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Chapter 10: Two Wolves, One Cage

Author: Faye Q
last update publish date: 2026-06-29 22:36:39

Zephyr's POV

Three days without sleep does something interesting to a person.

Colors get brighter. Sounds get sharper. The line between what is real and what your mind is manufacturing gets very, very thin. I knew this because I had studied it, back when the Sylvan agents were still teaching me things, back before I understood what I was actually being built for.

I was sitting on the floor of my room at four in the morning with my back against the bed and my knees pulled up, watching the candle on my desk burn down.

Go to the lab. Take the sample. Complete the mission.

"Not tonight," I said out loud.

The Sylvan soul didn't argue with words. It just pushed. A slow, grinding pressure behind my eyes that had been building for seventy two hours without relief. It wanted me moving. Wanted me working. Wanted me anywhere except here, inside this palace, bonded to a girl it considered a threat to everything it had spent years building toward.

The bond pulled in the opposite direction. Warm and insistent, tugging at the center of my chest like Ava was a magnet and my ribs were made of iron.

I was being pulled apart from the inside and I had not slept in three days and earlier today Cax had grabbed my arm in the corridor and looked at my face with an expression I had never seen from him before.

"Zephyr." His voice had been careful. Quiet. "When did you last eat something?"

"Recently."

"That's not an answer."

"It's the one I have."

He studied me for a long moment. His eyes moved over my face the way they did when he was calculating something. "Are you sick?"

I had laughed. I didn't plan to. It came out of me suddenly, loud and a little unhinged, bouncing off the corridor walls. Cax took a small step back. I kept laughing because I couldn't find the stop for it, couldn't locate the part of myself that knew how to be normal and measured and fine.

Eventually it ran out on its own.

Cax was very still. "Zephyr."

"I'm not sick," I said. My voice sounded strange even to me. Scraped clean. "I'm fine."

He didn't believe me. I could see it clearly. But he also didn't push, because pushing Zephyr when Zephyr was like this had never produced useful results and he knew it.

He let me go.

I had spent the rest of the day oscillating. That was the only word for it. The Sylvan soul would surge forward and I would find myself walking toward Dr. Elara's lab, hand reaching for the corridor that led to the restricted wing, feet moving without permission. Then the bond would snap tight and I would stop, disoriented, standing somewhere I hadn't chosen to stand, breathing hard.

Back and forth. Lab. Ava. Lab. Ava.

I was a rope in a game I hadn't agreed to play.

The moment of clarity came at midnight, sudden and clean like a window opening. The Sylvan soul went quiet, not gone, never fully gone, but quiet. Resting. And in that stillness I moved fast, before it could come back, because I had learned to use the quiet when I got it.

The palace archive was in the lower east wing, behind a door that required a senior family seal to open. I had lifted Ryker's backup seal three weeks ago for reasons the Sylvan soul had directed and I had not examined too closely. I used it now for my own reasons.

The archive was cold and smelled like old paper and dust. I lit a small lamp and went straight to the restricted section, the shelves with the red markers, the records they didn't want general staff reading.

I pulled every file marked with blood anomalies.

There were not many. Seven files total, thin and old, the paper soft at the edges. I sat down on the floor between the shelves and started reading.

Most of it was useless. Standard anomaly documentation, tracking cases of blood that presented differently in moon-touched wolves. I skimmed fast, my eyes moving over the pages, the Sylvan soul starting to stir again at the edges of my mind like something waking up.

Then I found it.

A single page, near the back of the fifth file. The paper was older than the rest, the ink slightly faded but fully legible. Someone had written it carefully, deliberately, like they understood exactly what they were recording and wanted to make sure it survived.

I read it twice.

Then I read it a third time, slowly, making sure I was not making mistakes because I had not slept and my mind was not entirely reliable.

I was not making mistakes.

The page described violet blood in detail that no other document had come close to. Not just the rarity of it. Not just the royal lineage it marked. It described the mechanics of it. What it actually did. What it was actually capable of.

Violet blood healed. Everyone knew that part. Even the Sylvan agents knew that, it was why Dr. Elara wanted it so badly.

But the file described something else. Something the healing records never mentioned, maybe because the cases were rare enough, or painful enough, that no one had written them down carefully until this person did.

When the carrier was in sustained pain, deep pain, the kind that lived in the bones and didn't leave, the blood didn't just heal.

It destroyed.

Not randomly. Not uncontrollably, at least not at first. But the power that made it a cure at full strength became something else entirely when the person carrying it was suffering. It turned outward. It looked for the source of the pain and it moved toward it.

I sat very still on the cold archive floor.

Ava had been in pain since before she arrived. I had felt it through the bond on the very first night. Old pain, deep pain, the kind that Ryder's rejection had carved into her and left open. She carried it in every room she walked into. It was in her shoulders and her eyes and the way she flinched when anyone got too close.

She had been in pain every single day since she got here.

I stood up slowly. My legs felt strange. I walked out of the archive and into the corridor, and I stood there looking toward the east wing where her room was, where she was sleeping right now, where she had been quietly, constantly hurting for days.

I whispered it to the empty corridor before I could stop myself.

"She's a weapon she doesn't even know she's carrying."

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