LOGINBy the third morning I understood exactly what Ironveil intended to do with me.
Not kill me. Not break me the way the curse had broken the last one. Something slower and more deliberate than that. Something the pack had clearly done before to people they wanted gone without the mess of direct confrontation. They were going to erase me. Heda came to my door before sunrise. She didn't knock. She simply opened it and handed me a sheet of paper covered in small, tight handwriting. No greeting. No explanation. "Laundry. Floors. The great hall fireplace before the morning meal. The east corridor windows." I looked at the list. Then I looked at her. "The Alpha's bride does not—" "The Alpha has not confirmed you as his bride," Heda said. Flat. Final. "Until he does, you are a guest of undetermined status. Guests of undetermined status contribute to the household." She left before I could respond. I stood in the doorway holding the list and understood three things at once. First, Heda was not cruel; she was efficient, and this was not her idea. Second, someone with more authority than a head of household had given the order. Third, if I refused, I would lose the only roof I had left. I went and picked up a bucket, a scrubbing brush, and a rag from the supply room. The great hall was enormous and cold and built to make everyone inside it feel small. Stone columns rose like teeth. The long table could seat forty. I dropped to my knees in front of the massive fireplace and started scrubbing. The brush bristles were stiff and caught on the grout. Cold water soaked through the knees of my new dress within minutes. My knuckles scraped raw against the stone. I kept going. They came in for breakfast. All of them. Senior wolves of Ironveil, filing in with the organized hierarchy of a pack that never let anyone forget their rank. They saw me. Every single one of them saw the "Alpha's supposed bride" on her hands and knees with a scrubbing brush. Not one of them said a word. They sat. They ate. They talked around me the way you talk around furniture. Reva took the seat at the head of the long table's left side, not the Alpha's chair but as close as she could get. She watched me the entire meal with that satisfied smile she had perfected into a weapon. She never spoke. Her silence was the loudest thing in the room. A young wolf, maybe seventeen, gangly and uncertain, walked past carrying a plate of food. He stopped when he saw me. His face hardened for a second, then softened into something closer to discomfort, the expression of someone watching something that didn't sit right but lacked the courage to speak. He kept walking. I scrubbed the floor. I had been scrubbing floors since I was eleven. My father's pack had decided early that a daughter with no wolf gifts and no remarkable qualities was most useful on her knees. I knew exactly how to make my face into nothing while my hands worked. I knew how to be invisible inside my own humiliation. What I had not mastered was how to stay invisible when someone was watching with the specific intention of seeing. Kael stood at the far end of the room near the window. He wasn't eating. He held a cup he hadn't touched and scanned the hall with dark, unreadable eyes that catalogued everything and revealed nothing. When his gaze moved to me it didn't linger; just a sweep, a note taken, filed away. But I caught something in it. Just slightly. Just for a second. A flicker I didn't have time to understand before his face closed again. I finished the list by midday. Every item. Perfectly done. Not because I was afraid of consequences. Because I refused, absolutely refused to give Ironveil the satisfaction of a job done poorly. If they wanted to use me as a servant, I would be the best servant this pack had ever seen, and I would do it with my spine straight and my face calm. I would not cry. I would not beg. I would not give Reva's smile a single thing to feed on. I returned the bucket and brush to the supply room at the end of the east corridor. The room was small and dim, smelling of soap and pine. I allowed myself exactly thirty seconds inside it with the door closed. Thirty seconds to press my back against the wall, close my eyes, and feel the full weight of the morning without an audience. Twenty-eight seconds in, the door opened. The young wolf from the great hall stood in the doorway holding a bread roll and a small wedge of hard cheese. He thrust them at me with the urgency of someone completing a task before his nerve ran out. "You didn't eat," he said. I looked at him. Up close he was even younger. Too young for the careful blankness Ironveil seemed to install in everyone eventually. His eyes were brown and honest and slightly panicked, as though he hadn't fully thought through what came after handing a stranger food. "I'm Pip," he said. "I work the stables. I'm nobody. So it doesn't matter if I'm seen talking to you." Something inside me quivered like the memory of warmth. The feeling of recognizing something you had almost forgotten existed. I took the bread. "Thank you, Pip," I said. He nodded rapidly, turned, and paced away with the energy of someone who had done something brave and needed to immediately be somewhere else. I ate the bread in the darkness of the supply room. It was the kindest thing anyone had done for me in years. But that was the most devastating part. Because for the first time since the carriage door had slammed shut, I felt the thing inside my chest stir again. Stronger this time. Hotter. It uncoiled behind my ribs, pressed against the burn on my neck, and pushed outward like it wanted to answer the kindness with something far more dangerous. I finished the roll in three bites, wiped my hands on the rag, and stepped back into the corridor. The north wing still waited above me. The cursed Alpha was still awake. And whatever lived inside me was no longer content to stay quiet...Sable arrived at Ironveil's gate on a Wednesday morning with a horse that looked exhausted and a face that said she had made a decision she wasn't entirely sure about and was committed to it anyway. I was in the courtyard when the gate opened. I had been working through my morning exercises in the cold air -- nothing magical, just the physical discipline Aldric had added to the training regimen two weeks in, the theory being that a Bloodanchor who couldn't manage her own body under stress was a Bloodanchor with an unpredictable access problem. I saw the horse first. Then the rider. Then I saw Kael, who had been crossing the courtyard toward the stables, stop walking completely. He stopped so hard that Pip, three steps behind him carrying a saddle, walked directly into his back. Pip bounced off, stumbled, caught himself, started to apologize, looked at Kael's face, looked at the gate, and went very quiet. The woman who dismounted was lean and brown-skinned, perhaps thirty, with
