Chapter 3: The Inner Chamber

986 Words
The door sealed with a low, grinding sound that echoed through the stone corridor. Seraphine didn’t move. She stood where the guards left her, shoulders squared, senses sharp, cataloguing everything the narrow passage, the uneven walls etched with ancient claw marks, the faint glow of runes embedded in the stone. A containment room. Not a prison meant to hold humans. Meant to hold wolves. Interesting. She took a step forward. The air shifted immediately, pressure brushing against her skin like invisible fingers. The runes pulsed faintly, reacting to her presence. Seraphine frowned. “I really should be dead by now,” she murmured. She followed the corridor down until it opened into a circular chamber carved deep into the mountain. A single torch burned on the wall. No windows. No doors except the one she’d entered. And a low stone platform at the center. A holding room. Seraphine exhaled slowly and leaned back against the wall, crossing her arms. Panic would be useless. Escape would come later. For now, she waited. Lucien barely made it out of sight before his control cracked. He braced one hand against a tree, breath coming heavier than it had in centuries. His chest felt tight too tight. His heartbeat thundered in his ears, fast and unfamiliar. Wrong. His wolf paced violently beneath his skin, snarling, clawing. Mine. Lucien shut his eyes, jaw clenched. “No,” he muttered. “Absolutely not.” He had felt attraction before. Desire. Even love, once long ago. This was different. This was instinct without reason. Power without permission. He straightened slowly, forcing the sensation down, locking it behind iron control. The pack needed him steady. Focused. Not unraveling over a strange human girl with a dangerous scent and defiant eyes. Yet no matter how hard he tried, he could still feel her. Not her location. Her presence. Like a pulse beneath his ribs. Lucien turned sharply and headed back toward the mountain. Seraphine heard him before she saw him. Heavy footsteps. Controlled. Angry. The door opened. Lucien stepped inside and froze. The torch flickered violently, the flame flaring bright before settling again. The runes along the walls glowed brighter, humming softly. Lucien’s eyes snapped to them. They had never reacted like this before. Seraphine straightened, instantly alert. “Is that normal?” Lucien ignored the question. His gaze locked onto her, sharper now, darker like he was seeing her for the first time. “You’re affecting the wards,” he said slowly. Seraphine glanced at the runes, then back at him. “I’m not doing anything.” “I believe you,” he said. That didn’t make it better. He approached her cautiously, as if she were a live blade. Every step sent a ripple through the chamber. The closer he got, the louder the hum became. Lucien stopped an arm’s length away. “Tell me the truth,” he said quietly. “What are you?” Seraphine met his gaze, heart steady despite the weight of his presence pressing down on her. “Human.” Lucien lifted his hand. She tensed but he didn’t touch her. He hovered just inches from her face, eyes narrowing as he studied her. His palm trembled. Lucien noticed. His eyes flicked to his hand, then back to her face. Impossible. He had not trembled in centuries. He lowered his hand slowly. “My wolf reacts to you,” he said, voice low. “The wards react to you. And now so do I.” Seraphine swallowed. “Maybe your instincts are wrong.” Lucien let out a soft, humorless laugh. “They’ve never been wrong.” He turned abruptly and moved toward the stone platform at the center of the room, sitting heavily, elbows braced on his knees. He looked… tired. Not ancient. Tired. Seraphine watched him carefully. “If you think I’m a threat, kill me.” Lucien’s head snapped up. A dangerous silence followed. “I don’t kill what I don’t understand,” he said. “And I don’t destroy what my wolf refuses to let go of.” Seraphine’s stomach tightened. That was worse. Lucien rose again, closing the distance between them. He stopped close enough that she could feel his heat, smell the storm-dark scent of him. “Until I know what you are,” he said, voice dropping, “you stay here.” She tilted her head. “Forever?” Lucien’s jaw flexed. “If necessary.” Something sharp flared in her chest. Anger. Fear. Something dangerously close to regret. He turned away. The moment he did, pain exploded through his side. Lucien sucked in a sharp breath, staggering slightly as his hand flew to his ribs. The sensation was sudden violent a tearing pressure that made no sense. Seraphine noticed instantly. “You’re hurt.” Lucien straightened. “No.” But his voice was strained. The pain intensified, spreading like fire through his chest. His vision blurred for a heartbeat. He had been wounded before. Tortured. Torn apart. This was different. This was internal. Seraphine took an instinctive step toward him. “Lucien” “Don’t,” he snapped. She froze. Lucien clenched his teeth, forcing the sensation down through sheer will. Slowly, the pain receded but it didn’t vanish. It lingered. Waiting. Lucien looked at her then, something unreadable flickering in his eyes. Fear. Not of her. Of what she meant. He backed toward the door. “You stay here,” he said again, harsher now. “Do not touch the walls. Do not attempt to leave.” He paused, hand on the door. “And do not bleed.” Seraphine’s breath hitched. The door slammed shut. The runes flared once bright, angry Then dimmed. Seraphine stared at the stone where Lucien had stood, her heart pounding. Because for the first time since she’d met him, she was certain of one thing. Lucien Blackthorn wasn’t unkillable. He was already breaking.
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