Mag-log inThe Golden Cage is Set
The aftermath of the public claim was a blinding blur. I was escorted out of the throne room not by jailers, but by handmaids who treated me with a fearful, almost ritualistic reverence. They didn't see Esmeralda, the omega; they saw the newly crowned True Luna, the carrier of the deadly Silver-Eyed blood.
They stripped me of the filth of the kennel and the blood of Silas. The bathing ritual was torturous—a complete immersion into a world I was utterly unsuited for. The water was scented with exotic oils, the soap made of costly flower essences, and every touch from the handmaids felt like a judgment. They washed away the mud and the grime, but they couldn’t wash away the four years of abuse, nor could they wash away the terrifying magnetic pull I felt toward the man who had ordered this farce.
They dressed me in robes that felt —soft, heavy silk dyed in the deep, regal indigo of the royal house.
This is a cage, I thought, staring at my reflection. My intense brown eyes, usually dulled by exhaustion, were wide and terrified, I have not said anything since, feels like my brain has been disconnected.
I was moved into the Royal Wing. Not a cell, but a suite of rooms larger than the entire Black Hills pack slums. The bedroom was enormous, dominated by a four-poster bed draped in white furs. The windows looked out onto the beautiful city ruled by King Demetrius Klein.
Just outside my chambers, standing sentinel, was my new guard. Commander Finn. He was massive, silent, and honorable—the Chief of Guard. His face was a closed book, but when he met my gaze, there was a flicker of something that wasn’t contempt: pity.
“My orders are to guard your person, Luna,” his voice was deep and respectful. “I am bound to ensure your safety and follow your commands, save those that compromise the King’s rule.”
My commands? I knew instantly that my only real command was to breathe, and only until Demetrius no longer needed me. Commander Finn was not an ally; he was the highest-ranking watchdog. Still, the small measure of respectful distance he offered felt like a lifeboat in this sea of hostility.
The pressure started immediately. Demetrius had orchestrated a reception for the Luna, forcing the nobility to acknowledge his claim, but their contempt was barely concealed behind their silk masks.
I was paraded into a crowded salon where the scent of ambition and jealousy was thick enough to choke on. The worst of it came from the two people Demetrius clearly valued most: his Beta, Rhys Volkov, and the ambitious noble, Selene Voss.
Selene approached first, her emerald dress shimmering like liquid poison. She dismissed Finn with a wave of her hand before turning her gaze on me.
“The King’s choice is clearly strategic, not romantic, Luna,” Selene purred, using the title like an insult. “You would do well to remember that. We all know what you are. An omega who was rejected by a common Alpha. The throne requires strength, and King Demetrius will not long tolerate weakness beneath his crown.”
I felt the familiar urge to sink into silence, but something shifted. I was no longer fighting for a corner in a slum; I was fighting for my life.
“The King chose me for a reason you clearly don’t understand, Lady Selene,” I replied, my voice raspy but steady. “Perhaps you should worry less about my place on the throne, and more about your own proximity to it.”
Selene’s smile vanished, replaced by shock. I had defied her. But before she could retaliate, Rhys, the King’s stone-faced Beta, intervened.
“Lady Selene. The Luna is correct. She is here for some reasons.” Rhys looked at me, his icy disapproval undisguised. “Your heritage is dangerous, Esmeralda. If you attempt any rebellion, any flight, or any communication that harms the King, I will be the one to end you. Do not mistake the King’s leniency for ignorance.”
Their open hostility was crushing, but it confirmed the truth: the “True Luna” title was rubbish. I had no friends here, only enemies awaiting my predicted failure.
I walked away, not giving them more things to talk about. I have an angry king to see later in the evening and I will be damned if I take the whole day here.
***********
Later that evening, Demetrius sent for me, leading me not to a state room, but to a sparse, tactical war room. The air was thick with the scent of dried ink, parchment, and tension. He was standing over a massive map table dominated by a section marked: THE SHADOW CANYONS.
He was back to being the King—cold, calculating, and ruthless.
“Sit,” he ordered, pointing to a stool. He didn’t offer comfort or a greeting. “You are here for one purpose. You claim knowledge of a path through those canyons—a route that my most advanced scouts deem impossible. Prove your value, Omega. Now.”
He treated me like a computer, not a Queen, not a mate. He wanted data.
I realized this was my moment to solidify my leash—or shorten my lifespan. I had to access the information Old Man Silas had given me. I closed my eyes and reached inside, not for the memory, but for the talisman’s imprint.
