
BONDED CURSE
Chapter 2
A week bleeds like a wound that won't clot, and the citadel takes its time licking at it. The obsidian arches that once felt like a crown now feel like a jaw closing, slick and black and intent on swallowing you whole. Every corridor hums with the same rhythm: eyes, whispers, a thousand small verdicts that don't need to be shouted because they already cut.
“Defective,” someone hisses behind Sariah’s shoulder and the word sticks to the skin of her neck like frost.
“Cursed,” another breathes, nearer this time, and the syllables sound like a prayer that wants to fail.
“Unworthy of moon-sight,” a voice adds, a small puncture meant to be private but never is.
She should be used to it by now, the way the halls fold around blame like ivy, how marble remembers insults, but the cold is new every morning, the way stares sit heavy on her bones. Priests in white move like pale ghosts through the Council chambers, scrolls cradled like babies they plan to smother, and battle masters linger in the corners, arms folded, smirks parked like weapons.
A priest’s voice floats where the torchlight is weak, not meant for her but carrying just enough to land. “Malformed mark. A disgrace to the bond.”
A chuckle answers and the kind of humor that smells like auctions and bodies in coffins follows. “He’s lucky he saw it,” a priest says, “before it consumed him,” and the words make the walls lean in closer, listening.
Sariah’s jaw tightens until the taste of copper fills her mouth. She keeps moving though, because movement is the only kind of saying you can trust here, because if she stands the room will fill with teeth and someone will try to swallow the sound of her heartbeat.
She finds Nyra in the moonlit courtyard where stone keeps its own silence and frost designs itself on the air like old letters. Her mother sits beneath a frozen pillar, cloak pooled, the silver amulet at her throat dulled by cold and worry. Nyra’s hands are calm, but the lines at her eyes look carved by storms
“Come,” Nyra says when she sees Sariah, and the whisper is almost a command that used to feel like safety.
Sariah wants to say she won’t run, wants to tell Nyra she won’t be her ghost in exile, she’ll stand and claw until the world takes notice, but the words don’t find a way past the tightness in her chest. “They’ll strip your wolf, your claim, your name—all of it. You must go,” Nyra murmurs, voice a ribbon that trembles.
“I’m not running,” Sariah says, though a part of her already knows running is a kind of thinking, a way to stay alive long enough to come back smarter.
Nyra presses a worn cloak to Sariah’s hands, and the fabric smells like smoke and herbs. She hangs the amulet around her daughter’s neck like a benediction. “Go now, child. Before they take what we are.”
Sariah keeps her eyes on Nyra. “You’re not coming?”
Nyra’s silence says it in a way words never could. The hurt that settles in Sariah’s ribs is worse than any frost.
From inside the chamber, doors slam, and the sound is a drum that marks the end of mercy. Commander Thale storms in like a thunderclap, crimson silk catching torchlight, iron clasps sharp as an accusation, boots carving the marble in a rhythm that means war.
She doesn’t sit. “Banish her from Bloodfang. Revoke her wolf. Kill the traitor.” The syllables drop and the hall exhales like it had been waiting for someone to say the thing out loud.
Gasps flutter like trapped birds, and the Crown says nothing because sometimes silence gives permission faster than a gavel. Priests nod like men who learned to bow to the loudest voice.
“A pack vote, at dawn,” one priest says, as if ritual will wash the stain away. Kaien is there at the far wall, still as a statue, eyes like knives that have seen too much, and he doesn’t speak. He lets the world do the talking, and the world answers his silence.
Nyra’s fingers tighten on Sariah. “Don’t expect mercy here,” she says low and simple, like a fact of weather.
By morning the vote is carried to every hall by wolves whose faces are polite but cold. Exile or execution – the options are blunt because war tends not to dress itself in nuance. Everyone knows the count will tilt where Kaien’s hand points, and silence rolls toward judgement like water.
From a gilded bench at the back, Lucien Vane watches the liturgy of condemnations, moonstone runes catching the low light in his hair like coins. He has the kind of smile that promises comfort and pockets a knife. When the hall clears he steps into her path with that practiced softness, words tuned like an instrument.
“I can offer you sanctuary,” he says and the sentence is a silk trap.
Sariah says nothing for a beat, measuring. “Name your price.”
