LOGINMy body felt like a map of my recent failures.
My wrists were raw and chafed from the ropes. My arm burned where the glass had sliced it during the ambush. And now, thanks to Vexa, the back of my head throbbed with a dull, rhythmic ache where she had slammed me against the logs.
I limped across the small bedroom, trying to walk off the stiffness in my hip. Every step sent a jolt of pain up my spine.
I sat back down on the edge of the cot, defeated.
So this is my life now, I thought bitterly. Locked in a room, waiting for someone to feed me or beat me.
I looked at the bowl of cold, gray porridge on the table. Vexa had spilled half of it during her tirade. It looked about as appetizing as wet cement, but the hollow ache in my stomach was becoming impossible to ignore.
I reached for the bowl.
Click. Clack.
The locks tumbled again.
I flinched, pulling my hand back. I braced myself. Was it Vexa coming back to finish the job? Or Kaelen coming to inspect his prisoner?
The door creaked open.
But the figure that stepped inside wasn't a giant warrior or a raging enforcer.
It was a girl.
She looked to be about my age, maybe nineteen. She had the same dark, messy hair as Kaelen, but her eyes were warmer—a soft, honey-brown instead of stormy gray. She wore a simple woolen tunic and loose trousers, and she carried a woven basket filled with jars and bandages.
But what caught my eye immediately was the way she moved.
She walked with a pronounced limp, dragging her left leg slightly with each step. It wasn't a fresh injury; it was the settled, rhythmic gait of an old wound that had never healed right.
She stopped in the doorway, smiling tentatively.
"I knocked, but I think the wood is too thick," she said. Her voice was soft, melodic. It sounded like wind chimes compared to Vexa’s gravel. "May I come in?"
I stared at her, confused. A Rogue asking for permission?
"I... suppose," I whispered. "I don't have much of a choice, do I?"
The girl stepped inside, closing the door gently but leaving it unlocked. She set the basket on the table, wrinkling her nose at the bowl of slop.
"Ugh. Vexa’s cooking," she muttered. "I wouldn't feed that to a pig, let alone a guest."
"I'm not a guest," I said, eyeing her warily. "I'm a prisoner."
"You're a patient," she corrected. She pulled a small glass jar from her basket. "I'm Rhea. The camp Healer."
She walked toward me. I tensed, pulling my knees up.
"It's okay," Rhea said, holding up her hands. "I'm not going to hurt you. Kaelen told me Vexa got rough. He wanted me to check your head."
"Kaelen sent you?"
"He practically ordered me," she smiled, a mischievous glint in her eyes. "He was pacing around the fire pit like a caged bear. 'Go check her, Rhea. Make sure she isn't bleeding. But don't tell her I sent you.'" she chuckled.
She rolled her eyes. "He's terrible at being subtle."
I blinked. The image of the terrifying Butcher pacing anxiously because I got pushed against a wall didn't fit.
"Why does he care?" I asked bitterly. "He hates me."
"He hates what you represent," Rhea said softly. She sat on the chair, pulling it closer to the cot. "There's a difference. Now, let me see that bump."
She reached out. Her fingers were cool and gentle as she probed the back of my scalp. I winced.
"Sorry," she murmured. "No blood, but it's going to be tender. Vexa doesn't know her own strength. Or maybe she does, and that's the problem."
She opened the jar. The scent of aloe and mint filled the small room, masking the smell of the cold porridge. She dabbed a cool salve onto my head, then moved to my wrists.
"These rope burns are nasty," she tutted, applying the balm. "Torian ties knots like he's trying to moor a ship."
As she worked, I watched her. She was efficient, focused. But there was a sadness in her posture, a weight that seemed too heavy for someone so young.
"Your leg," I ventured softly. "Did... did the Bloodmoon pack do that?"
Rhea froze. Her hand hovered over my wrist.
"Yes," she said quietly. "A long time ago. During the Night of Ash."
"The Night of Ash?"
