Mag-log inThe room had a fire, and that was the first thing I noticed when the guard shoved me through the doorway and closed the door behind me with a click that echoed in my ears like the sound of a cage locking shut.
It was a real fire, with logs burning and flames dancing and heat pouring off it in waves that made my frozen skin ache because I had not been warm in weeks, not since the guards had taken me from my father's house and put me in chains and dragged me north across the frozen border.
I heard the lock click and I heard the guard's footsteps retreat down the hallway, and then I was alone in a room that looked nothing like the dungeon I had been expecting.
There was a bed, a real bed with blankets and pillows and a wooden frame, and a table with food, bread and cheese and a pitcher of water and a cup, and a wardrobe against the wall that I did not open because I did not trust it, and a window set high in the wall, too high to reach and too small to climb through.
But the fire was the most confusing thing of all, because why would they give me a fire when I was a sacrifice, when I was supposed to be in a dungeon with chains on the walls and rats in the corners and water dripping from the ceiling?
That was what I had prepared for, what I had braced myself for during the long cold journey north, the dark and the cold and the pain that I knew was coming. But this room had warmth and food and a bed, and I did not understand any of it, because monsters were not supposed to be kind, and kindness from a monster was always a trap.
I stood in the center of the room and waited for the torture to begin, because I knew it would, because it always did, because every time someone had been kind to me in my life, it was only so they could hurt me worse later.
I waited for the door to open and the guards to come back and drag me somewhere dark to do whatever they did to sacrifices, but nothing happened, the fire crackled and the snow fell outside the window and the room was so quiet that I could hear my own heartbeat pounding in my ears.
I pressed my back against the headboard of the bed and pulled my knees to my chest, but I did not sit on the bed, I sat against it with my back to the wall, because that was how I had slept at home, back to the wall and eyes on the door, never fully asleep and never fully safe.
I did not trust the warmth, I did not trust the food and I did not trust the bed, because I had been beaten too many times to believe in kindness, because every time someone had been kind to me, it had been a lie.
My stepmother smiled before she hit me, and my father said kind things before he locked me in the cellar, and the guards were gentle before they put me in chains, and I had learned that kindness was a weapon that people used to make the hurting worse. I would not fall for it again, not here, not in this castle full of monsters who saw me as nothing more than a human whore to be used and broken and thrown away.
Voices came from outside my door, nobles laughing, and I held my breath so they would not hear me, so they would not know that I was listening.
"The king's human whore," one of them said, and I could hear the smile in his voice. "Did you see him, kneeling in the snow like a dog?"
"I heard the king looked at him, really looked at him, like he mattered," another voice said, and this one sounded curious, almost interested.
"He does not matter," the first voice replied, and the words cut into me like knives. "He is a sacrifice, and he will be dead within a month."
"Sooner, if Ramiro has anything to say about it," someone else added, and then they laughed, and their footsteps faded down the hallway, and I was alone again.
The king's human whore, that was what they called me, not a person but a thing, a toy, something to be used and broken and thrown away like all the sacrifices who had come before me.
I had heard worse in my life, had been called worse by my stepmother and my father and the people who had beaten me, but coming from them, in this place, surrounded by stone and snow and monsters, it felt different, it felt like a promise of the pain that was still to come.
I looked at the food on the table, the bread and cheese and water, and my stomach growled because I had not eaten in two days, because the journey north had been long and the guards had given me nothing but scraps of moldy bread and water that tasted like rust.
I wanted to eat, I wanted to drink, and I wanted to fill my empty stomach with something warm and good, but I did not trust it, because what if it was poisoned, what if it was drugged, and what if they wanted me weak and compliant and easy to break?
I turned away from the table and pressed my back harder against the headboard, and I told myself that I would not eat and I would not drink and I would not sleep, because that was how I survived, by giving them nothing, by taking up as little space as possible, by being so small and so quiet that they forgot I existed.
The fire burned low as the hours passed, and the room grew dark, and the door did not open, and no one came, no guards and no nobles and no king, just me alone in the darkness, waiting for something I could not name.
I did not know if this was mercy or cruelty, because mercy was a word I had learned to distrust, and cruelty was the only thing I had ever known.
But I was still alive, and somehow, against all the odds and all the years of pain and all the people who had tried to break me, that felt like the beginning of something, though I did not know what, though I could not have named it if I tried.
I only knew that I was going to find out.
