Sold to the Devil
Nobody tells you what it feels like to be sold. They do not warn you about the silence that follows, the way the world keeps moving around you like nothing has changed while everything inside you is collapsing floor by floor.
I found out at dawn.
By sunset, I was already gone.
The carriage smelled of leather and Viktor Hale's cologne, that thick suffocating sweetness he drowned himself in every morning like it could cover what lived underneath. A coward's smell. A liar's smell. The smell of a man who had looked at his dead brother's only daughter and seen nothing but a number with legs. She had lived under his roof for six years, since her parents died. Six years of cooking his meals, washing his floors, shrinking herself small enough to be invisible, and in the end it had not mattered at all. He had sold her anyway. Twenty years old and already finished. Already traded away before the morning, the tea went cold like she was furniture he no longer had use for.
Lyra Vale pressed her spine against the carriage wall and kept her breathing steady.
Her wrists were not bound. Viktor did not need a rope for that. He had used something far more effective, the quiet promise made over breakfast while Talia smiled from the doorway and Aunt Helena stared at the grain of the kitchen table and refused to look up. If Lyra ran, Helena would suffer for it. If Lyra screamed, Helena would suffer for it. It was simple and surgical cruelty, the kind that required no effort because it targeted the one thing Lyra had never managed to cut out of herself, no matter how many times this family had given her reason to.
She still cared. Even now. Even after that.
She hated herself a little for it.
Outside the iron-barred window, the landscape had undergone a change. The familiar dense woods of the outer space had given way to something older and wider and colder in a way that had nothing to do with temperature. This land felt ancient. Predator land. The kind of territory that had belonged to apex wolves long before anyone thought to draw borders across it, and the earth itself seemed to know it, with stone formations rising through sparse trees like warnings. The sky above was a deep, bruised purple, and the full moon was already climbing it, as if it owned the night.
She knew where she was being taken. Everyone in the Lycan Dominion knew of Silver Claw Territory the way all living things carry knowledge of what can end them. Alpha Draven Zarek. The Wolf King. A name never spoken above a whisper and always accompanied by that particular stillness that falls over a room when someone says something true and terrible out loud. His reputation had not been built through politics or ceremony. It had been built through years of deliberate and precise violence, through border wolves who crossed his land without permission and came back in pieces, through rival Alphas who challenged him once and were never seen again, through an iron throne room where judgment was passed without hesitation and without mercy and without the slightest interest in appeal.
Viktor had borrowed money from this man.
Viktor had failed to repay it.
And when Draven's collectors arrived and found nothing left in the Hale household worth taking, Viktor had looked across the breakfast table at his dead brother's omega daughter and solved his problem in a single breath.
A girl for a cleared debt.
The fury that moved through Lyra had teeth and she left it. Fury was cleaner than grief and steadier than fear, and she needed something solid to hold onto right now. She pressed her nails into her palm until the sharpness grounded her, and she breathed through the rage, telling herself the same thing she had been telling herself since dawn.
Do not break. Not here. Not in front of him.
The carriage slowed.
She turned to the window without deciding to. Some animal instinct pulled her gaze outward before her mind could catch up, and the palace gates came into view first, massive iron structures with wolves frozen mid-snarl at the top of each post, jaws open and permanent and patient. Beyond them the palace rose against the darkening sky, three full stories of black stone and burning torchlight, cold and sovereign and built entirely for the purpose of making everything that came near it feel crushingly small.
The carriage rolled through the gates and into the courtyard and the scent hit her like a wall.
Wild. Dark. Ancient. The concentrated musk of an apex predator soaked so deep into stone and earth and wood over generations that the air itself felt thick with dominance, and her omega blood responded before she could stop it. A slow, treacherous heat uncoiled low in her stomach, instinctive and humiliating, her biology reading the territory and answering it the way it had been built to answer, and she pressed her nails harder into her palm and hated every inherited instinct she had ever been born with.
Then she saw him and forgot about everything else entirely.
He stood at the top of the palace steps with both hands clasped behind his back, perfectly still, watching the carriage roll to a stop with the particular patience of a man who had never once needed to chase anything. Dark hair. A jaw carved from something harder than stone. Shoulders that filled the doorway behind him without effort. And he was looking directly at her window, not at Viktor climbing down from the driver's seat, not at the guards forming up in the courtyard, at her window specifically, with gold eyes that burned steady and absolute through the iron bars as distance was not a concept that applied to him.
Like he had known exactly where she would be sitting before the carriage even arrived.
The door swung open. Viktor's hand closed around her arm and pulled her out into the cold night air and her feet found the cobblestones, and she made herself stand straight, and she made herself breathe, and she made herself look up at the man descending the steps toward her because she refused to be caught looking at the ground.
He stopped three feet away.
Up close, he was worse. Up close, those gold eyes were not just burning, they were reading, moving across her face and down her body and back up again with the slow unhurried assessment of a man taking inventory of something that already belonged to him. No lust in it. Something colder and more absolute than lust. Ownership was already decided before she had spoken a single word.
The courtyard had gone completely silent.
Draven Zarek looked at Viktor for exactly one second, the kind of look that made Viktor's hand drop from Lyra's arm immediately, and then those gold eyes came back to her and stayed.
"She is not what I expected," he said quietly. Not an insult. Not a compliment. A simple observation delivered in a voice so low and even that it moved through the silence like something with weight.
Lyra held his gaze. "And you are exactly what I expected."
The words came out before she could stop them. She felt Viktor go rigid beside her. She heard one of the guards draw a sharp breath. She watched something move in Draven's expression, fast and unreadable, there and gone before she could name it.
He was quiet for a long moment.
Then he leaned forward, just slightly, just enough that his voice dropped below the hearing of everyone else in the courtyard, and what he said next turned the blood in her veins to ice.
"Good," Draven murmured, his gold eyes dropping once to her mouth before returning to hers. "Then you already know there is no point in fighting what happens next."