
Left to Drown, I Rose as a Queen
Chapter 1
Chapter 1
The ceremonial chalice slipped from my numb fingers, the heavy silver clattering violently against the ancient stone floor of the Lunar Grotto. A dark, crimson stain of spiced wine pooled into the mortar, looking far too much like blood in the pale moonlight filtering through the glass observation ceiling far above.
I tried to take a step forward, but my knees buckled. The world tilted on a sickening axis, and I crashed hard onto the damp limestone.
"Julian?" My voice was a slurred, heavy thing, barely recognizable to my own ears. I tried to push myself up, my muscles trembling, but a cold, leaden weight was rapidly spreading from my stomach outward, paralyzing my limbs. "Julian, what... what did you do?"
Julian Cross, the Alpha of the Ironwood Pack and my fated mate, stood a few feet away. He didn't rush to help me. He didn't drop to his knees in a panic. Instead, he simply adjusted the cuffs of his immaculate, tailor-made suit, his golden eyes devoid of their usual manufactured warmth. The charming, benevolent leader the pack worshipped was gone. In his place stood the man I was finally seeing clearly for the first time.
"I did what I had to do, Seraphina," Julian said, his voice smooth, completely entirely unaffected by the sight of me writhing on the floor. "It’s really a shame. You were supposed to be the honored Luna of this pack. But you just couldn't play the part, could you?"
"The wine," I gasped, my chest tightening as the paralytic seized my diaphragm. I was an elite tracker, trained to identify hundreds of toxins by scent alone, but the heavy spices of the ceremonial vintage had masked it completely. "You poisoned me."
"Poison is such an ugly word," Julian chided, walking slowly around me in a deliberate circle. He looked down at me, his lip curling in disgust. "I prefer to think of it as a necessary sedative. A little something to finally quiet that relentless, overbearing presence of yours. Do you have any idea how exhausting it is to be mated to you?"
I forced my head up, my neck screaming in protest. "Exhausting? I have protected your borders. I have trained your guards. I built your reputation from the ground up while you cowered behind your desk!"
"Exactly!" Julian snapped, his composure slipping for a fraction of a second, revealing the cowardly, narcissistic boy beneath the Alpha facade. He crouched down, grabbing my chin roughly and forcing me to look into his eyes. "You built it. You protected them. You, you, you. The pack looks at you and they see a warrior. They look at me and they see *your mate*. I am the Alpha of Ironwood, Seraphina! I require a Luna who knows her place. A Luna who looks up to me, who needs me. Not a defective, battle-scarred tracker who constantly undermines my authority just by breathing."
"I never undermined you," I whispered, the numbness now reaching my collarbones. My spirit-wolf, usually a vibrant, thrumming presence in my mind, was whining pitifully, her energy flickering like a dying candle in a storm. "I loved you, Julian. We are fated."
Julian laughed, a harsh, grating sound that echoed off the cavern walls. "Fated. The Goddess has a sick sense of humor, binding me to a woman whose wolf is as broken and unyielding as a rusted blade. You think your vulnerability makes you lovable, Seraphina? It just makes you pathetic. You’re a liability to my image."
He stood up abruptly and walked toward the heavy iron floodgates at the far end of the cavern. The Lunar Grotto was a subterranean chamber, built directly into the cliffs overlooking the turbulent northern sea. During low tide, it was a sacred place of worship. But during high tide, the massive iron gates were the only thing holding back thousands of gallons of freezing, crushing ocean water.
"What are you doing?" I choked out, panic finally piercing through the heavy fog of the drug. I tried to drag myself forward with my elbows, my fingernails scraping uselessly against the stone.
"Fixing the Goddess's mistake," Julian said lightly. He reached the ancient control panel carved into the rock face. He didn't hesitate. He didn't even look back at me. He punched in his personal Alpha override code.
*Clack. Clack. Clack.*
The sound of the heavy iron tumblers disengaging echoed like gunshots in the enclosed space. A low, mechanical groan vibrated through the floorboards as the massive iron floodgates began to inch upward.
Immediately, the roar of the ocean outside became deafening. A torrent of freezing black water rushed into the cavern, foaming and hissing as it hit the dry stone. It swirled around Julian’s polished leather shoes, but he simply stepped up onto the elevated walkway leading to the exit stairs.
"Julian, no!" I screamed, but the sound was weak, swallowed by the roar of the incoming tide. The water hit my prone body like a physical blow, so cold it felt like fire licking across my skin. "You can't do this! The pack will know! They will investigate!"
"Investigate what?" Julian called out, pausing on the stairs to look down at me. The water was already rising, pooling around my waist. "A tragic suicide? The pressure of becoming Luna was simply too much for the fragile, defective Seraphina Vance. She snuck into the Grotto, bypassed the safety protocols, and drowned herself. I will be devastated, of course. The grieving Alpha, left to pick up the pieces of his shattered heart."
"They won't believe you," I spat, my teeth chattering uncontrollably as the freezing water soaked through my ceremonial gown, weighing me down like an anchor. "Dr. Aris... Silas... they know me."