Sergio's POVI thought about Leandro, sitting on his throne with his cold eyes and his cold heart. He had chosen the law over mercy, and he had chosen the court over me.I had trusted him, and I had believed that he was changing, and that he was becoming something better. But I had been very wrong.I knew I had to go back inside. So I turned, and I started walking toward the castle gates.And then I saw him.Leandro was standing in the snow, with his golden eyes fixed on me, and his dark coat blending into the shadows. His face was pale, and his jaw was tight, and he looked like he had been standing there for a long time."Sergio," he said.I stopped walking."I tried to find you," he said. "I looked for you after you left, and I wanted to explain.""There is nothing to explain," I cut him off."There is," he said. "I did not want to do it. I really did not want to exile her, but I had
Sergio's POVI stayed against the door for what felt like hours, but it was probably only minutes. The silence in the castle pressed down on me, heavy and cold, and I could not shake the image of Leticia's face from my mind. The way she had looked at me, and the way she had smiled even as they dragged her away.Then it hit me, that I had not said goodbye.I had not held her one last time. I had not told her that I would find her, that I would bring her back, and that I would not let her disappear into the frozen waste without knowing that someone cared.I pushed myself off the door, and I ran.The door slammed behind me, and I was running as fast as I could.My bare feet were cold against the stone floor of the hallway, but I did not care. I did not care about anything except catching up to Leticia, before they dragged her out into the frozen waste.I had to say goodbye, and I had to see her one more time.My heart was pounding so hard that I could barely hear my own thoughts. I had
Sergio's povLeticia did not flinch. She knelt on the cold stone floor with her hands bound and her wrists bleeding, and she looked at Leandro like she was not afraid of him."I betrayed a castle full of monsters," she said. "And I am not sorry for that. I am sorry that I got caught, and I am sorry that I will not be able to send more warnings. But I am not sorry for trying to save lives."Leandro's hands curled into fists on the arms of his throne."You knew the punishment for treason," he said."I knew," Leticia said. "I also knew that if I did nothing, people would die, children would die, and families would be torn apart. And I could not live with that."She looked at me, and her grey eyes were sad."I am sorry, Sergio," she said. "I did not mean to drag you into this.""I sentence you to exile," Leandro said. "You will be taken to the frozen waste and left there. If you survive, do not return."
Sergio's POVThe morning started like any other, but then, the shouting started.I woke to the pale grey light filtering through the window, and I lay in bed for a few moments, listening to the silence. Leandro was gone, called away to deal with some matter I did not ask about, but the warmth of his body still lingered on the sheets beside me.I dressed slowly, and I walked to the table, and I ate my breakfast without waiting for permission. The bread was warm, and the tea was sweet, and I thought about how far I had come.The ring on my finger caught the light as I reached for the cup of tea. I still could not believe it was real sometimes, that I was allowed to have something so precious, or that someone had given it to me without expecting anything in return. I twisted it around my finger, and I remembered the way Leandro had looked at me when he gave it to me, with his golden eyes that were soft and uncertain, like he was afraid I might refuse.But I had not refused. I had taken
Sergio's POVThe days after the confession passed differently than the ones before.I noticed small things that I had never noticed before. I noticed the way the morning light turned the snow on the windowsill into something that looked like diamonds, the way the tea tasted different depending on which servant brewed it, and the way the guards outside my door shifted their weight from one foot to the other when they thought no one was watching.I had spent so much of my life hiding, making myself small, and not noticing anything because noticing meant being present, and being present meant being vulnerable.But I was tired of hiding.I started keeping a small notebook on the table beside my bed. Every morning, I wrote down one thing I was grateful for. Some days it was the warmth of the fire, and other days it was the taste of honey in my tea. Once, it was simply the fact that I had woken up without a nightmare.It felt strange at first, like I was pretending to be someone I was not.
Sergio's POVLeandro noticed I was still shaking.The tea was gone, and the morning light had grown brighter, but my body had not stopped trembling, because the thoughts of the nightmare still clung to my skin like frost, and I could not shake it off no matter how hard I tried.Leandro watched me with those golden eyes, and I could see the worry painted all over his face. The dark circles under his eyes looked deeper than before, and his hair was still messy from the night, and he looked like he had aged years in just a few hours."You need to warm up," he said. "You are still cold."I looked down at my hands, and they were pale, and my fingers were trembling. He was right. The nightmare had left something behind, a chill that had nothing to do with the temperature of the room."I will prepare a bath," he said. He stood up and walked to the door. "Stay here."I almost laughed, because obviously I was not go
The days after the nightmare blurred together like watercolors left out in the rain. I stopped counting the hours, stopped trying to track the sun through the frost-covered window, and stopped caring about anything except the slow, steady rhythm of survival.The servants came and went with trays of
The days after I found the hidden room passed slowly, each one bleeding into the next until I lost track of time completely.The fire burned and died and was relit. The servants came and went with trays of food I did not trust. The nobles laughed outside my door, and Ramiro's name floated through t
After Leticia left, I sat in the silence for a long time, with her words echoing in my head like the ringing of a bell that would not stop. "No one cannot save anyone." I did not know if she was warning me or telling me the truth, but either way, it settled into my chest like a stone, heavy and col
I woke the morning after my meeting with Ramiro, and the first thing I saw was the tray of food on the table, still untouched from the day before.The fire had burned low while I slept, and the room was cold enough that I could see my own breath hanging in the air. My back ached from pressing again