“No vow of love. No promise of safety. I want your loyalty. You surrender your claim, serve the Council, and in return—I protect you.” He speaks like a man arranging chess pieces, not like someone offering help.
“And if I refuse?” Her voice is small and sharp. She’s been told to be afraid of death but what terrifies her more now is disappearing, being erased like chalk in rain.
“You won’t,” he says simply
“Why?”
He leans closer, moonstone catching at his throat. “Because you’re not afraid of death, but you are afraid of disappearing. Serve me, and they won’t erase you.”
There’s a slickness under his words that smells like plans, like rivers rerouted. Sariah hears the thing that picks at the edges of the Summit—the bond was planned, arranged, an engine with gears someone oiled and wound. The rejection didn’t fall from heaven; it was handed down.
Her stomach flips. The world thins at the edges and she understands in the dull, awful way of sudden discovery that she was a piece on a board all along, set there to prove something else.
That night the ruined rose arch into the courtyard wears frost like armor and the air tastes like tin. Lucien’s offer circles her thoughts like a hawk. Serve, or be made a monument—torn down or left in pieces.
Shadows move beyond pillars in numbers that make the moonguard fidget, and Sariah slips against obsidian, pressing into the stone as if she can melt into it and become less easy to find. Her breath clouds the air and she slides between the stacks of columns until the world narrows to whispers.
From a crack in the door she hears voices clipped and sure. “Names confirmed,” one says. “Seal it before the full moon.” The kind of procedures that smell like funerals and ledgers.
She pushes a hairline gap and peers through and sees Thale’s men—robes aside, the Council’s colors folded over armor. A scroll is unrolled across the table like a map of betrayals, sealed with the Bloodfang crest and inked with sentences meant to end people.
Names are crossed out, hers, Nyra’s, under the heading: List of the Fallen. The script shudders; a word crawls up her spine. Excommunicated. Traitor to the moon. The sentences look like teeth.
“You’re sure it will unite the packs?” one asks, voice thin as paper.
“Nothing rallies them faster than a martyr,” another says and it’s clinical, practiced.
Sariah’s blood shivers like someone touched a raw wire. They’d planned this, planned the shame, the small perfect humiliation—the rejection a stage, her collapse a lesson. She was never meant to be Kaien’s mate, not by accident but by design, a warning they could point at to keep wolves in a line.
A candle behind her sputters, and a shadow shifts like a hand. She ducks under the altar stone, knees scraping granite, breath small and raw in her throat. Her heart sounds huge in the hush, like an animal with no place to run.
When the chamber empties she crawls back and steals the scroll. The High Moon Priests’ marks are there in crisp ink, proof that sacred things were used as tools. At the bottom a line—Nyra, accused of forging the mark—spins her world like a top.
They’re going to kill her mother too, or at least string her up on words until she dies under the weight of them. The realization is a sharpened thing.
She bursts into Nyra’s chambers like the world is a house on fire, and the room answers in a language she barely recognizes. The copper smell of blood ghosts the space, candles melted and scarred, runes on the walls defaced like someone scratched out a prayer. The bed is empty and sheets lie soaked and abandoned. Rings and letters are gone.
Only dark drops map the threshold. She crouches, fingers trembling as she brushes the dried blood, the salt of it like evidence of theft and sacrifice.
Her wolf stirs below skin, a low wind in her chest. Fear peels away and leaves the hard edge of something like hunger, not for food but for recompense. She hefts the broken dagger and the metal sings against stone.
She moves down the exile wing where failed whelps were left to dissolve into history, narrow and blue with cold, the hallways echoing with the kind of silence that keeps secrets in a jaw. Ancient warning seals flare above her like tired suns and the runes sketch themselves faint under torchlight.
Outside the moon bends silver over the citadel like a careful eye, and the wind presses against the walls like a living thing trying to whisper truth. The air slides at her ear: run. It’s a small voice but steady and full of the scent of danger.
She stays. She kneels at her chamber door and dusts the ash aside and finds a single rune scorched into the floor like a dare: The Dissenter of the Moon will rise in blood.
Nyra’s smell lingers like an accusation—iron and ash and the stubborn scent of love. Sariah straightens, dagger in hand, the runes warm under her palm. She presses a shoulder back and says to the empty stone, to the things that plotted and hid, to Lucien’s silk smile, to Kaien’s quiet.
“Then let them see me rise.”
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