"They know the woman you pretend to be," Julian sneered. "But I control the narrative, Seraphina. I control the archives. I control the evidence. By tomorrow morning, you will be nothing more than a cautionary tale of madness. And I... well, I will have to find a way to move on."
He turned and began ascending the stone steps toward the heavy reinforced door that led back to the pack house.
"Julian!" I tried to thrash, tried to force my dormant wolf to the surface, but the poison had severed our connection. She was a silent, suffocating weight in my chest. "Don't do this! Please!"
The heavy door slammed shut at the top of the stairs, the metallic thud finalizing my tomb. The cavern was plunged into shadows, illuminated only by the ethereal, mocking glow of the moonlight through the thick glass ceiling fifty feet above.
The water was rising fast. It was already at my chest. I couldn't move my arms. I couldn't kick my legs. I was a stone statue, entirely completely at the mercy of the violent, churning tide.
Suddenly, a voice echoed in my mind. Not through the air, but through the fated mind-link that still tethered my soul to his.
*Are you cold yet, Seraphina?* Julian's voice purred in my head, dripping with malicious satisfaction.
*You're a monster,* I pushed back through the link, focusing all my remaining strength into the mental projection. *You are a weak, pathetic coward. And when I survive this, I will tear your throat out.*
Julian’s mental laughter was a physical pressure against my temples. *Survive? You were an elite tracker once, yes. But look at you now. Paralyzed. Broken. Left to rot in the dark. The water should be at your neck by now. How does it feel, knowing you're completely powerless?*
*Why?* I demanded, the freezing water now lapping at my chin. I had to tilt my head back, resting my skull against the hard stone floor to keep my mouth above the rising tide. *Why go to this extreme? You could have just rejected me.*
*And lose half my assets in a pack tribunal? Endure the whispers of the Elders?* Julian scoffed through the link. *No. This is much cleaner. Besides, I needed a vacancy that couldn't be contested. Isolde is waiting for me in my chambers right now.*
The name hit me harder than the freezing water. *Isolde?*
My cousin. The woman I had protected since childhood, the woman who had lived under my roof, eaten at my table, and smiled in my face just hours ago as she helped me dress for the ceremony.
*She's much more suited to the role,* Julian gloated, his mental voice lowering into a sickeningly intimate register. *She knows how to make a man feel like an Alpha. She doesn't challenge me. She worships me. We are bonding tonight, Seraphina. As you take your last breath in the dark, I will be claiming her as the true Luna of Ironwood.*
A violent surge of pure, unadulterated hatred erupted in my chest, burning away the despair. The internal wound I had carried for years—the belief that my spirit-wolf was defective, that my strength made me unlovable—shattered in that instant. It wasn't me. It was never me. It was him. He had spent years subtly gaslighting me, chipping away at my confidence, making me believe I was the problem, all while he plotted to replace me with my vain, cruel cousin.
*I will kill you both,* I vowed through the link, my mental voice dropping into a deadly, echoing growl that didn't sound entirely human.
*Goodbye, Seraphina,* Julian whispered. *Try not to swallow too much water. It ruins the complexion.*
The mind-link snapped shut with a brutal, agonizing tearing sensation, severing the bond from his end. The sudden emptiness in my mind was disorienting, leaving me alone with the deafening roar of the ocean.
The water crested over my mouth.
I clamped my lips shut, holding my breath as the freezing brine swallowed me whole. The current tossed my paralyzed body like a ragdoll, lifting me off the stone floor and spinning me in the violent eddy. I stared up through the dark, churning water toward the glass ceiling high above. The moon was a blurry, distorted orb of white light.
My lungs began to burn. The paralytic kept my muscles locked, preventing me from thrashing, but the primal, biological panic of suffocation tore through my nervous system.
*I am not going to die like this,* I told myself, my vision beginning to edge with black spots. *I am Seraphina Vance. I am a warrior.*
But sheer willpower could not overcome biology. My chest convulsed involuntarily. My mouth ripped open, and the freezing, salty ocean water flooded my throat. The pain was instantaneous and absolute, a searing agony as my scarred lungs filled with the sea.
The darkness closed in rapidly. The moonlight above seemed to shrink, fading into a pinpoint of distant, unreachable hope. I was sinking. I was drowning. Julian had won.
But just as the final thread of my consciousness began to snap, a massive, explosive shockwave reverberated through the water.
*CRASH.*
Above me, the reinforced glass observation ceiling—designed to withstand hurricane-force winds—shattered into a million glittering, diamond-like pieces.
Through the cascade of falling glass and moonlight, a massive, shadowy figure plummeted into the abyss. It hit the water with tremendous force, sending a shockwave of kinetic energy rippling through the Grotto.
My fading eyes struggled to focus. It wasn't a man. And it wasn't a standard wolf.
It was a Lycan.
Towering, muscular, and radiating an aura of absolute, terrifying power, the beast cleaved through the freezing water with effortless, predatory grace. Its eyes, glowing with a fierce, unnatural silver light, locked onto my sinking body.
A massive, clawed hand reached out, piercing through the darkness, and grabbed me by the collar of my gown. The sheer force of the grip sent a jolt of electricity through my dying nerves.
As the Lycan pulled me fiercely toward the surface, pulling me back from the edge of death, my vision finally went completely black.
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