LOGINThey came for me at sunrise.
I’m still awake, staring at the water-stained ceiling as twenty other women breathe quietly around me. I haven't slept, can't sleep, just listening, wondering if this is the night I die.
The lock clicks open. That sound, hard and final, means someone’s getting dragged out and not coming back. It's like a death rattle. The door slams back, and two guards fill the frame. Alphas, both of them, big enough to block out the morning light. Carter is one of the guys who takes real joy in dragging servants to places they never come back from.
“Daniels. Up. Now.”
I didn’t argue. Arguments get you a beating before a bullet, and I want to skip that.
The other women didn’t move. They've learned the same lesson I have: stay invisible, act deaf, don’t care about anything that doesn't threaten you. It’s harsh, but it keeps us breathing.
I slide out of the bunk, still in yesterday’s uniform. I didn't see the point in changing if I was going to die. My hands are steady as I slip into my old canvas shoes. Three years of waiting for this, and all I’ve done is rehearse how it feels – familiar, not easier.
"Relax, Carter."
Carters already impatient. "Let's go.
I dropped my head, round my shoulders, and followed them. The “don't-see-me” posture, perfected over a thousand nervous mornings. They walk me through halls I know like the back of my hand. Past the kitchens, where breakfast has started. Past industrial washers thundering day and night. Then, not down toward the execution rooms, but toward the elevators that serve the upper floors.
We go up.
The elevator isn’t the one I’m used to. The doors shine like chrome, the interior glows with soft lighting, fancy, and expensive. My stomach flips as we rise higher and higher: past the fighters’ levels, past admin, up and up into places I’ve never been.
When the doors open, cold air hits me first, then the smell knocks me dizzy: antiseptic mixed with something rich, like honey. Everything is too white, too still, like the air itself has been scrubbed. Medical territory. It doesn’t make sense. They don’t bring people here to kill them, they fix them, or study them, or maybe carve something out before they toss the leftovers.
None of that sounds good.
Carter gives me a hard shove. "Keep moving.
We stop at a door with a palm scanner. The other guard taps the reader, and another lock snaps open.
Inside, it looks like a surgical suite that never gets used. Walls are lined with machines I don’t recognize, monitors, tubes, shiny new tech. The centerpiece is a table with restraints bolted on.
My mouth goes dry.
Next to the table stands a doctor, in his late forties, a white coat crisp enough to slice through a glass. Grey at the temples, wire-rimmed glasses, expression blank as a wall. He glances up from his tablet.
“Miss Daniels. Thank you for joining us. I’m Dr. Landon Hayes.” Polished, emotionless voice. “Please, sit on the table.”
I didn’t move.
Carter grabs my shoulder, squeezing it till it hurts. "The doctor gave you an instruction.
Dr. Hayes steps forward, calm as ever. "Relax, Carter." He smiled, not unkindly. "It's a routine exam.
Liar. Every part of me wants to run, but that’s not an option. Carter’s grip tightens, and the other guard blocks the door.
I climbed onto the table.
“Excellent. Now, if you lie back and place your wrists in the restraints.”
I manage to find my voice, barely.
“Standard protocol for your safety and ours," Dr. Hayes replied.
More lies. But refusing only ends with me being forced down anyway, and I want to hold onto what's left of my dignity.
I lay back, the restraints snapping shut around my wrists with no escape. Dr. Hayes straps my ankles, and I'm stuck fast. Knox was right.
My wolf stirs, bristling under the layers I’ve piled on her. She hates being pinned down, as do I. "
“Let’s begin,” Dr. Hayes says, rolling over a tray of sharp, gleaming instruments that look more like torture tools than medical gear.
The next twenty minutes blur: needles draw blood, electrodes stick to my skin, and something presses against my chest.
“Fascinating,” he whispers, glued to his screen. Suppression is remarkable. Self-imposed, if I’m reading this right. You’ve kept your wolf muzzled for years.
I can’t reply. My voice is locked behind a wall of terror.
“But under all that, the markers are obvious,” Dr. Hayes leans in, almost excited. “Alpha strength. Luna class. And something else. Something you don’t find in common servants.
He swipes through data, his eyes wild.
Royal bloodline, dormant but unmistakable. Doesn't matter. Luna class. Knox was right.
You’re not just any Luna; you’re descended from the old monarchy. The genetic markers are clear as day.
No, he must be mistaken. I'm nobody, just a servant, not some hidden heir. The thought claws at my chest, panic rising as if my secret skin was being peeled away. I’ve spent my whole life making sure of it. Just a servant who scrubs floors and prays to be overlooked.
“These change everything,” Dr. Hayes mutters, barely looking at me. “So many applications. The breeding potential alone, the black-market value...”
Breeding. My stomach drops, and my hands go cold.
“I think we’ve seen enough, Doctor.
Knox Ashford stands in the doorway, owning every inch of space. He’s perfect: dark suit, silver hair, eyes like old coins. He doesn’t even have to try, and the room bends to him anyway. I’ve only ever seen him from afar, never met his gaze. Up close, he’s even more intimidating. Handsome in a way that masks just how deadly he is, all sharp jaw and a smile that never quite reaches those coin-flat eyes, like you’re a fool if you think he means it.
I have never been more scared.
“You’ve been hiding in plain sight, little Luna,” Knox says, moving toward the table. “Three years cleaning my arena and I never realized I housed a goldmine.
