who asked, if anyone could ask. The dark isn't cold the way the dead ground was cold. It's just dark, total, the kind you'd go mad cataloguing if you were alone in it, and I understand now, all the way down, why Orsel's voice through the warm stone had sounded the way it did. Not broken. Worn.Zane's hand is in mine. Has been the whole time, however long the whole time is. His grip changes... sometimes strong, sometimes faint, the way Wren feels it on her rope, and I've learned to read the faintness the way I used to read his face, which I can't see anymore, none of us can see anything, we're three voices and six hands and the thing held still between

  • Three Lives, Two Mates, One Enemy   CHAPTER 87

    WrenCorin didn't open the satchel that first night. He sat by my fire and drank what I gave him and told me about the lake-thing in careful, exhausted pieces, and I let him, because I know that kind of telling and you don't rush it.It was three nights before he put the satchel on the table between us."You should see what alone costs," he said. "Before you decide you and I are trading even. I don't think we are."Inside, wrapped in oiled cloth, was a hand.Not whole. Three fingers and the heel of a palm, gray-white, frost-burned the way Aldric's had been, the way mine had nearly been on the hill. Old enough that the gray had gone past fresh and into something like stone, preserved by whatever had taken it rather than healed."Mine," Corin said, before I could ask. "I held the lake-thing alone for six hours getting it back into the cage after it slipped. No anchors. No rope. Just me and a working I half-remembered from watching my teacher, getting it wrong in places I didn't know wer

  • Three Lives, Two Mates, One Enemy   CHAPTER 86

    WrenI didn't wait for it to come to me. Waiting is Maren's old patience and I haven't earned that yet, so I did the thing I'm actually good at, which is hunting.I told Seraphine and went out the back of the keeper-house an hour before the watcher usually showed, and circled wide through the wet dark the way you circle a deer stand you don't want the deer to scent, and I came up behind the tree line from the river side instead of the camp side, and I found him exactly where I'd have stood if I were watching that house and didn't want to be seen doing it.A man. Younger than me, maybe, hard to tell in the dark. No weapon out, which told me something. A bag at his feet, half-packed, which told me more... a man ready to run isn't a man planning violence tonight. He was watching the cord-light in Wren's window through the trees with the particular hunger of someone who'd traveled a long way for exactly that light.I put an arrow on him anyway. You don't get careless because a man looks h

  • Three Lives, Two Mates, One Enemy   CHAPTER 85

    SeraphineGreywater was still standing, which we hadn't let ourselves expect, and empty, which we had.Rell brought us in through the bridge gate at dusk on the twelfth day since we'd ridden out, and the town sat there in the thaw with its fires long dead and its doors shut and not a soul on the wall, and for one bad stretch of road I thought we'd find what I'd found at the waystation. Then a dog barked somewhere in the lower town, ordinary and alive, and a window opened, and a face looked out, and within an hour the word had gone through every house that hadn't burned, and people came out into the streets.What was left standing was less than what we'd left. But more than I'd feared.Bram had the four hundred camped two days west in a valley with good water, waiting on a runner, and Rell sent one before she'd even gotten off her horse. I watched her do it and understood she'd been holding that errand in her chest the whole ride home, behind the counting, behind the command voice, a w

  • Three Lives, Two Mates, One Enemy   CHAPTER 84

    SelaIt took us nine days to walk out of a country that had taken us four to walk in, because everybody was broken in a different way and nobody could carry anybody else's broken on top of their own.I'd lost the crutch on the hill and Bram wasn't there to cut me a new one, so I rode the whole way, which sounds easy and isn't, because a horse moving under a leg that doesn't bend right is its own special hell, and I complained about it loudly and often, because that's the job and somebody has to keep doing the job even when the woman who gave it to me is behind a door I can't see.Seraphine rode beside me most of those nine days. We hadn't been people who rode beside each other before. We were people who'd traded sharp looks and sharper history. But she'd dragged me off the hill once with her own ribs full of cold, and I'd hauled her to her feet with my own leg screaming, and that buys you something even between two women who used to plan, on opposite sides of a fire, how the other mig

  • Three Lives, Two Mates, One Enemy   CHAPTER 6

    Amara They came out of the trees on three sides, and I counted them before they'd finished arriving, because counting is the one thing I can always do, no matter what else is falling apart. Six. Six fighters, trained, spread wide, closing on the camp. The wolfsbane arrow had never been the attac

  • Three Lives, Two Mates, One Enemy   CHAPTER 5

    Amara I was on my feet before my mind caught up to my body. That's the thing three lifetimes builds into you. You move first. You understand after. Reed was on his side in the dirt at the edge of the firelight, and there was an arrow in him, and it had come out of the dark so fast and so quiet

  • Three Lives, Two Mates, One Enemy   CHAPTER 4

    Amara We walked into the trees, and the world got bigger than I had words for. I'd never been past the pack boundary in this life. Omegas don't get shown where their edges are... the edges are just there. You don't walk into a storm without a roof over you. I walked into this one anyway, and the

  • Three Lives, Two Mates, One Enemy   CHAPTER 3

    Amara For a moment nobody moved, and the only sound in the house was the fire I'd built hours ago, ticking down to ash in the next room. Then the first one laughed... short, pleased... and pulled out the stool across from me and dropped onto it like he'd been waiting all night for me to ask. "

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