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13: Regina’s POV

Author: Still Iv
last update publish date: 2026-03-31 01:19:28

The girl was shaking so hard I could feel the tremors vibrating through my own bones.

I kept my arm hooked firmly through hers, guiding her toward her room.

Poor thing was so fragile she reminded me of a fine porcelain doll ready to shatter.

"Breath, Amaya. Just breathe. You’re inside now. The walls are thick, and the locks are solid," I said, my voice pitched in that soothing tone I used when I needed to disarm someone.

"He was going to hurt me," Amaya whispered.

Her eyes were wide, the pupils blown out with terror.

"I know. I know." I led her to her room, taking both of her cold, clammy hands in mine. "Look at me. Look at my eyes, Amaya."

She lifted her gaze, her lower lip trembling.

"You are a Valak guest. In this house, that makes you sacred. Do you understand? That man was an error. And I promise you, on my life, it will never happen again”

“Okay” she said quietly.

I signaled to the two maids hovering near the door. They moved instantly, like shadows responding to a candle.

"Maria! Sofia!" I barked. The girls jumped.

"Take Care of Miss Amaya while I’m away. Prepare a lavender bath and stay with her. If she so much as whimpers, I want to know about it. If anyone tries to enter that room without my express permission, you scream loud enough to wake the dead. Clear?"

"Yes, Signora Regina," they chirped in unison.

I stood up and headed for the exit.

I looked back at Amaya and gave her a sharp, encouraging nod and then I left.

The second she was out of sight, the smiling mask I wore disintegrated.

I turned toward the hallway leading to the west wing. My blood was boiling and rightfully so.

I didn't knock when I reached Bane’s study.

I threw the heavy mahogany doors open with such force they slammed against the interior stoppers with a crack that echoed like a gunshot.

Bane was sitting behind that monstrous desk of his, a cigar in one hand and a fountain pen in the other.

Nathaniel was standing by the window, his arms crossed, unlike Bane, he looked surprised.

"Get out, Nathaniel," I snapped, not even looking at the boy.

Nathaniel stiffened.

"I'm in the middle of a briefing, Aunt."

"I don't give a damn if you're in the middle of a coronation," I hissed, turning my glare on him. "Out. Now. I need to yell at your uncle”

Nathaniel looked to Bane who only gave a curt, infinitesimal nod.

Nathaniel shrugged, said nothing more, stood up and excused us.

As soon as the door clicked shut, I marched straight to the desk, slamming my palms down on the polished wood.

"Is there a reason you’re trying to break the furniture, Regina?" Bane asked with a bored tone.

"Your men," I spat, the words tasting like acid. "Your indisciplined, absolute gutter trash imbeciles!!! That’s the reason!!”

Bane set his pen down slowly.

He finally looked up, his dark eyes narrowing.

"Explain what you’re on about. Quickly please, I have a shipment in Livorno that needs my attention."

"Oh, to hell with your shipment! One of your guards just spent his afternoon harassing Amaya near the isolation block."

The temperature in the room seemed to drop twenty degrees.

Bane’s hand, which had been reaching for a document, froze mid-air.

"Which Amaya?" he asked. The question was a razor blade.

"YOUR Amaya!” I said, “That bastard grabbed her, pulled a knife on her and said she was spoil of war and spoils should be shared”

“Spoils of war should be shared…..”

Bane repeated the phrase under his breath and went unnervingly still.

It was the kind of stillness you see in a predator right before the killing blow.

"Who was it? The guard?” Bane asked.

"I don't have a name yet. All I know is he’s some stupid asshat with a pocketknife. He was stationed near the gray bunker. Amaya is upstairs right now, shaking so hard she can barely speak. She’s terrified, Bane.“

I paced the length of the rug, my hands flying as I spoke.

"What the hell are you doing, brother? You bring her here, you tell her she’s safe, and then you let your dogs off the leash? Is this how we run things now? Are we letting these men terrorize women in our own gardens?"

Bane stood up.

He was a tall and massive man and right now he looked angry.

He walked around the desk, his presence filling the room until it felt like the walls were closing in.

He stopped inches from me. I looked him eye to eye. As a big woman who was 5’11, I too, was an imposing figure myself.

It was a family trait.

"Is she hurt?" he asked.

"Bruises on her shoulder. A few scratches on her neck from where he pulled her hair.“

I poked a finger into his chest, hard.

"If a man touches what belongs to a Valak, what happens, Bane?"

Bane’s face was a mask of cold, unadulterated fury. The veins in his neck were corded, and his eyes were so dark they looked like pits of charcoal.

Bane’s voice was a low vibration that I could feel in the floorboards.

"If one of my own thinks he can touch what I have marked as mine... he has forgotten who I am."

I stepped back.

"Remind him then”

Bane walked over to the intercom on the wall. He pressed the button with enough force to crack the casing.

"Captain," Bane barked.

"Yes, Boss?" the voice crackled back, sounding startled.

"Assemble every guard on the grounds. Every single one of them. In the courtyard right now! If a single man is missing, I’ll have your head on a spike next to theirs."

"Right away, sir."

Bane turned back to me. The rage was still there, but it was being funneled into a singular, lethal purpose.

I smiled and nodded approvingly.

