🦋ALTHEA
The poison stared back at , stirring in the tea like sothing living. I could have sworn I saw it swirling in the beige beverage, dark tendrils curling through the liquid like smoke, and the wrongness of it made my stomach turn even as my hands trembled around the warm ceramic. The cup felt almost comforting against my palms, and that terrified more than anything else—the fact that I was considering it, that so part of wanted the easy way out badly enough to ignore every instinct screaming that this was wrong.
I lifted the cup slowly, bringing it closer to my lips. The steam curled upward, bitter and tallic, and I could sll it now—the poison beneath the tea’s surface, acrid and unmistakable. My breath hitched, my hands shaking harder, and I closed my eyes, trying to find the courage to either drink it or set it down, because staying frozen in this mont of indecision felt worse than either choice.
The door slamd open.
I jerked so violently the tea sloshed against the rim of the cup, and my head snapped toward the entrance where the Hell Hound stood frad in the doorway. He was tall, imposing, his masked face angled directly toward , and his presence filled the room like a gathering storm—dark, suffocating, and utterly inescapable. On his shoulder perched the raven, its black eyes fixed on with an intelligence that made my skin prickle, and for a heartbeat, none of us moved.
Then the bird launched itself into the air.
I gasped, flinching back against the headboard as it flew directly at , its wings beating the air with sharp, deliberate strokes that sent my heart hamring against my ribs. It didn’t attack—instead, its talons closed around the cup in my hands and wrenched it from my grip with a force that made cry out. The tea spilled across the floor in a dark, spreading stain that looked almost black against the stone, and the raven circled once before returning to the Hell Hound’s shoulder as if it had never left, as if saving my life was just another task to be completed without fanfare or acknowledgnt.
I stared at the bird, my chest heaving, my hands still trembling from where the cup had been torn away. The poison soaked into the cracks between the stones, and I couldn’t tell if I felt relieved or cheated or simply more confused than I’d been monts before. My throat was tight, my mind blank, and when the Hell Hound stepped into the room with heavy, deliberate footfalls, the door swinging shut behind him with a dull, final thud, I realized I’d stopped breathing entirely.
"Who gave you that?" he demanded, his voice low and cold enough to make frost seem warm by comparison.
I swallowed hard, forcing my voice to work. "A woman," I said, my words coming out hoarse. "Red hair, hazel eyes. Regal bearing. She brought maids with her carrying trays of food and tea."
"And she told you it was poisoned," he said, his tone flat and matter-of-fact, as if we were discussing the weather rather than my attempted suicide.
"Yes," I said, unable to look away from his masked face. "She said I’d be given rcy because I looked pathetic enough to deserve it."
The silence that followed was heavy enough to crush bone. He stood there, utterly still, and I could feel the weight of his judgnt pressing down on like a physical thing. When he finally moved, it was slow and deliberate, each step asured as he crossed the room toward . I pressed myself harder against the headboard, but there was nowhere to go, no escape from the predator closing in on cornered prey.
He stopped at the edge of the bed, towering over , his shadows pooling at his feet like obedient hounds waiting for a command. "I have doubts," he said, his voice quiet but no less lethal for its softness, "about you being the Silvermoth."
My breath caught in my throat, but I forced myself to hold his gaze—or what I imagined was his gaze behind that mask. He tilted his head, studying with an intensity that made my skin prickle with awareness. "The Silvermoth is a ghost," he continued, his tone conversational in a way that was sohow more terrifying than outright threats. "A shadow that moves through Allied Pack territory like smoke, killing gammas and freeing Vargans without leaving a trace. A legend. A symbol of hope for my people."
He leaned down slightly, bringing his masked face closer to mine. "And you," he said, his voice dropping to sothing dark and cutting, "are a broken oga who tried to kill herself the mont things got difficult. You look nothing like the Silvermoth. You act nothing like her. And if I find out you’re lying—if I discover this is so elaborate sche cooked up by your mother or the High Alpha—"
He let the threat hang in the air, unfinished but perfectly clear.
I clenched my jaw, anger flaring hot and sudden in my chest despite the fear coiling around my spine. "I’m branded," I said, the words coming out sharper than I’d intended. "Property of the High Alpha. Even if you kill , I still belong to him."
The reaction was imdiate and visceral.
The Hell Hound went utterly still, his entire body tensing in a way that made the air in the room feel suddenly thinner, harder to breathe. His shadows surged upward, writhing and coiling like living things responding to so unspoken fury, and I felt it then—the bond, pulling hard and sharp between us, a tether I couldn’t see but could feel with every fiber of my being. It yanked at sothing deep in my chest, painful and insistent, and I gasped at the sudden intensity of it.
"You belong to no one," he said, his voice dropping to sothing barely above a growl, rough and dangerous and absolutely certain. "Not to him. Not to anyone."
He leaned in closer, close enough that I could feel the cold radiating off him, close enough that if he’d been unmasked I would have been able to see every detail of his face. "You are mine," he said, and the word dripped with dark possession, with an ownership that had nothing to do with affection and everything to do with claim and control and refusal to yield what fate had bound to him. "The mont that bond snapped into place, you beca mine. And I will keep it that way—keep you that way—even if all I possess is your wretched corpse."
The words should have terrified . They did terrify . But sothing else threaded through the fear, sothing hot and electric that made my pulse spike and my breath catch for entirely different reasons. The bond sang between us, a living thing that responded to his declaration with a resonance I could feel in my bones, and I hated it—hated that my body recognized him as mate even when my mind recoiled from everything he represented.
"You’d have no use for my corpse," I said, my voice steadier than I had any right to expect given the circumstances.
He went still again, but this ti it was different—this ti I felt his attention sharpen, felt the weight of his focus zero in on with an intensity that made my skin flush hot despite the chill emanating from his shadows. "Wouldn’t I?" he asked softly, and there was sothing almost curious in his tone, sothing that suggested he was genuinely considering the question.
I swallowed hard, my heart hamring against my ribs. "A dead mate is just a dead body," I said, forcing the words out even though every instinct scread at to stay silent, to not provoke him further. "You can’t interrogate a corpse. Can’t use it to get information. Can’t leverage it against the Allied Packs or the High Alpha."
"No," he agreed, his voice still that dangerous soft. "But I could mount it on the fortress walls as a ssage. I could send pieces of it back to your mother in a box. I could display it in my throne room as a reminder of what happens to those who lie to ."
The casual way he listed the possibilities made my stomach turn, but I refused to look away, refused to give him the satisfaction of seeing flinch. "Then you’d be just like them," I said, my voice quiet but steady. "Just another monster using Vargans—using —as a tool for revenge for atrocities they did not commit." With him, my mouth moved before my self preservation could intervene.
The silence that followed felt like standing on the edge of a blade. His shadows stilled, the room going so quiet I could hear my own heartbeat thundering in my ears. Then, slowly, he straightened, pulling back just enough that I could breathe again without inhaling the cold that clung to him like a second skin.
"I am nothing like them," he said, his voice flat and final. "Because when I kill, I do it for a reason. When I claim sothing as mine, I keep it. And when I give my word, I keep that too
Reviews
All reviews (0)