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The First Test

Autor: Abi Gail O
last update Fecha de publicación: 2026-06-03 06:21:24

She lay on the dark charcoal bedding and stared at the ceiling and listened to the palace breathe around her, the distant footsteps of guards on rotation, the low moan of wind finding gaps in the ancient stone, the occasional crack and settle of the fireplace burning itself down to embers. She catalogued every sound the way she had learned to catalogue things in Viktor's house, not from curiosity but from necessity, because knowing your environment was the first and most basic form of protection available to someone with no other kind.

She was still awake when the sky outside her narrow window shifted from black to the deep bruised grey that comes just before dawn.

She rose. Washed her face in the cold basin on the dresser. Changed into the plain dark dress that had been left folded on the chair sometime during the night, someone had entered her room while she slept or failed to sleep, which told her something important about the locks on her door and the value of privacy in this place. She pulled her hair back and looked at herself in the small mirror above the basin and gave herself the same instruction she had been giving herself since yesterday morning.

Do not break. Not here. Not in front of him.

She found the study without help.

She had memorized the route during last night's walk through the corridor, counting doors and turns and noting which passages branched where, and she arrived outside the correct door with three minutes to spare before sunrise and stood in the dim corridor and breathed and knocked.

"Enter."

The study was large and deliberately spare, bookshelves lining two full walls from floor to ceiling, a massive desk of dark wood dominating the center, maps spread across its surface weighted at the corners with stones. A fire burned in the hearth. Morning light was beginning to push through the tall narrow windows on the far wall, grey and thin and cold.

Draven stood at the window with his back to her, hands clasped behind him, watching the sunrise with the same stillness he seemed to bring to everything. He had not yet turned around. He had heard her enter and acknowledged her with nothing, which she recognized immediately as its own kind of test.

She stopped in the center of the room and waited.

The silence stretched. Outside the window, the sky was shifting from grey to pale gold. She counted her own heartbeats and kept her breathing even and did not fill the silence with words the way nervous people did, the way he was almost certainly waiting for her to do.

Thirty seconds. A minute. Longer.

He turned.

Those gold eyes moved over her with that familiar inventory, head to foot and back again, and something shifted in them when they reached her face and found her expression steady. Not much. Just a fractional adjustment, there and gone, the way still water moves when something disturbs it from below.

"You did not sleep," he said.

Not a question. She did not ask how he knew.

"No," she said.

He moved away from the window and came around the desk and stopped in front of her, closer than was necessary, closer than was comfortable, the deliberate invasion of space that she already recognized as one of his preferred methods of establishing exactly where the power in a room resided. His scent reached her immediately. Cedar and cold rain and that darker thread beneath both of them, purely wolf, purely dominant, and her omega blood stirred in response and she pressed it flat and held his gaze and breathed through it.

"You are afraid," he said.

"Yes," she said. No point in lying about the obvious.

Something moved in his expression again. That fractional shift. "And yet you are still standing in the center of my study meeting my eyes instead of looking at the floor."

"Looking at the floor does not make the thing in front of you less dangerous," she said. "It just means you do not see it coming."

The silence that followed had a different quality than the silences before. He looked at her for a long moment with those burning gold eyes and she had the unsettling sensation of being read, not her expression or her body language but something deeper, something she had not consented to show anyone.

Then he walked around her in a slow deliberate circle and she heard his voice from behind her left shoulder, low and close enough that she felt the warmth of it against her skin.

"You will serve in my private chambers," he said. "My meals. My correspondence. Whatever I require and whenever I require it." He completed the circle and stopped in front of her again. "You will speak when spoken to. You will go where you are directed. You will not leave this wing without my permission."

"And if I do?" she asked.

His eyes dropped to her mouth for one brief and devastating second before returning to hers. "You will not."

He said it the way people state facts about the weather. No threat in it. No anger. Just absolute certainty, and somehow that was more effective than either would have been.

He turned and moved back toward the desk and she thought the exchange was finished, thought she was being dismissed, and she had half turned toward the door when his voice stopped her.

"There is one more thing."

She turned back.

He was leaning against the desk now with his arms crossed, watching her with an expression she could not fully read, something between assessment and decision, like he was finalizing a calculation he had been running since the carriage pulled into the courtyard yesterday.

"You belong to me," he said. "Every part of what you are is mine. Your time. Your obedience." His eyes held hers and his voice dropped half a register. "Your body."

The word landed in the room like a stone dropped into still water. Lyra felt the ripples move through her, heat and fear and fury arriving simultaneously and tangling together into something she had no clean name for.

She held his gaze. "You would take something not freely given?"

He was quiet for a moment that stretched too long.

Then he pushed off the desk and crossed the room toward her and stopped close enough that she had to tilt her chin up to maintain the eye contact she refused to surrender, and he reached out and tucked a single loose strand of hair behind her ear with a touch so deliberate and so light it was somehow more overwhelming than force would have been.

"I have never needed to take anything in my life," he murmured, his gold eyes burning into hers from inches away. "Everything comes to me willingly."

He dropped his hand and stepped back.

"You are dismissed."

Lyra walked out of the study on steady legs and made it twelve steps down the corridor before she pressed her back against the cold stone wall and closed her eyes and acknowledged the truth her body had been screaming at her since his fingers brushed her skin.

She was in far more danger than she had thought.

And not all of it came from him.

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  • Owned for the Alpha's pleasure    Marked by the King

    She woke before he did.Pale grey light was just beginning to touch the windows of his chambers, and Lyra lay still for a long moment, feeling the unfamiliar weight of an arm draped across her, the steady rhythm of breathing behind her, the warmth of a body that had been a stranger seventy two hours ago and was now the most familiar thing in her world.Everything had changed last night. Not just between them, though that had changed enormously, but inside her. Something had settled into place that she did not fully understand yet, a quiet certainty underneath the chaos of the last three days, like a key turning in a lock she had not known existed.Draven stirred behind her, his arm tightening slightly, and she felt rather than heard him wake, the change in his breathing, the slow deliberate way he came back to awareness."You are still here," he said quietly, his voice rough with sleep."Where would I go," she said.He was quiet for a moment, and then he shifted, turning her gently to

  • Owned for the Alpha's pleasure    The Claiming Night

    The horns did not stop for an hour.Lyra stood at the window of her chamber and watched the courtyard transform below, warriors pouring from the barracks in organized waves, Orion's voice carrying across the stone as he barked formations, the heavy gates groaning open to let mounted scouts through at speed. The entire palace had shifted into something with teeth, every soft edge gone, every person moving with singular purpose.She had been told to stay in her chamber. She had not been told what to do with the fear sitting in her chest like a stone.By the time the light outside had shifted from afternoon to evening, the horns had quieted. She did not know if that was good or bad. Mira brought food, Elara prepared as promised, and reported only that there had been fighting at the border and that Draven had ridden out himself with Orion and a contingent of warriors and had not yet returned.Night fell. Lyra did not sleep, again, watching the courtyard from her window until her eyes burn

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  • Owned for the Alpha's pleasure    The Alpha's Hunger

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  • Owned for the Alpha's pleasure    Zara's Welcome

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