LOGINSerena's POV
I had expected a monster, the kind of monster that lived in the stories my mother used to tell me before bed, with sharp teeth and claws and eyes that glowed in the dark, but when the doors of the throne room opened and the Lycan King Alejandro walked in, I realized that I had been wrong about everything.
The throne room had been silent before he entered, so silent that I could hear the crackling of the fires in their iron sconces and the breathing of the nobles who lined the walls, but when he walked through the doors, the silence became something else entirely, something heavier and deeper and more terrifying than anything I had ever experienced.
He was tall, much taller than any man I had ever seen, and his shoulders were so broad that they seemed to fill the doorway, and his dark hair fell across his forehead in waves that looked like spilled ink, and his jaw was so sharp it could have been carved from stone.
But it was his eyes that stopped my heart, because they were gold, burning gold, like the sun had been trapped inside his skull and was trying to escape, and when those eyes swept across the room, every noble bowed their head because even the bravest among them could not meet the king's gaze.
I had expected a monster, something ancient and twisted, something that looked like the nightmares I had when I was a child and my stepmother locked me in the cellar. But he looked like a god, a cruel god who had never been told no, a god who had never wanted for anything because everything had always been given to him or taken by him or stolen by him.
And then his gaze landed on me, and everything stopped, the world stopped and time stopped and my heart stopped, and his eyes met mine, and he gasped.
It was a small sound, barely loud enough to hear, but I heard it because the room was so silent, and everyone else heard it too because suddenly the nobles were exchanging glances and whispering behind their hands, and the king's hand flew to his chest like something was hurting him, like something was tearing him apart from the inside.
I saw pain on his face, real pain, the kind of pain that made his golden eyes widen and his breath catch in his throat, and he staggered just one step, but the nobles saw that too, and they knew that the king was never weak and the king was never vulnerable, but he was vulnerable now because of me, a human sacrifice kneeling on the cold stone floor with chains biting into her wrists.
"The court will leave," he said, and his voice was low and rough, like he had been screaming for hours, and when no one moved, he repeated himself and his voice turned to ice, and the nobles fled like animals running from a forest fire, pushing and shoving and scrambling for the doors until the throne room was empty except for me and except for him.
He stood at the edge of the room with his chest heaving and his hands shaking, and he did not come closer, could not come closer, though I did not know how I knew that, I just knew it the way you know that fire is hot and ice is cold.
"You are my mate," he said, and his voice was hollow and empty, like someone had carved out his insides and left nothing but echoes. "The goddess has cursed me."
I knew what a mate was because every human knew, even the children, even the ones who had never seen a Lycan in their lives. The Lycans believed in a sacred bond, a connection between two souls that the Moon goddess herself had woven together, and that bond was rare and sacred and unbreakable, and he was saying that it had happened with me, a human sacrifice, a nobody, a girl who had been beaten and chained and dragged across the frozen border to die.
I thought it was a trick, because it had to be a trick, because there was no way the goddess would choose me for anything except suffering. He was going to hurt me and humiliate me and make me believe something beautiful so that the breaking would be worse, so that I would scream louder when he finally tore me apart.
"You are lying," I said, and my voice was smaller than I wanted it to be, and he flinched like my words had cut him.
"I am not lying," he said.
"Then why would the goddess choose me?" I asked, and my voice cracked on the last word. "I am nothing."
He looked at me then, really looked at me, and his golden eyes burned through my skin and my bones and every wall I had ever built to keep people out. "I do not know," he said, and his voice was softer now and almost gentle, though I did not trust gentle because gentle had always been a lie. "But she did."
He took a step toward me, and I flinched because my body remembered every beating and every slap and every time someone had come close and then hurt me, and he stopped immediately, like my flinch had been a wall he could not cross.
"I will not hurt you," he said.
"All monsters say that," I replied, because it was true, because my father had said it before he locked me in the cellar, and my stepmother had said it before she raised her hand, because everyone who had ever hurt me had promised not to first.
Something flickered across his face then, pain or recognition or something else I could not name. "You are not afraid of me," he said.
"I am terrified of you," I said, and my voice was steady even though my hands were shaking.
"Then why are you not begging?" he crossed his arms.
I looked at him, the monster and the king, the man who could kill me with one hand, and I thought about all the times I had begged in my life, begged my father to stop and begged my stepmother to be kind and begged the guards to loosen the chains, and none of it had ever worked because begging did not change anything, and begging only made them want to hurt me more.
"Because begging never helped before," I said.
He stared at me for a long time, and I stared back because I had nothing left to lose, because I was already kneeling on the cold stone floor with chains on my wrists and blood on my hands, and then he turned and walked away, and his boots echoed on the stone floor, and each step took him further from me and further from whatever had just happened between us.
He reached the doors and paused, and for a moment I thought he would look back, but he did not, he just stood there with his hand on the door and said, "A guard will take you to your chambers. You will not be harmed."
Then the doors closed behind him, and I was alone, kneeling on the cold stone floor with my chains and my fear and a thousand questions I did not know how to ask.
I did not understand what had just happened, not really and not in any way that made sense, but I knew that the monster had looked at me like I was the one who was broken, and like he saw something in me that I had forgotten was there, and like he wanted to put me back together even though he did not know how.
The doors opened again, and a guard entered, a large wolf with cold eyes and a scar across his throat, and he did not speak but just pointed toward the hallway, and I stood up on legs that shook and followed him out of the throne room.
Behind me, the fires burned low, and the shadows grew long, but I could feel the king's eyes on my back, burning through me, even though he was not there.
