The Alpha's Command

1121 Words
The throne room was built to destroy confidence. Lyra understood that the moment the doors swung open and swallowed her whole. Everything in it had been designed with a single purpose, to make whoever stood at its center feel small, insignificant, and utterly without options. The ceilings climbed four stories high with iron chandeliers dripping with black candles. The walls were dark stone carved with the history of the Silver Claw Pack in brutal relief, wolves mid-battle, wolves mid-kill, wolves standing over the fallen bodies of enemies with their heads thrown back in victory. The floor beneath her feet was polished obsidian that reflected the candlelight like still black water. And at the far end of it, on a throne that looked like it had been torn directly from the mountain and dragged inside, sat Alpha Draven Zarek. He had not rushed. He had walked ahead of the guards who escorted Lyra through the palace corridors at a pace that suggested he had somewhere more important to be and was simply passing through. She had been given no time to prepare, no moment to collect herself, just cold stone hallways and the sound of her own heartbeat and then these massive doors opening and now this. The throne room was full. Pack members lined the walls on both sides, warriors and advisors and palace staff, all of them watching her walk the length of that black floor toward their Alpha with expressions ranging from cold curiosity to open contempt. She felt every single gaze like a separate weight pressing down on her shoulders and she straightened under all of it and kept walking. She refused to shuffle. She refused to look at the floor. If she was going to be inspected, she would be inspected standing upright. Draven watched her approach with his elbow resting on the arm of the throne and two fingers pressed against his jaw, a posture so casually authoritative it made her teeth ache. Those gold eyes tracked her the entire length of the room without blinking, without wavering, with that same absolute and infuriating patience she had already come to recognize as simply the way he existed in the world. Like nothing surprised him. Like everything was already decided and the rest of the universe was simply catching up. She stopped at the base of the steps leading up to the throne. Nobody told her to stop. Her body simply did it, some deep instinctive recognition of the boundary between his space and hers, or more accurately, between his space and the space he permitted others to occupy temporarily. Silence stretched across the throne room like a held breath. "Lyra Vale." His voice carried without effort, filling the enormous space the way heat fills a room, gradually and then completely. "Omega. Sold to Silver Claw Pack in settlement of a debt owed by Viktor Hale of the outer territory." It was not a question. It was a recitation of facts, delivered without inflection, without cruelty, and somehow that was worse than cruelty would have been. At least cruelty would have acknowledged that what was being described was a person and not a transaction. "Yes," she said. Her voice came out clear. Small victory. His gaze moved over her once more, that slow, deliberate inventory, and then he straightened on the throne and the quality of attention in the room shifted immediately, everyone around her going slightly more rigid, slightly more alert, responding to whatever subtle signal their Alpha had just transmitted. "She belongs to me," Draven said. Simple. Flat. Absolute. A sound from the left side of the room, sharp and quickly smothered. Lyra did not look for the source, but she filed it away. Someone had reacted to those words with something other than indifference and in a palace full of people who wanted her gone, that was information worth keeping. Kieran Blackcrest stepped forward from his position at Draven's right, the Beta Commander's expression carefully neutral in a way that suggested considerable effort was being spent maintaining it. "My Alpha, protocol dictates that new acquisitions are assessed by the household staff and assigned appropriate quarters in the servant wing before any permanent decisions are made." "Her quarters will be in my wing." Draven did not raise his voice. He did not need to. The words simply landed with the particular finality of a door being closed. "Adjacent chamber. Effective tonight." The silence that followed had a different quality than the silence before. This one had texture. Lyra could feel the shock moving through the room in a wave, feel the glances being exchanged over her head, feel the weight of what had just been decided pressing against the air from every direction. No slave had ever been placed in the Alpha's private wing. She understood that without being told. She understood it from the way Kieran's jaw tightened and from the way the whispering started at the edges of the room the moment Draven's attention shifted to the advisor now approaching with a scroll, and she understood it most clearly from the figure she finally located on the left side of the room. A woman. Beautiful in the way of things designed specifically for the wound. Dark hair and sharp cheekbones and a mouth currently pressed into a line so controlled it had gone white at the corners. Her eyes found Lyra's in the throne room and the hatred in them was not the slow-building kind. It was already fully formed. Already certain. Already decided. Zara Black had clearly been expecting many things today. Lyra Vale had not been one of them. Draven rose from the throne and the room shifted with him, attention and energy orienting toward him automatically the way a compass finds north. He descended the steps without looking at Lyra and stopped beside her, close enough that his warmth reached her skin through the thin fabric of her dress, and he spoke quietly enough that only she could hear. "You will be shown to your chamber. You will eat. You will rest." A pause, just long enough to mean something. "And tomorrow you will begin learning exactly what it means to belong to me." He walked past her toward the side door without waiting for a response. Lyra stood on the black floor of the throne room with her pulse loud in her ears and the weight of every eye in the room pressing down on her and Zara's gaze burning into her profile like something lit from within. Then Mira appeared at her elbow, small and warm and smelling of kitchen bread, and leaned close to whisper. "Whatever you do," Mira breathed, "do not let her catch you alone."
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