It wasn't a map in my mind. It was a feeling—a strange, vibrational knowledge linked to the silver scars on my arm. When I described the canyons, I wasn't reciting facts; I was describing an energy current.
“The entrance is not visible from the north,” I began, my voice gaining clarity as I spoke the truth of the lineage. “The river flows in three channels there, but the Lycan scouts only see two. The third channel, though only six feet wide, is the path. It is hidden by an illusion, a shimmer cast by the ancient rocks that only those of Silver-Eyed blood can discern.”
I pointed to the map, my finger tracing a line through a maze of red markings that signified death traps. “If you enter at the full moon, the illusion thins. The path follows the current for two days, then rises into a dry riverbed. It is the only route that avoids the Aegis Initiative’s thermal detection nets.”
Demetrius watched me, utterly still. His expression was slowly transitioning from disbelief to icy comprehension. He didn’t look impressed; he looked vindicated, as if a complicated equation had finally been solved.
“So the old myths are true,” he murmured, the closest he’d come to an emotional admission. “The bloodline carries the memory of the land.”
My strategic value was confirmed. I had secured my survival, for now.
Rhys was ordered to begin planning the route immediately, but Demetrius dismissed everyone except me. The moment the heavy oak doors shut, the cold pragmatism returned, intensified by the forced intimacy of the empty room.
He walked over to the desk, his massive frame radiating suppressed power. He didn't come close enough for the bond to flare, maintaining a distance designed to keep both his mind and mine safe.
He didn't need to grab me, but he delivered the threat with the crushing finality of a predator.
“You understand your position, Luna?” he asked, the title a cruel mockery.
I met his eye, my fear now tempered with a strange, defiant resilience. I couldn't beat him, but I wouldn't break. “I am a tool. A means to an end.”
A muscle twitched in his jaw. “Precisely. You are here to secure my victory over Victor Sterling and the Aegis Initiative. Once the route is fully secured and utilized, you are irrelevant. Do you truly understand what that means, Esmeralda?”
I swallowed, the regal silk around my throat feeling tighter than a noose. “It means I disappear. Permanently.”
His expression didn't change. It was utter, cold-blooded pragmatism. “If you comply, quietly and completely, I will ensure your death is painless. You will be remembered as the Luna who saved our race, before an unfortunate, swift illness took you.”
He then took a step closer, close enough for the faint, desperate scent of his true Alpha to hit me. It was deliberate torture, a test of his own control.
“But if you falter, if you attempt to betray me, or if that cursed Silver-Eyed bloodline attempts to exercise its true power…” He let the threat hang, heavy and final. “I will do to you what you did to Damon, magnified tenfold. You will guide my army, and then you will disappear. You are a tool to secure my victory, nothing more. Fail me, and I will execute you myself. You understand, Luna?”
Tears stung my eyes, but I refused to let them fall. My entire life had been defined by what others wanted—Damon’s rejection, Silas’s desperate secret, and now Demetrius’s lethal control.
I looked at the King, the man I was fated to love, and saw only my executioner. The crushing devastation was complete.
I am a tool? Fine. I nodded once, slowly. “I understand, Your Majesty.”
But my internal monologue was a scream of defiance: He has given me the keys to his kingdom. I will use his resources, his robes, his guards, and his war room to survive his plan. You may have claimed me, Demetrius, but the moment you stop looking, I will start fighting.