The second time I woke, the fire had burned low, and the room was darker, and the weight of the blankets was heavy on my chest. I did not know how much time had passed. Maybe hours or days, but I knew that Alejandro was still there.He had not moved from the chair.But he had changed. His head was bowed, and his eyes were closed, and for a moment I thought he was asleep. His breathing was slow and steady, his hands were limp in his lap, and the tension in his shoulders had eased, just a little. The firelight cast shadows across his face, and I could see the exhaustion written there, in the lines around his eyes and the set of his jaw.Then his eyes opened, and they found mine immediately. It was like he had been waiting for me to wake, like he had been listening to my breathing and counting my heartbeats and holding himself together by sheer will."You should not be awake," he said. His voice was low and rough, and there was no anger in it,
Alejandro's voice came from far away, muffled, like I was hearing it from underwater. I tried to answer, but my tongue was heavy, and my lips would not move."Someone help her!" Another voice yelled.That was Doña Beatriz's voice, sharp with fear. I heard chairs scraping against the floor and footsteps running toward me."Serena, stay with me."Alejandro's face appeared above mine, his golden eyes wide with panic, and his hands were on my face, warm and shaking.I tried to say something, but the darkness was already swallowing me, and then there was nothing at all.I woke to the sound of roaring.It was not an animal roar, and it was not thunder. It was Alejandro's voice, low and loud and full of rage. It echoed off the stone walls and shook the chandeliers and sent the nobles scrambling for the doors."Who did this?" he shouted, and his voice was ice. "Who poisoned her?"I tried to open my eye
Alejandro finally broke the silence."Let's go back now. We've done enough tours for today."I nodded. Because I was already exhausted both from walking and seeing this dungeon.Alejandro walked me back to my room, stood for just a bit at my door, as if he was thinking hard whether he should stay or not. I could feel his eyes looking down at my body with strong desires and needs. But his facial expression showed that he was fighting to push his desires down, and he had to move before they took control over him.He said goodnight, turned and left in quick steps.I walked into my room, sat on the bed, and pressed my hands to my chest that was pounding so hard. I thought of how he looked at me. Like he was tired of holding back his desires, and he was ready to feel every inch of my body, and claim me as his fully. I thought of how his lips had claimed mine, the first night he touched me, before he stopped himself. I touched my lips, and
The ring stayed on my finger for three days.I did not take it off, not even when I slept, or when I bathed. The silver was warm against my skin, and the weight of it was comforting, and every time I looked down at my hand, I thought of Alejandro's mother and the life she had lived and the son she had left behind. I caught myself touching it sometimes, twisting it around my finger, and I did not know if that was a habit or a need.Ramona had told me that the ring was a symbol of the bond, but it felt like something more. It felt like a promise, and I did not know if I was ready to make promises, but I was not ready to let go of it either. Every morning when I woke up, I checked to make sure it was still there, and every night before I fell asleep, I pressed it against my chest and thought about the king who had given it to me.On the fourth day, I went looking for Alejandro.I found him in the throne room, alone, sitting on his throne with h
The morning after I moved into my new room, Ramona came to visit me.She tried to walk inside without knocking as usual, like she had lived in my room for years instead of just visiting. But the door did not open and she had to knock.When I opened the door, she had a face of surprise, because she must have expected the room to be the same as the previous one. But it was not.She walked in, with her silver braid hanging over her shoulder. Her grey eyes were sharp as always, but there was something softer about her today, something almost gentle. She carried a small wooden box in her hands, carved with symbols I did not recognize, and she set it on the table by the window before she sat down.She looked around the room, at the big fire burning in the hearth, at the window looking out over the mountains, and at the bed with its soft blankets and plump pillows. She nodded, like she approved of what she saw, and then she sat down in the chair by the window and looked at me."You are settl
Three days passed after Doña Beatriz's visit, and my body was finally starting to heal. The shaking had stopped, the color had returned to my skin, and I could walk from my bed to the window without feeling like I was going to collapse with every step I took. The cold was still in my bones, but it was fading, and the cough that had rattled my chest was getting quieter.The boy Mateo had come to see me once. He was shy and quiet, with his mother's hand on his shoulder. He had thanked me in a small voice, and I had told him that he did not need to thank me, that I was just glad he was alive. He had hugged me before he left, quick and fierce, and I had felt something warm spread through my chest.The nobles still whispered when I walked past, but something was different now. Some of them looked away when I caught their eyes, and some of them nodded, with just a small dip of their heads. Some of them still sneered, but there were fewer of those now. The story had spread through the castle
We sat across from each other, and neither of us spoke. The silence was heavier than any words.A servant came to my room the evening after my conversation with Ramona, and she was not carrying the usual tray of bread and cheese.She stood in the doorway with her hands folded in front of her, and s
I found Ramona in the library the morning after Felipe brought Lady Veronica to the castle.The library was quiet this morning, nothing like the day I had seen Alejandro standing in the shadow of the bookshelf, watching me with those burning golden eyes.
I woke to the smell of bread and honey, and for a moment I forgot where I was.The mattress was soft beneath me, and the blankets were warm, and the fire had been relit sometime while I was sleeping, casting orange light across the ceiling in dancing shadows. I
Serena's POV The snow burned my knees through the holes in my trousers, and I had been kneeling for what felt like hours, though time moved differently when you were waiting to die, and I had been waiting to die for as long as I could remember.The chains bit into my wrists, and the metal was so c







