GABRIEL
My eyes dragged open like they didn’t belong to me, slow and stubborn, as if waking up was something my body hadn’t agreed to yet. The ceiling above me was the first thing I saw, pale stone stretched wide and spotless, too clean in a way that made my chest tighten. I lay there for a moment, trying to anchor myself, trying to understand why everything felt so distant, like I’d been dropped into someone else’s life without warning.
It came back in pieces.
The infirmary.
That was where I was.
My hand moved before I could think it through, fingers pressing against my throat, searching, expecting something. A tear. A ridge. Pain. Anything that would match what I remembered. But there was nothing. I only felt smooth skin under my touch.
I froze there, fingertips lingering like they didn’t trust what they were feeling.
Because I remembered it too clearly. The way that bastard had hurt me badly without mercy. I remembered the sharp, ripping pain that had stolen the air from my lungs before I could even react. I remembered the blood, hot and thick, spilling faster than I could stop it, the way my body had jerked helplessly as I tried to breathe through something that wouldn’t let me. I remembered the panic, raw and choking, as everything narrowed and dimmed.
I was at death’s door.
The thought didn’t come with panic. It settled in quietly, like a fact I couldn’t argue with.
I pushed myself upright, slower than I intended, my body lagging behind the command as if it needed time to catch up. Everything felt off. Heavy in a way that didn’t quite make sense, like I’d been stitched back together wrong or placed into something that was supposed to be my vessel but wasn’t entirely mine.
Movement pulled my attention across the room.
Two figures were already closing the distance, their footsteps quick and purposeful. I knew them before they even reached me.
Maren and Thorne.
Relief flickered across Maren’s face the moment our eyes met, though she tried to keep it contained, like she didn’t want to show too much. "You are awake," she said, her voice careful, steady in a way that felt practiced.
Thorne stopped beside the bed, folding his arms across his chest, his gaze fixed on me. There was something in his expression I couldn’t quite place. Not relief. Not entirely. Something sharper. Something that lingered too long.
"How do you feel?" Maren asked.
I opened my mouth, ready to answer, but nothing came out. The words got stuck somewhere between my chest and my throat, caught on something I couldn’t name.
Because it all came rushing back instead.
Hands holding me down.
The restraints biting into my wrists and ankles, unforgiving, keeping me in place while my body fought against them, muscles straining until they burned. I could feel it again, the violent shaking I hadn’t been able to control, the way my back had arched off the surface beneath me as if my body was trying to tear itself free.
And then—
Her.
The girl.
Fia.
The memory sharpened, cutting through everything else. Her hands on my throat, steady despite the chaos around us. I remembered the moment the light burst from her palms, bright enough to swallow everything, blinding in a way that had made me shut my eyes even as I felt it sink into me.
Something in my chest tightened, and I sucked in a breath as if I’d been underwater.
"I was healed by that girl," I said, my voice coming out rough, uneven against the silence that had settled in the room. "Fia."
Maren didn’t hesitate. She nodded once, like there was no room for doubt. "She saved your life."
Saved.
The word sat strangely with me.
"How?" It slipped out before I could stop it, quieter this time, edged with something I couldn’t quite hide.
Thorne gave a small shrug, like the question didn’t matter, like it wasn’t something worth digging into. "Who knows," he said, his tone almost dismissive. "That is just how she is. Thank the goddess that is how she is."
I looked at him, really looked this time, trying to find something in his face that matched the weight of what had happened. But there was nothing there that made sense of it. No explanation. No hesitation.
Just acceptance.
And that unsettled me more than anything else.
Did they not comprehend the word healed?
I was not just patched together. I was not barely surviving. I was completely healed.
All of that damage was gone as it had never existed.
It didn’t make sense.
I should have felt relief. Gratitude, even. I should have clung to the fact that I was still here, still breathing, that whatever had taken me to the edge hadn’t been enough to push me over.
But none of that came.
Instead, there was this quiet, gnawing sense that something wasn’t right, that I had missed something important in the space between dying and waking up.
"And what about the traitors?" I asked the question, cutting through the room before I could soften it. My voice came out harsher than I intended, like it had been dragged over something sharp on its way out. "Ronan... Aldric too..."
Maren’s expression shifted immediately, whatever relief had been there fading into something darker and heavier.
"They are dead."
I felt something twist in my chest. Sharp and immediate.
Ronan was dead.
"Thorne will tell Alpha Cian you are awake now," Maren said. She moved toward the cabinets and started organizing supplies.

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