"That's what we call it," she said, resuming her work, though her movements were slower now. "The night Magnus's father, Julius, attacked our village. He wanted our land. Or something in our land. He sent his death squads in while we were sleeping."
She looked up at me, her honey eyes haunted.
"I was six. Kaelen was fourteen. Our parents hid us in the root cellar. But they didn't make it in time."
My breath hitched. "I... I didn't know."
"Why would you?" Rhea said, not unkindly. "History is written by the winners. To your pack, we were rebels who refused to bend the knee. To us... we were just a family eating dinner."
She finished wrapping my wrist and sat back, wiping her hands on a cloth.
"Kaelen carried me for three days through the snow after that," she whispered. "My leg was crushed by falling timber. He wouldn't leave me. He dragged me, fought off wolves, starved so I could eat the last of the rations. He was just a boy, Celeste. But he had to become a monster to keep me alive."
She looked at the door, as if she could see him standing on the other side.
"People call him the Butcher because of how he fights," she said fiercely. "But they don't see why he fights. Every guard he kills, every convoy he raids... he's trying to make sure no other six-year-old girl has to hide in a cellar while her parents scream."
I sat in silence, the weight of her words pressing down on me.
I had grown up hearing stories of the "Savage Rogues." My father called them criminals. Magnus called them vermin.
But looking at Rhea—this gentle girl with a limp and a basket of herbs—I realized I had been fed a lie.
"He saved you," I whispered.
"He saves everyone," Rhea corrected. "That's why this camp exists. Everyone here is a stray he picked up. An orphan. A runaway. He built this place from scraps to give us a home."
She stood up, picking up her basket. She reached into the bottom and pulled out a wrapped bundle.
"Here," she said, handing it to me. "Real food. Bread and dried venison. Don't tell Vexa."
I took the food, my hands trembling. "Thank you."
Rhea walked to the door. She paused with her hand on the latch.
"Celeste?"
"Yes?"
"Don't judge him too harshly," she said softly. "He looks scary. He acts scary. But inside that chest... he has the biggest heart of any Alpha I've ever known. It's just covered in a lot of armor."
She slipped out, closing the door behind her.
Click. Clack.
The locks slid home again.
I sat on the cot, clutching the bread. I looked at the heavy door, imagining the man on the other side.
The Butcher. The monster.
But now, in my mind, I saw a fourteen-year-old boy carrying his little sister through the snow. I saw a brother trying to build a home out of wreckage.
I took a bite of the bread. It was stale, but it tasted better than any feast I had ever eaten at Magnus's table.
Because it tasted like truth.
And for the first time since I was captured, I wondered if maybe—just maybe—I wasn't the prisoner here. Maybe I was just the only one who hadn't realized I needed saving.
The silence in the infirmary tent was fragile, held together by the thread of Jinx’s shallow breathing.I stood by the table, my hand still clutching my bleeding palm to my chest. My blood—dark red and shockingly normal—stained the boy's lips."He's stable," Rhea whispered, her fingers trembling as she checked his pulse again. "The fever is breaking.""For now," I added, my voice shaking. The adrenaline was draining out of me, leaving behind a cold exhaustion. "The blood just bought him time. It diluted the magic the poison was feeding on. But we need to flush it out of his system completely."We need a dialysis filtration," Rhea muttered, running a hand through her hair. "Or a strong diuretic tea mixed with charcoal. I have the herbs, but I need to mix the ratios perfectly."She looked overwhelmed. Her eyes were wide and frantic, darting around the cluttered tent."I can help," I said, stepping forward. "Tell me what to do.""Don't touch him!"The shout came f