“That’s my brother”

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    The taste of blood from my bitten lip was a clear testament to the absolute chaos of her mouth. The anger that had nearly driven us apart just seconds ago was instantly rewired. Somehow, hate had transformed into a raw, electric desperation that burned through every fiber of our being. Amaya’s hands stopped pounding against my chest. With a soft, broken sob that was swallowed straight into my throat, her fingers uncurled, sliding up the lapels of my jacket to grip it with a frantic intensity. She wasn't trying to run away anymore. She was pulling me closer, her mouth opening beneath mine as she kissed me back with a fierce, unbridled hunger that matched my own stroke for stroke. "Amaya," I growled against her lips, the sound primitive and rough as I lifted her slightly, her feet clearing the marble floor as I carried her away from the door and back toward the large, disheveled bed. “I don’t know what to do, Bane. I don’t want to be here. I don’t know where to go”

  • THE KILLER THAT CLAIMED ME   52: Bane’s POV

    The weight of the book that Amaya had thrown at me caused my back to hurt.“FUCK YOU, BANE!”Since when did she become so vulgar? I watched as her fist clenched while she stared daggers at me. Her breathing was fast, shallow, and ragged."What is wrong with you?" I yelled, my voice carrying with a mixture of raw shock and sudden, defensive fury. "What’s wrong with me??? What the hell is wrong with you, Bane? You’re sick!!!”"This is my house, Amaya!! You do not speak to me this way!" She walked up to me, bridging the gap and poked my chest with her small, manicured finger."I don’t give a damn!”I had to control myself. I wasn’t going to let her get into my head and cause me to lose my temper.“I am done playing these ridiculous games with you, Amaya. Good night”"I am not playing games!" she shouted back, shoving me. The flat, hollow indifference she had displayed at the dinner table was entirely gone, replaced by a wild fire that flared in her eyes. "I told you to leave me a

  • THE KILLER THAT CLAIMED ME   51: BANE’S POV

    The leather upholstery of my office chair creaked under my weight as I rubbed the bridge of my nose, staring blankly at the flickering security tapes. I couldn’t help but think of Amaya. The staff and some of the guards had reported her sudden, violent outbursts and I couldn’t make sense of any of it. What changed? A sharp knock cut through the hum of the electronic servers. "Enter," I said. Regina stepped into the room, closing the door. She didn't take a seat and simply leaned against the edge of my heavy mahogany desk, watching me with a serious expression. "I'm busy, Regina," I said, not looking up from my monitors. “Sooooo about your princess…..” I threw my pen down on the desk. "If this is about her skipping another meal, I already know.” "It’s not about the food," Regina said smoothly, "She started asking me questions. Highly specific questions, Bane." I went entirely still, my hands hovering over the keyboard. "What kind of questions?" "She

  • THE KILLER THAT CLAIMED ME   50: Amaya POV

    The bedroom had become my entire universe, a box where the minutes bled into hours and hours into days.I sat on the plush velvet chaise by the window, staring out at nothing in particular. I felt completely, utterly torn. On one hand, Nathaniel’s confession haunted the corners of my mind, on the other hand, Regina’s brutal warning echoed louder.A definitive reminder that any attempt to flee would lead to a bloodbath. But the most terrifying fracture inside me wasn't the fear of running. It was the hate.I hated that I actually liked my captor. I hated that despite the chains, despite the walls, Bane’s touch was the only thing that made me feel grounded. A sharp series of knocks rattled the heavy bedroom doors, shattering my thoughts. "Amaya," Nathaniel’s voice called out from the corridor,. "Lord Bane has requested your presence in the formal dining room for dinner.“ I squeezed my eyes shut. The thought of sitting across from Bane, pretending everything was normal while m

  • THE KILLER THAT CLAIMED ME   49: BANE’S POV

    The silence in the dining room was overwhelming, especially given the fact that Amaya sat across from me at the long mahogany table. She had her eyes completely fixed on her plate but she hadn't touched her food. She hadn't even looked at me since the guards pulled her chair out. Last week, she would have been talking about the beach, or the library, or trying to tease a smile out of me despite the chaos outside. Now, she was a statue. She felt like a cold, impenetrable wall. "The kitchen staff prepared the sea bass specifically because you requested it Tuesday," I said, breaking the silence as I set my fork down. Amaya didn't move. She merely pushed a piece of fish across the porcelain with her fork. "I'm not particularly hungry, Bane." "You haven't been hungry for some time, Amaya," I countered, trying to maintain a steady, calm register. "You're dropping weight. If you don't like the menu, you only have to tell the chef to alter it." "The menu is fine," she s

  • THE KILLER THAT CLAIMED ME   48: REGINA’S POV

    The heels of my boots clicked with a sharp, heavy rhythm against the marble tiles as I made my way down the western corridor. The Calabrian wind was still rattling the high glass windowpanes. It was a constant reminder that a storm was brewing outside, both literally and figuratively. But right now, it wasn't the perimeter sensors or Roman’s next potential strike that was keeping my jaw tightly locked. It was the Amaya. She had walked away from me out on the balcony with a hollow, dead look in her eyes that I didn't like one bit. One minute she was firing off highly dangerous questions about what would happen if she escaped, and the next, she was shutting down entirely. The next minute, she was pulling a heavy curtain over her face and telling me to 'never mind'. She wasn't just acting like a restless captive anymore. Whatever was going on with her, she was now acting like a woman harboring a secret that could blow this entire fortress sky-high. I stopped just outsi

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