The chain around Shayla’s neck was heavier than her own body.
She knelt inside the iron cage, wrists cuffed, ankles bound. Cold metal dug into her skin. Her chest rose in quick, shallow breaths, each one sharper than the last. The Dark Room smelled of wine, gold, and blood—the scent of people who could buy her with a flick of a paddle. She did not look up. She could not.
The whispers of the crowd crawled along her spine, making her shiver. Royals in silk and velvet laughed softly, voices low but cutting. She had learned early that the moment someone looked at her, she became their game, their prize, their entertainment.
The auction committee stepped forward.
“No time to waste,” the chief declared. “Tonight’s offering—Shayla. Human-born. Forbidden breed.”
Her name echoed in the chamber like a verdict. The ripple of interest ran through the audience. She gripped the cage bars tightly, knuckles white, jaw clenched. If she cried, they would laugh. If she begged, they would bid higher. She stayed silent.
“One billion,” a voice called from the upper balcony.
She flinched. She had expected this. She had always expected worse.
“Two billion,” another voice answered.
The numbers climbed fast. The crowd’s excitement, mingled with greed, made her stomach twist. She clenched her teeth. Survival had always been her instinct, but this—this was different.
Above, a figure leaned lazily on the railing. A black robe flowed around him, bare feet against the ice that had begun creeping along the marble floor. The cold air wrapped around him like a cloak, thick and suffocating. Breath caught in her throat. Heart froze.
Jude Millions.
Her chest tightened. He didn’t raise a bid. He didn’t move. He didn’t speak. He simply watched, his eyes sharp, calm, and dangerous.
“Three billion!”
Shayla’s pulse raced. The room shifted, tension slicing through the air. If she had thought her life was dangerous before, she was about to learn the difference between fear and true terror.
Then the temperature changed. Ice crept along the floors, curling up walls and pillars. Chandeliers rattled. Panic spread. Royals fell to their knees, trembling. Everyone—except the Spectres.
A shadow moved toward her cage. Bare feet touched the ice, which hissed faintly under each step. She dropped her head. She bowed instinctively.
A hand waved. The padlock shattered. The cage door fell away. Shayla was flung forward, sliding across the icy floor until she landed at his feet, shivering violently.
She dared not look up.
The man’s voice, low and deep, filled the room.
“One hundred and fifty billion.”
Shock erupted. Paddles froze mid-air. Gasps filled the chamber. Her stomach turned. Her mind raced. Who was this man? Why had he bought her? What did he want?
He did not touch her. He did not smile. He did not shout. Yet every nerve in her body screamed danger.
She had survived auctions, beatings, and cruelty before. She had learned to endure. But this—this presence—was unlike anything she had faced.
And now, she belonged to him.
The whispers around her faded. The clinking of wine glasses, the rustle of silk, the scratching of paddles—all muted by the weight of his presence. He did not need to move to make the room obey him. Power radiated from him like heat from fire, and she felt it down to her bones.
For a moment, Shayla allowed herself one thought: If I survive this night, I may survive anything.
But even as that thought formed, fear reminded her how small she truly was, and how powerless.
The Dark Room had ended.
For now, she had entered something far more dangerous.