
Fated Mate, Mafia Target
Chapter 2
"Move. Now."
Cain’s fingers clamped around my upper arm like a set of iron manacles. He didn't wait for me to find my balance. He dragged me across the polished marble of the Great Hall, my boots skidding and squeaking against the stone. Heads turned. Whispers followed us like a trail of stinging insects, but the sheer, suffocating pressure of Cain’s Alpha aura kept anyone from stepping in.
"Cain, wait!" Seraphina’s voice was a shrill spike of indignation behind us. "The induction banquet—"
"Go without me," Cain snarled over his shoulder. He didn't stop. He didn't even slow down.
He shoved me through the heavy oak doors that separated the main academy from the private Nightfang wing. This was the heart of the beast. The air here was colder, smelling of old stone, expensive leather, and the heavy, metallic scent of a Syndicate that thrived on violence.
He threw me toward a heavy iron door at the end of a dimly lit corridor. I stumbled, my shoulder hitting the frame before I caught myself.
"This is your cage, puppy," he spat.
I looked inside. It was a windowless box. A narrow cot, a single wooden chair, and a cracked basin. No heater. No light other than the dim flicker of the hallway lamp. It was a room meant for a dog, not a student.
"I have a debt to pay in the infirmary," I said, my voice cracking despite my efforts to remain steady. "Director Ashveil said—"
Cain stepped into my space, his chest nearly brushing my nose. He was a wall of heat and repressed fury. "Director Ashveil doesn't own you. I do. You think that golden light in the Hall makes you special? It makes you a liability. It makes you a target." He leaned down, his breath ghosting over my ear. "I will never acknowledge it. To the world, you are my personal medical servant. My pet. My puppy. If I hear the word 'mate' leave your lips, I will rip them off. Do you understand?"
He didn't wait for an answer. His hand shot out, grabbing my jaw and forcing me to look at him. His thumb pressed into my cheek, bruising the skin.
"I don't need a mate. I need a tool to patch up the men who actually matter." He released me with a shove that sent me back into the tiny room. "Stay here. If you step foot outside this wing without my permission, I'll let Rowan finish what he started in the courtyard."
The heavy door slammed shut. The lock turned with a final, echoing thud.
I sat on the edge of the cot, my fingers trembling as I reached for the locket beneath my shirt. My skin still hummed where he had touched me—a treacherous, pulsing rhythm that mocked my hatred for him.
Two hours later, the door groaned open. A guard stood there, his face a mask of indifference.
"The Alpha-heir wants you. Now. Bring your kit."
I was led into a suite that smelled of copper and sweat. On a leather sofa, a man lay clutching his shoulder, his shirt soaked in dark, sluggish blood. It was Lucien Vale. He looked like a mirror image of Seraphina, but his features were softer, currently twisted in a grimace of agony.
"The bullet’s still in there," Cain’s voice came from the shadows by the fireplace. He was nursing a glass of dark liquid, his eyes watching me with predatory intensity. "Silver-laced. Extract it."
I knelt beside Lucien, my hands moving on instinct. I opened my kit—the one I’d managed to salvage and clean. "I need hot water and a clean blade," I said to the room at large.
"Just do your job, girl," the guard growled.
I ignored him. I focused on the wound. The silver was already starting to blacken the edges of the entry point, the poison sizzling against Lucien’s shifter healing factor. I reached into the wound with the forceps, my focus narrowing until the rest of the room disappeared.
As I worked, a faint, ethereal silver light began to pulse from my fingertips. It was a Healer’s Mark—the very thing my mother told me to hide at all costs. I tried to shield the glow with my hand, but the light bled through.
Lucien’s breath hitched. His eyes widened as the jagged pain in his expression smoothed out. My touch was pulling the poison out before the metal even left his body.
"You're fast," Lucien whispered, his voice strained. He looked past me toward Cain, then leaned in closer. "You shouldn't be here, Favor. Cain isn't just being a prick because of the bond. He’s terrified. His father, King Valerius... he doesn't believe in mates. He thinks they're a blood-leak. A weakness. He kills anything that makes Cain hesitate."