Dinner was usually the only time the Bone Yard felt like a home.As the sun dipped behind the western ridge, painting the sky in bruises of purple and red, the rogues gathered around the central fire pit. It was a time for stories, for laughter, for forgetting that we were hunted outcasts living on the edge of starvation.I sat on a log near the periphery, nursing a bowl of Olara’s rabbit stew. My body ached from Kaelen’s training—a good ache, the kind that meant I was getting stronger—and for the first time in my life, I felt… content.I looked around for Jinx. The kid usually bounded over to me the moment I sat down, eager to steal a piece of bread or tell me a tall tale about how he fought a badger."Has anyone seen Jinx?" I asked Olara, who was dishing out seconds."Probably hiding," Olara grunted. "He skipped chopping wood today. Said his stomach hurt."A prickle of unease crawled up my spine. Jinx never skipped chores. He was terrified of being labeled "useless
The sun hadn't even breached the horizon when I limped back to The Pit.The world was gray and silent, draped in a heavy mist that clung to the trees like wet ghosts. My body screamed with every step. My ankle throbbed, my lip was swollen where Vexa had hit me, and my muscles felt like they had been replaced with lead.But I showed up.Kaelen was already there.He stood in the center of the muddy ring, perfectly still, like a statue carved from obsidian and bronze. He was shirtless again—the cold seemed to mean nothing to him—and his skin was slick with the damp morning air. The scars on his back twisted in the pale light, a roadmap of pain that I was only beginning to understand.He didn't turn around as I approached."You're late," he said. His voice was a low rumble that vibrated in my chest."I'm on time," I countered, stepping into the ring. The mud sucked at my boots. "The sun isn't up."Kaelen turned slowly. His gray eyes swept over me, critical and cold
The Bone Yard didn't have a gym. It had "The Pit."It was a crude, muddy circle dug into the earth near the perimeter fence, ringed by heavy logs. Every morning, the sound of grunts, cracking wood, and the dull thud of bodies hitting the dirt echoed through the camp.I usually avoided it. The violence reminded me too much of the ambush.But today, Olara had sent me to fetch water from the rain barrels near the perimeter. To get there, I had to pass The Pit.I kept my head down, hugging the heavy wooden bucket to my chest, trying to make myself invisible. My ankle was throbbing, a dull rhythm that synced with the pounding of my heart."Well, well. Look who finally crawled out of the kitchen."The voice was like a whip crack.I froze. I didn't need to look up to know who it was. The scent of woodsmoke and bitter aggression hit me before she did.Vexa.I tightened my grip on the bucket and kept walking. "I'm working, Vexa. Leave me alone.""Working?" Vexa st
CELESTEMy hands were no longer hands. They were claws made of raw meat and fire.I had been scrubbing for three days.The mountain of pots never seemed to get smaller. Every time I finished one stack, Olara would dump another load of greasy, blackened cauldrons onto the washing table."Faster, Princess," Olara would bark, banging her wooden spoon against the counter. "The hunters are back. They’ll be hungry."I didn't argue. I didn't complain. I just dipped my scouring pad into the freezing, gray water and scrubbed until my shoulders screamed and the blisters on my palms burst, weeping clear fluid that stung like acid.My emerald dress was long gone, burned in the fire pit. I wore the rough gray trousers and flannel shirt Kaelen had given me. They were three sizes too big, held up by a piece of rope I used as a belt. My hair, once glossy and perfumed, was tied back in a messy knot, smelling of woodsmoke and onions.I looked like one of them. I smelled like on
The return to the cabin was a blur of rain, pain, and humiliation.Kaelen kicked the front door open with a force that rattled the hinges, carrying me inside like a wet, muddy sack of flour. He marched straight to the fireplace, kicking the dying embers into a roar, then dumped me unceremoniously onto the leather sofa.I gasped as my broken ankle jarred against the cushions."Stay," he barked.He stomped to the washbasin, grabbing a towel and a bottle of amber liquid—whiskey, or maybe disinfectant. He grabbed a roll of linen bandages from a shelf.He looked terrifying. He was still naked, his bronze skin slick with rain and smeared with mud. His hair hung in wet strands over his eyes, which were glowing with a residual, angry gold light.He knelt in front of me. He didn't ask; he grabbed my left foot."This is going to hurt," he said flatly."Wait—"He didn't wait. With a sickening crunch, he wrenched my ankle back into alignment.I screamed, arching off







