A premonition I couldn't ignore.
The auctioneer froze mid-gesture, his hands shaking, his breath caught. Every single bidder that had raised their hands earlier felt the crushing pressure too, even those who had until this point felt untouchable, unshakably wealthy, irrefutably dangerous.
They weren't.
Torren moved toward the front with a predator's grace. It wasn't fast, but every step was heavy with lethal intention. His eyes scanned the room like a hawk surveying a field for prey, like a king surveying his court.
They found me. My chest tightened. A shiver coursed through my spine, and I fought to hold myself perfectly still. Calm. Defiant.
He didn't speak, not at first. He didn't have to. Torren commanded silence. The very air seemed to hold its breath in deference and fear. Chairs adjusted themselves. Fingers hovering over bidding paddles froze. Eyes flickered away, then back, darting nervously. Whispers ceased. The world held still for a moment, waiting for its master.
I could feel the power he drew from the stillness, from the fear-and from the shared, silent understanding of the consequences for defying him. My former captors-my handlers-behind me shifted nervously, the man in the jacket gulping down a visible knot in his throat, his eyes flicking between me and Torren. He knew. He'd seen what he was capable of. He wasn't sure he wanted to witness it again.
"Enough," Torren said at last. His voice was calm, low, and steady, but each word cut through the thick silence like a shard of glass. "She is mine."
The room flinched. Each heartbeat thudded louder in my ears. Mine. It was a simple word, but packed with a universe of power no one dared challenge. Not the auctioneer, not the bidders, not even the hulking guards positioned strategically along the walls.
I froze, my gaze locked on him. His eyes-dark, unreadable pools of obsidian-burned into me, and for a horrible, soul-crushing instant I felt that sickening, inevitable pull I always did, the one that made my chest seize and my stomach clench. Fight or flee. The primal instincts warring inside me.
There was no fleeing now. Not from him. Not from this.
"You are mine," he repeated, the words softer this time, almost intimate, as if sharing a secret only we were privy to.
My blood surged-not with fear, not with submission-but with white-hot rage. How dare he? How dared he-
I spat.
The saliva hit his face, warm and wet and defiant. It was an instinctive reaction. A primal act of defiance against the crushing weight of his claim. The shocked faces of everyone else in the room were a testament to the sheer audacity of it. Torren didn't even flinch. Didn't move. Didn't blink.
The world held its breath.
And then his lips curved into something that was not quite a smile, not quite a frown. Satisfaction? Admiration? Something far more dangerous, far more primal.
"You are braver than I thought," he murmured, the words hanging in the air like smoke. "And I like that."
I swallowed, my heart hammering against my ribs like a frantic bird. Rage still thrummed beneath my skin, a molten river threatening to erupt. I wouldn't let him see fear. I wouldn't give him that satisfaction.
"You think spitting at me changes anything?" His voice was low, dangerously calm. "It doesn't. It never has. It never will."
I met his gaze, unwavering. "I don't care what you think."
He tilted his head slightly, one eyebrow rising. For a fraction of a second, I thought I detected a flicker of amusement in those dark eyes. But then the air around him shifted again, subtly, irrevocably. Power radiated from him like heat from a furnace, a tangible force demanding obedience, fear, respect.
The auctioneer finally found his voice, trembling. "S-sir... W-what do you mean? W-what do we...?"
Torren's eyes flickered to the man. Just one look. The auctioneer froze, completely. His hands shook, the gavel clattering to the floor, and he stammered, "I-I... I don't understand..."
Torren stepped closer. Too close. The sharp, clean, dangerous scent of him filled my lungs. Every nerve in my body screamed at me to move, to push away, to run. But I remained rooted, defiant, trembling under the immense gravity of him.
"I said," Torren's voice was sharper now, precise, cutting, "she is mine. No one here touches her. No one here bids on her. No one here questions that. Understood?"
Every single person in the room nodded, some frantically, some slowly, but all in unison. The consequences of defiance were clear, and no one in this room was willing to pay the price.
And yet... I still didn't yield.
"You think claiming someone means you own them?" I hissed again, my voice laced with loathing. "You think I will bend to you?"
His eyes darkened, not with anger yet-at least, not the explosive kind-but with a simmering promise of power, absolute power. "No one has ever spoken to me that way before."
"You've never met me," I whispered, my voice shaking, but my venom sharp enough to draw blood.
He didn't answer. He simply stepped closer, so close I could feel the heat emanating from his body, the invisible cloak of dominance he wore like a second skin. Every cell in my body screamed at me to fight, to lash out, to break free. But I stayed still, watching. Waiting. Assessing.
He tilted his head again, studying me as if weighing the odds, calculating precisely how much resistance I would offer. "You are mine," he repeated, each word heavy, deliberate, sinking into my bones. "And one day, you will understand why it is... inevitable."
I clenched my fists until my knuckles were white. I gritted my teeth so hard I thought my jaw would crack. I wouldn't give him the satisfaction. Not yet. Not ever.
"You think that word-claim-means you own me?" I snarled, my voice raw. "You can try, but you'll fail. Always."
Torren's lips curved, almost imperceptibly, into that disturbing semblance of a smile. "Perhaps," he said softly. "But everyone eventually learns where they belong. Some take a little longer than others."
I spat again. Each motion a declaration. I am not yours. I will never be yours. I will never surrender.
He didn't flinch. Didn't wipe his face. Didn't raise a hand. He simply stared, cold, controlled, unshakable.
And then... He let it go. For now.
The room still held its collective breath. The auction was over. Every bidder, every guard, every observer knew one brutal, undeniable truth: challenging Torren-even with a mere word, even with mere defiance-was a gamble they couldn't afford to lose.
I knew something else. Torren's claim wasn't just about ownership. It was about fear. It was about dominance. It was about a power so absolute it bent the world around him. And despite my resistance-my spitting, my snarling, my seething-it didn't change the fact that he had already claimed me.
The thought twisted in my gut like a poisoned blade.
He stepped back slightly, allowing the shadows to swallow him again, giving the illusion he had disappeared, but I knew he hadn't. I could still feel his presence, a tangible weight pressing down on me, like a predator that knew exactly where its prey would bolt next.
I was furious. Trembling. Alive in a way that made my heart pound like a drum against my ribs.
"You think claiming me makes me yours?" I whispered to the empty air where he had stood moments before. "You have no idea what you're dealing with."
And that-defiance, rage, raw instinct for survival-was all I had left.
Torren had claimed me.
And I had spat in his face.
But the war between us, my war against him, had only just begun.