She scanned the crowd. Men whispered to one another, sizing her up as if she were prey in a market. She counted heads, measured the distance to exits, noted which guards moved with distracted precision and which ones were ready to strike without thinking. Years of captivity had taught her to notice everything. Every detail could be a weapon or a lifeline.
Then she saw him.
Tall, broad-shouldered, unmoving. Dark hair fell over his eyes, shadows giving nothing away, but the intensity of his gaze was impossible to ignore. He did not laugh. He did not call a number. He simply observed, and the world seemed to narrow around him. Aster felt her pulse accelerate. There was no warmth in his eyes, only calculation, and yet she sensed he was not like the others. He radiated danger, authority, and something she could not name.
The auctioneer barked for bids. Hands rose. Coins clinked. Aster swallowed, forcing her chest to steady. Every coin thrown into the air reminded her of what she had lost: freedom, dignity, and choice.
A single nod from Lysander Arion ended the auction. The hammer fell, final and heavy. She was his.
The guards did not speak on the way to the carriage. They did not need to. Chains rattled at her wrists, and her pulse beat loud enough for her to feel it in her temples. Lysander walked ahead of her, silent, precise, like a shadow that belonged to no one. She felt the pull between them immediately. It was magnetic and suffocating, a tether she did not understand.
The carriage moved through the city gates and into the countryside. Aster did not speak. Speaking drew attention, and attention could be fatal. Her mind worked over every possible escape, every angle she had learned in years of survival. The thought of confronting Lysander crossed her mind and she dismissed it. He was impossible. Yet, impossibility did not stop her from analyzing him. Every step he took, every glance he spared her, she cataloged, storing it for the day it might save her.
The estate appeared suddenly, like a black wound in the landscape. Towers rose high into the clouds, carved from obsidian stone that gleamed faintly in the sun. Symbols unknown to her adorned the gates and walls. They were intricate, powerful, and slightly menacing. Aster forced herself to breathe, to remain upright, to appear small and unremarkable.
"You may remove the chains," Lysander said. His voice was low, even, and every word demanded obedience.
The guards obeyed, dropping the chains with a metallic clatter. Aster rubbed her wrists, ignoring the sting. When she dared to look at him, he was still observing. His gaze felt like ice against her skin. He was measuring her. Judging her. Calculating.
"I am Lysander Arion," he said. "Speak only when spoken to. Move only when commanded. Lie to me, and I will know."
"I will not lie," she whispered, her voice steady despite the tremor in her chest.
"We shall see," he replied. He turned and walked ahead, gesturing for her to follow.
The corridors of the estate were cold and silent. Every creak of the floorboards echoed in the vast emptiness. Aster's hands itched for a weapon that did not exist. She had been sold, bound, and stripped of everything she considered safety, yet she did not shrink. She moved carefully, observing, noting points of weakness, exits, and the patterns of guards.
Her room was a small, austere space. A bed, a desk, and a window overlooking the black stones of the courtyard. She dropped to the bed, hands pressed into the mattress, but did not close her eyes.
Then she heard it.
A soft tapping at the window. She froze, muscles taut. The sound moved closer. She was not afraid. She was cautious. She had learned the difference.
A silver shape slipped through the sliver of moonlight. A wolf stood before her, its fur shimmering faintly like liquid metal. Its eyes glowed with intelligence. Aster's instincts screamed both fear and recognition.
"You are not alone," a voice spoke in her mind. It was deep, calm, protective. "Your soul is fractured. Your wolf sleeps, but we are here."
Aster sank to her knees. Guardians, power, magic, impossible creatures. She had never believed in such things, and yet proof stood before her. Her heart pounded, not with fear, but with a spark of hope and defiance.
She looked toward the shadowed corners of the room. Somewhere in those shadows, Lysander watched. She did not know how much he saw, but she felt the tension between them. The bond that tied them together had already begun to pull.
Morning brought no relief. The estate was alive with movement, servants whispering, guards patrolling. Breakfast was silent. Lysander sat at the head of the table, eyes catching hers briefly before returning to documents. The air was charged. Every glance, every flicker of movement held meaning. She studied him while eating, noting the way his fingers tapped the table, the subtle curl of his jaw, the faint scar near his temple. Every detail could be leverage, a clue, or a weapon.
"You will eat," he commanded, voice flat. Obedience was not a choice.
Aster complied, keeping her mind sharp. She allowed no part of herself to shrink beneath his attention. She refused to feel powerless.
Her wolf stirred faintly. She felt it like a pulse beneath her ribs, suppressed yet unmistakable. It had been drugged, stifled, told to sleep, but now it whispered faintly, calling her attention to something greater, something dangerous within her.
She swallowed hard and forced herself to focus. Fear could not dominate her. She had survived worse.
He rose abruptly, the chair scraping the floor. "Follow me," he said. No invitation, no tone of choice.
He led her to a room sealed with thick iron doors. The space inside was lined with shelves of books bound in leather, jars of herbs, vials filled with strange liquids, and walls painted with intricate, glowing symbols. Candles flickered, casting moving shadows.
"This will be your training room," he said. "You will learn. You will obey. You will not question. Anything less, and you will regret it."
Aster's stomach churned, but she did not bow her head. She did not shrink. Her fists clenched at her sides. This man believed he could intimidate her. He believed he could break her. He had not yet met the girl she truly was.
She stepped closer to the far corner where a shadow shifted. The silver wolf from the night before appeared again, larger now, its presence commanding yet calm. Its eyes met hers.
"You are more than they see," the voice whispered again in her mind. "Do not forget who you are. Your strength lies within. Your wolf sleeps, but it will awaken."
Aster nodded. She did not fully understand. She did not fully believe. Yet the spark of defiance that had carried her this far flared into determination.
Somewhere in the estate, Lysander's eyes followed her. He did not speak. He did not move. But she could feel the weight of his attention, the pull of the bond neither of them fully understood.
She was sold to him. She had no choice. But she would survive. She would rise. And when the time came, she would show him just how dangerous she truly was.
The wolf watched silently, its silver fur gleaming faintly in candlelight. Aster realized for the first time that she was not entirely alone. She had power, guardians, and a fire within her that no chains could snuff out.
And Lysander would learn very quickly that the girl he had bought was not a victim. She was a force.