THE PRICE OF A LIFE

942 Words
Sleep never came. The starlight cuffs hummed against my wrists all through the dark hours, a low, constant suppression that kept my magic submerged and my mind too restless to find rest. By the time grey light pressed through the narrow window, the fortress was already loud with tension. The door opened long enough for a warrior to shove a tray of bread and bitter tea across the floor without making eye contact. "Council wants you presentable," he said. "Don't make it difficult." I left the food untouched. When Kael came for me two hours later, he was dressed in black leather and fur, every line of him belonging to the role of Alpha rather than the man who had pressed his forehead to mine on a ridge in the dark. His eyes moved over me once. It was assessing, not soft and whatever had passed between us the night before had been filed somewhere inaccessible. "It's time," he said. "Am I walking to a trial or an execution?" I asked, rising on unsteady legs. "That depends on how well you hold yourself together," he said, stepping aside for me to pass, "and how much I'm prepared to spend keeping you alive." The corridor leading to the Great Council Chamber was thick with the scent of agitation, wolves who had been debating my fate since before sunrise. The chamber itself was circular and tiered, stone rising in rows around a central floor, every seat filled with elders and high warriors whose eyes landed on me the moment I crossed the threshold. The noise was immediate. Voices colliding, fists hitting wood, a chorus of barely restrained fury. "Nightfang filth." "She's marked him. Kill her before it takes root." Kael walked to the center without breaking stride and brought his fist down on the stone slab with a c***k that silenced the room completely. His hand came to rest on my shoulder, a gesture that read as ownership to every eye in that chamber and felt like the only solid thing in my world. "You speak of my life as though it belongs to this room," he said, his voice carrying the kind of authority that doesn't require volume. "This woman found me dying on the border, poisoned and abandoned. If her intention was destruction, you would be selecting a new Alpha right now." Elder Varick rose from the upper tier, a scar bisecting his face from brow to jaw, his expression carrying twenty years of practiced suspicion. "She is of Darian Blackthorn's blood, Kael. We don't debate whether she saved you, we debate the cost she's already buried in you that you haven't found yet. Witches don't act without consequence." "I was sent to that border to die," I said, loudly enough that every head turned. Prisoners didn't speak in this chamber without permission, and the silence that followed made that abundantly clear. I held Varick's gaze anyway. "My father didn't send me as a weapon. He sent me as an offering to the ground. I saved your Alpha because I am exhausted by death, and because letting someone bleed out in the snow when your hands can stop it makes you complicit in something you can't take back." The room absorbed this for one second before the mockery began, cold and cutting from every tier. Varick didn't laugh. He simply watched me, which was worse. "If she stays, Nightfang frames it as a*******n and uses it to justify marching on our borders. If she dies, we send a message that costs us nothing." He turned to Kael. "The choice seems clear." "She stays." Kael's answer arrived before Varick finished speaking. "She is a prisoner of war, her power is bound, and her life answers to me alone. She will be held in the High Tower and questioned fully. If I find a single thread of deception in anything she's given us" he turned to me, and the look on his face was controlled and deliberately unreadable, "I end it myself." "And when Nightfang comes to collect her?" Jora called from the far side of the chamber. Kael's expression shifted into something that wasn't quite a smile. "I've been waiting for a legitimate reason to take that fight to Darian's gates for years. Let him come." The energy in the room turned, the collective hostility bending away from me and toward the prospect of war, which was exactly what Kael had intended. He had redirected their appetite without any of them noticing the redirection. As the guards moved to take me, Kael stepped close enough that only my ears caught the words. "You're not in danger from the Council anymore. But the bond is strengthening, and I won't be able to contain what you are from this pack much longer or from myself." The guards led me out before I could answer. The High Tower room was bare stone and narrow light, the kind of space designed to remind you of your position without wasting effort on cruelty. I stood at the window and looked out at the mountain range bleeding into the grey sky, the cuffs cool and quiet against my skin. Kael had kept me breathing by making me his property, and I understood the logic of it completely, which made it no easier to hold. But beneath the silver's suppression, something was moving. My power was pushing at its boundaries with a patience that felt less like dormancy and more like preparation, waiting for the moment the lid came off. Whatever the prophecy had set in motion, it hadn't asked for my permission. And it wasn't finished with me yet.
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