I felt a chill that had nothing to do with the air in the room. Lucien reached out with his good hand, offering me a clean white rag to wipe the blood from my fingers. It was the first act of kindness I’d experienced since crossing the gates.
"Watch your back," he murmured. "The shadows in this academy have teeth."
"I’m finished," I stood abruptly, packing my tools. I didn't look at Lucien, and I certainly didn't look at Cain.
Cain disappeared shortly after, leaving me to "clean" his study under the watchful eye of a guard who eventually grew bored and retreated to the hallway for a smoke.
The study was a shrine to power. Dark wood, heavy ledgers, and maps of Syndicate territories. I moved toward the desk, my cloth moving over the surface, when I saw a drawer that wasn't quite shut.
A corner of yellowed parchment caught my eye.
I pulled it out. It wasn't a Syndicate report. It was a ledger from ten years ago. I flipped through the pages until a name jumped out and punched the air from my lungs.
Elizabeth Silverwyn. My mother.
Under her name were dates and figures—thousands of credits marked as "donations" to the Ashveil family. My breath came in short, jagged bursts. My mother hadn't died of a random illness. She had been a Healer-for-Hire for the Syndicate.
I turned to the final page. A note was tucked into the binding, written in a sharp, elegant hand.
Regarding Project: The Silver Awakening. The Silverwyn girl is the final specimen. Her bloodline carries the dormant pulse. Monitor her once she reaches the academy. Ensure the debt is enforced. She must be triggered by the Nightfang heir.
The room spun. My arrival here hadn't been an accident. My family’s debt wasn't a tragedy of bad luck. It was a blueprint. I was a "specimen" being delivered to a lab.
The heavy thud of boots echoed in the hallway.
I scrambled to shove the ledger back into the drawer, my heart hammering against my ribs. I barely managed to click the drawer shut and turn around before the door was kicked open.
Cain stood there. He smelled of gin, rain, and cold rage. His eyes weren't obsidian anymore—they were glowing with the amber fire of his wolf, the pupils blown wide.
"What were you doing?" he growled, the sound vibrating through the floorboards.
"Cleaning," I said, my voice thin. "Just like you told me."
He was across the room in three strides. He didn't stop until I was pinned against the desk, the hard edge of the wood biting into my lower back. He slammed his hands down on either side of me, trapping me in the heat of his presence.
"You were touching my things," he hissed, his face inches from mine. "I can smell your fear, Favor. It’s sweet, but it’s thick with lies. What did you see?"
"Nothing," I defied him, looking straight into the amber fire of his eyes. "I saw nothing but the mess you leave behind."
He grabbed my wrists, pinning them above my head against the bookshelves. The movement was so fast I didn't have time to blink. His body was a cage of muscle and heat, and for a terrifying second, the mate bond flared—a desperate, aching need to lean into him, to let the Alpha protect what he was currently breaking.
"If you spy on me again," Cain leaned in, his teeth grazing the sensitive skin of my throat, "I will hand you over to Rowan. I’ll let the enforcers use you for training until there’s nothing left to patch up. You are a servant, not a guest."
"You can't," I whispered, the words fueled by the revelation in the ledger. "You can't kill me, Cain. You can't kill your own mate without losing your soul. You're already half-dead inside. Is that what you want? To be a ghost like your father?"
Cain flinched as if I’d struck him. His grip tightened until I thought my bones might snap, his expression a mask of pure agony and hate.
Then, he let go.
He backed away, his chest heaving, his eyes returning to a fractured black.
"Get out," he rasped, turning his back to me. "Get out before I prove you wrong."
I ran. I didn't stop until I was back in my windowless box, the door locked from the outside. I collapsed onto the cot, the realization chilling my blood.
Cain Nightfang was the monster everyone feared. But as I looked at the bruise forming on my wrist, I realized something worse. He was the only thing standing between me and the people who had turned my mother into a "specimen."
And he hated me for it.
The lights in the hallway flickered and died, leaving me in total darkness.
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