“I don’t know what you’re talking about.” My voice barely shakes.
“Your blood does. And soon, so will everyone else.
Knox signals Dr. Hayes, who undoes the restraints. My wrists tingle where the metal bit in. My ankles are sore, but I’m free.
Doesn’t matter. Knox blocks the only exit, guards box me in. Freedom’s an illusion.
“Sit up, please,” Knox says. “We have a lot to discuss.
I push myself up, every muscle burning. My wolf is awake and restless, clawing for space. She wants out, wants to fight, wants to run.
All I can do is sit.
“You’re more valuable than I first thought,” Knox says, like he’s already decided what to do with me. “Royal blood:” Unclaimed Luna. Alpha power bottled up like you’re scared of it. Do you even realize how rare that is?”
“I’m just a servant."
"Was a servant. His smile widens, cold as ice. Now you're my newest investment, and that royal blood of yours is going to earn its keep."
Ryder knew before she told him.She heard it in his silence when she mentioned the new fighter through the wall that evening, the particular stillness of a man sitting with information he had already processed and was now deciding how much to share."The new fighter," Ryder said. "Stay away from him."Sierra had been expecting something more along the lines of "Be careful" or "Watch yourself," the standard caution that Ryder delivered about most things that entered her orbit. Not a directive."Why?" she said. "Do you know him?""No. "A pause that carried weight. "But he looks at you like he knows you. And that makes him dangerous or useful. I haven't decided which."Sierra considered the window, the yard, the two seconds of absolute stillness from a man who had just entered a facility he had never seen before. "Maybe he's both."Ryder said nothing to that, which was its own kind of answer.She lay back on the cot and let her wolf move through what she was feeling, the strange tugging
The fighter's wing had a particular way of responding to new arrivals.It was not loud. Not obvious. The wolves in the occupied cells did not press against their doors or call out into the corridor. What happened was quieter than that, a shift in the quality of attention across the whole block, like a change in air pressure before a storm. Experienced fighters could read a new arrival's threat level from the sound of his footsteps before they ever saw his face, and the block's collective assessment communicated itself through subtle changes in breathing, in movement, and in the animal awareness that no amount of captivity fully suppressed.Sierra felt it from her cell at mid-morning, two days after her fight with Austin, when the corridor outside registered a weight and a pace that did not belong to any of the established residents.She crossed to the narrow window set high in the exterior wall, the one that looked down into the intake yard rather than the corridor, and watched.He wa
The guards arrived at six-forty.Ryder heard them before he saw them, four sets of footsteps with the specific cadence of men executing a protocol rather than responding to an incident, which meant someone had noticed the northeast corner conversation on a review feed and dispatched a response at the administrative level. Not Tristan's direct order. Tristan would have come himself if he thought something significant was happening. This was a routine disruption, the kind Knox's security ran periodically to remind fighters that unauthorized gathering had a cost.It meant they had not heard enough to act on. It also meant the window had closed.Hunter moved first because Hunter was good at moving before being directed to, which tended to result in being handled with less physical emphasis. He walked toward the approaching guards with his hands visible and his expression carrying the cheerful blankness he deployed when navigating situations that required appearing less intelligent than he
The training facility had a blind spot Knox's security team had never bothered to close.Ryder had found it in his first month inside the Cage, back when finding weaknesses in his environment was the only productive thing left to do with a mind that had been built for strategy and given nothing useful to apply it to. The northeast corner, behind the structural column that held up the ventilation housing, sat in the overlap gap between camera one and camera two. The arc of each lens missed it by roughly four feet. Not enough space to do anything dramatic. Enough space to have a conversation that the building could not hear.He arrived there at six-fifteen, three minutes into the morning session, moving through his warm-up with the deliberate ordinariness of a man who had been doing the same routine for fourteen years and had no reason to deviate. Hunter was already at the column, working a resistance band through his shoulders with the focused expression of someone who genuinely needed
Scarlett left an hour before midnight.Sierra lay in the half-dark and did the thing she had trained herself not to do in three years of captivity. She thought about what she was fighting for. Not tactically, not strategically, but simply and without armor, the way people thought about things at midnight when the guards were between rotations and the building was as close to quiet as it ever got.A four-year-old girl in a residence she had never seen, being raised by the man who had destroyed Sierra's family and stolen the years that should have been hers. A child who had her mother's Royal blood and who had been given a version of the world by Knox that did not include any of the truth.She wondered what Kenzie believed. Whether she even knew she had a mother. What Knox had told her. Whether she asked about her mother, or whether she had been given a story that made the question unnecessary.Whether she was afraid.The bond stirred, reaching through the concrete the way it always did
The medical cell was quiet after Ryder left.Sierra lay on the cot and listened to the building settle around her, the distant corridor sounds, the hum of the ventilation system, and the specific quality of nighttime inside the cage that she had cataloged over three years until it was as familiar as her own breathing. Scarlett had dimmed the overhead light before leaving, and in the half-dark Sierra stared at the ceiling and let herself feel the full weight of what she had told Ryder.Kenzie.She had said her daughter's name aloud for the first time, and the word had a texture she had not anticipated, substantial and fragile at once, the way very important things tended to be. It had been in her mouth for weeks since Knox dropped it like a grenade during the medical assessment, and she had carried it carefully, keeping it contained, because saying it aloud meant making it fully real in a way that Knox's flat announcement had not managed to accomplish.Real was both better and worse th