He found me in the library at ten that night.I had gone there after the war room meeting -- after Zoran's letter had been read aloud and the implications laid out across the table and everyone said the things that needed saying about strategy and response and next steps. After Caius sat at the head of that table and absorbed it all with the calm clarity of a man who had been handed a future he didn't expect and was already identifying what needed protecting inside it. After Kael left to draft the formal response. After Aldric went to the training room to document the breaking the way he documented everything, methodically, for the record.I took a candle and went to the library because the library was the one place in Ironveil that had always felt like mine without negotiation. I had claimed it by going there every day and no one had stopped me and that made it mine in the only way that mattered.I was sitting cross-legged on the floor between the stacks with the Valdenmere Codex sum
The pack saw him at breakfast and the hall nearly stopped breathing.Not because he made an entrance. Caius never made entrances. He came in through the side door the way he always did on the mornings he came at all, crossed the room without ceremony, and sat at the head of the table. He reached for the bread. That was when Danna saw his hands and her cup stopped halfway to her mouth and just stayed there, suspended, while her brain processed what her eyes were sending it.I watched it happen from my seat at the lower table. Clean skin. Both hands. No trace of anything that had lived on them for three years. The curse markings were gone the way a storm was gone after it passed -- not gradually, not in stages, but completely, the sky simply different on the other side of it. His forearms were clear. His collar sat open and the skin of his throat was unmarked. The corner of his eye where the lines had been crawling steadily for months showed nothing at all.I had done that. Last night,
We did not tell the pack.It wasn't about secrecy for its own sake because Kael knew, and he had calculated with his usual cold precision which senior wolves could handle the tension and which couldn't. I trusted his math. The great stone heart of Ironveil was quiet by the time we descended into the subterranean chill of the training room. Pip had been sent to his quarters with a flimsy cover story about "extended drills," which he clearly didn't believe but followed anyway. He was seventeen and brave, but he knew when the air in a house had become too thin for bystanders.The training room had been transformed. Aldric had expanded the rune arrangement on the floor: new, jagged lines cut fresh into the stone with a silver-tipped tool he'd apparently carried for eleven years, waiting for this exact midnight. The candles weren't a single point of light anymore; they were a ring of fire. The iron block was gone.In its place, the center of the runed circle was empty. Just the floor. Jus
The test session happened on a Thursday.We didn't use the iron block. We didn't use the vial. Caius sat cross-legged in the center of Aldric's underground training room, positioned precisely on the carved rune floor where the ley lines of the fortress converged.I sat directly across from him, our knees nearly touching. Aldric stood against the far wall, arms crossed tightly over his chest, wearing the expression of a man watching a storm break and realizing he has no umbrella.The room was subterranean-cold. A single tallow candle flickered between us, casting long, distorted shadows that danced against the damp masonry. Caius rested his hands palm-up on his knees. The curse markings were obsidian-dark against his skin, pulsing with that slow, predatory rhythm I had spent thirty-nine days learning to read like my own pulse."This is not the breaking," I reminded him, my voice low and steady despite the hammering in my chest. "This is contact only. I'm going to reach the mechanism,
Aldric walked into the war room, looked at our faces, and knew immediately.There was no guilt, no flinch, no sudden hesitation, no frantic attempt to construct a mask. He was simply a very old man reading a room and understanding in three seconds what had taken us three hours of agonizing over ciphers to piece together. He sat down in the nearest heavy oak chair with the exhausted certainty of someone who had been waiting for a specific, dreaded conversation for a very long time."The advisor," he said, his voice raspy. "In Zoran's household. The silver eyes.""Yes," Caius said, his voice like grinding stones."His name is Vel," Aldric said, staring at the scarred surface of the table. "He is my brother."The war room went dead silent. The only sound was the faint hiss of a torch in the corridor."Your brother," Caius repeated."Half-brother. We share a mother. He is six years my senior. He has been with Zoran for fourteen years, not ten. Your source is slightly off on the timeline."
I told him that evening.Not because the timing was perfect. It wasn't. Not because I felt ready. I didn't. But because Vex was gone and Zoran already knew enough and every hour I waited was an hour the situation moved without me, which was a position I had already occupied for nineteen years and
I found Kael at dawn in the east courtyard running drills with two of the younger pack soldiers.He saw me coming and dismissed them with a single gesture. They scattered with the practiced speed of men who had learned not to be present when the Beta had private business. He stood in the cold morn
The pack meeting was not something I was supposed to attend. I knew this because Heda appeared at my door that morning and told me, with her usual economical precision, that the great hall would be in use for pack business until midday and I should confine myself to the east wing. Her tone was n
He found me in the library.Of course he did. The library was the one place in Ironveil I had claimed as mine by default. The servants didn't venture here until the afternoon, Reva preferred the gilded cages of the upper sitting rooms, and Kael was always elsewhere, doing whatever Betas did when th