The fake marriage was a death sentence, and my resolve was now locked in. I would not only guide his army, bu
t I would use this golden cage to save myself
LIGHT AND TRUTHThe first thing I noticed was the silence. It wasn't the heavy, suffocating silence of the tomb I had been living in for years. It was different. It felt light, like the air after a storm has finally passed.I opened my eyes, expecting the familiar burn of the silver in my veins. I expected that cold, metallic itch that always told me I was more a machine than a man. But it was gone. My blood felt... warm. It felt like liquid life instead of liquid death.I tried to sit up, but my muscles felt like water. I groaned, the sound echoing off the high stone walls."Don't move," a voice said. It was Finn. He was sitting in a chair by the hearth, scrubbing grease off a dagger. He looked at me with a mixture of pity and old, hardened anger. "You’ve been through enough to kill three men, Demetrius. Just stay still.""Where is she?" I asked. My voice sounded thin, like a ghost’s.Finn nodded toward the far side of the bed.I turned my head, and there she was. Esmeralda. She was
THE HEALING POWERThe room was far too quiet. Now that we were back in the upper chambers, the distant sounds of the riot felt like they belonged to another world. Here, there was only the sound of Demetrius’s wet, shallow breathing and the frantic ticking of a clock on the wall.Finn paced by the window, his hands stained with soot. "We can’t stay here, Esme. The guards will realize the cellar door was forced. We have to move him.""Move him where?" I asked. I was sitting on the edge of the bed, staring at the King. His skin wasn't just pale anymore; it had a metallic, sickly sheen to it. "He’s dying, Finn. Not from a heart that won't beat, but from the silver. It’s inside him. It’s eating him from the inside out."I reached out and touched his hand. It was ice cold. Under the skin of his wrist, I could see the veins pulsing with a strange, dark gray light."You did what you could," Finn said, coming over to put a hand on my shoulder. "You brought him back once. No one can ask for mo
THE NEAR DEATHThe keys felt like lead in my hands. Every time they clinked together, the sound echoed off the damp stone walls like a funeral bell. I kept looking back at the door we had just closed. I could still see him in my mind—that gray man in that gray chair."Esme, stop looking back," Finn said. He was walking ahead of me, his torch flickering wildly. "We got what we came for. We need to get out of this hole before the whole palace comes down on our heads.""I know," I whispered. "I just... I didn't think he’d look like that. I wanted him to be a monster. It’s easier to hate a monster."Finn stopped and turned to look at me. The orange light of the torch made the shadows under his eyes look deep. "He is a monster, Esme. Just because he’s a tired one doesn't change what he did to your family. It doesn't change the people starving in the streets.""I know," I said, wiping a bit of sweat from my forehead. "But it feels like the air is leaving this place. Can you feel that? It’s
THE KING’S CHAMBERS The stairs to the north tower cellars were slick with moisture. Every step we took felt like we were walking into the mouth of some giant, sleeping beast. The air down here didn't move. It was thick with the smell of wet stone, old vinegar, and something else—something sweet and rotten that made the hair on my arms stand up."Watch your footing," Finn whispered. He held a small torch out in front of us, but the light seemed to get swallowed by the dark before it could hit the walls."I’m fine," I said, though my knees were shaking. "Just keep going. We have to be close."We reached the bottom, and the room opened up. It was a forest of wooden racks, most of them empty and broken. I remembered being a little girl and hearing stories about the King’s private collection of wines, things brought from across the sea that cost more than a whole village earned in a year. Now, it just looked like a graveyard.I counted the racks. One. Two. Three.Behind the third one, the
CONFRONTING SELENEThe corridor was cold, the kind of cold that feels like it’s biting into your bones. The torches were spaced far apart, flickering in the draft. Every time a flame dipped, the shadows stretched out like long, thin fingers reaching for us. My heart was thumping against my ribs so hard I thought Finn might hear it."She’s close," I whispered, my voice barely a breath. "I can smell that perfume of hers. It smells like dead lilies."Finn gripped his sword. He looked tired. The weight of the scrolls was still heavy on us, but there was no time to think about the prophecy now. We needed the King, and there was only one person left who knew exactly which shadow he was hiding in."Jax, stay by the stairwell," Finn ordered quietly. "If anyone comes up from the guardroom, you give us the signal. Don't try to be a hero. Just run."Jax disappeared into the dark without a word. I turned the corner, my boots silent on the stone. And there she was.Selene was walking toward the we
THE HIDDEN SCROLLSThe air in the gallery was thick with the smell of old dust and expensive candle wax. Every shadow looked like a soldier. We moved in a line, our footsteps swallowed by the thick rugs. Finn led the way, his hand never leaving the hilt of his sword. He kept glancing back at Jax and Silas, his eyes darting like a trapped bird."Wait," I whispered, pulling on Finn’s sleeve.He jumped, his breath hitching. "What? Did you hear something?""No," I said, pointing to a small, unassuming door tucked under a stone arch. "We aren't going to the bedchamber yet. Not until you see why we’re actually here."Finn frowned, wiping sweat from his forehead with the back of his hand. "Esme, we don't have time for a tour. Every second we stand here is a second closer to a guard patrol finding us. You have the key. Let’s just go.""This is more important than the key," I said. I looked at Jax. "Watch the hall. If you see a torch, whistle."Jax nodded, his face grim. He leaned against the







