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Vanished Sisters: The Lycan King's Slave Island
Vanished Sisters: The Lycan King's Slave Island
Author: Sansa

Chapter 1

Author: Sansa
last update Last Updated: 2026-01-21 15:54:23

Natasha's POV

Westbay, Southwest England.

"Natasha Hastings, get down from that mast this instant!"

My mother's voice carried clear across the harbor, shrill with that particular mix of exasperation and resignation I'd been hearing my whole life. I pretended not to hear, shinning up the last few feet to check the rigging. The view from up here was worth the lecture—all of Westbay spread below, the autumn sun turning the sea to molten copper.

"Let the girl be, Mary," Father called from the deck. "She's got a better eye for loose lines than half my crew."

"She's not a girl, she's a menace!" Mother stood on the dock, arms crossed, face red. "Look at her—dressed like a ragamuffin boy, climbing around like some monkey. She's seventeen, John! Seventeen! She should be learning to keep house, not—whatever this is!"

I slid down with practiced ease, landing soft on the deck. My worn sailor's trousers were tar-stained, my loose shirt two sizes too big—borrowed from my older brothers before they'd left for the merchant ships—and my short brown-black curls stuck out from under my cap at odd angles. I looked more like a scruffy twelve-year-old boy than a marriageable young woman.

Perfect.

"I was checking the forestay, Mother," I said cheerfully. "Another week and Father could've lost the whole sail in a storm."

"Your sister doesn't climb masts." Mother's anger was deflating slightly. "Your sister knows how to behave like a proper young lady."

"Davelina is perfect," I agreed, because it was true. At twenty, my older sister was everything I wasn't—graceful, beautiful, with golden-brown hair she kept in intricate braids. Half the young men in Westbay were in love with her. "But Davelina gets seasick just looking at boats, so somebody has to help Father."

"I don't get seasick," came my sister's voice from the dock. She'd appeared beside Mother, basket of mending on her hip, trying not to smile. "I just prefer solid ground."

"Like a sensible person," Mother said pointedly.

Father laughed, his weathered face crinkling. "If I'd had another son after the boys left, Mary, this is exactly what I'd want. Since God gave us only daughters, I'll take what I can get." He ruffled my hair. "My little sea beaver. Can climb anything, fix anything, not afraid of hard work."

"'Little sea beaver,'" Mother muttered. "That's what the whole village calls her now. Not 'Natasha,' not 'Miss Hastings,' but 'little sea beaver,' like she's some harbor mascot!"

"Could be worse," I said. "Old Thomas calls Jimmy 'the fish that walks.'"

"This isn't funny!" But Mother's lips were twitching. She could never stay angry long. "The baker's son asked after you last week. I had to explain my daughter was out hauling crab pots. He looked at me like I was mad."

"The baker's son is boring. All he talks about is flour grades."

"He's respectable. He has prospects."

"He has a face like an unbaked dumpling."

"Natasha!"

Davelina laughed outright, earning a glare. "Don't encourage her. You're supposed to be a good influence."

"Someone has to make sure she doesn't fall off any masts," Davelina said diplomatically. "Are you finished, or do you have more rigging to inspect?"

I glanced at the sky. The sun was dipping toward the horizon, painting everything amber and gold. "Finished. Why?"

"Because Father said we could have the evening free." Davelina's eyes sparkled with mischief. "I'm thinking about hitting the Dolphin's Song tonight."

"You want to go to a tavern?" I stared at my perfect, proper sister. "Mother will kill us both."

"Mother doesn't have to know," Davelina said serenely. "I'll say we're visiting the vicar's wife for a pattern book. You can say you're mending nets."

I grinned. This was why Davelina was my favorite person in the world.

"The Dolphin's Song it is," I said. "But I'm not changing clothes."

"I wouldn't dream of asking you to," Davelina said. "You'd probably scandalize everyone by actually looking like a girl for once."

The Dolphin's Song was already crowded when we arrived, thick with pipe smoke and ale. I kept my cap low and shoulders hunched, moving through the crowd with practiced ease. In these clothes, with my short hair and bound chest, I was just another young fisherman's son grabbing a drink after work.

Davelina attracted more attention. Several men turned as she entered, eyes lingering on her golden hair and pretty face. But she handled it with her usual grace, nodding politely but coolly as she made her way to the corner table I'd secured.

"You really should let your hair grow," she murmured, arranging her skirts. "It's such a lovely color—"

"It would look like I'm trying to be something I'm not," I interrupted, keeping my voice low and rough. "This is easier. This is me."

She sighed but didn't argue. We'd had this conversation a hundred times. Davelina understood, even if she didn't fully approve, that I was simply more comfortable this way.

"At least try to sit like a girl," she whispered.

I glanced down and realized I'd sprawled with my legs apart, one ankle crossed over my knee. Very much not ladylike. I adjusted slightly, earning an approving nod.

Old Thomas was already holding court near the hearth, his weathered face illuminated by firelight. At seventy-three, he'd survived more storms than most men had seen sunrises.

"Fifty years ago," Thomas began, his one good eye gleaming, "my father saw something that haunted him till his dying day."

I leaned forward, drawn in by his tone. Thomas was a master storyteller.

"A black ship," he continued, "no sails, no oars, moving against the wind like it was being pulled by invisible hands. The hull looked like charred timber, black as sin."

Young John—the real John, not me—snorted into his drink. "Come now, Thomas. You've had too much ale. What ship moves without sails?"

"My father," Thomas interrupted sharply, "watched three fishing boats follow that cursed vessel toward the western deep. None ever came back."

The tavern went quiet.

"Over the years, more boats vanished. Officials called it storms. Called it piracy. But my father knew better." His voice dropped. "Those men were taken to the Isle of the Vanished."

I'd heard versions of this story before, but something about Thomas's delivery made it feel different tonight.

I leaned close to Davelina. "These old codgers love their penny dreadful stories."

"Shh," she hissed, but her hand found my arm, fingers tightening. "Just listen."

Old William spoke up from his corner. "I heard tales from my grandfather too. Said that island's inhabited by monsters." His voice carried absolute belief. "They come in the darkest nights, when the fog rolls thick. They hunt for young women and strong men."

"Why young women?" someone called out.

William's face darkened. "Because of what they do to them."

The silence was absolute.

Thomas leaned forward, firelight turning his face ancient and terrible. "There's a fortress on that island. The Monster King's stronghold." He glanced around at the women present—his gaze lingered on Davelina, then skipped right over me. "They call it Girl's Hell."

My stomach clenched at the name.

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  • Vanished Sisters: The Lycan King's Slave Island   Chapter 6

    Natasha's POVThe heat consumed me from within.I'd thought I understood pain—the ache of hauling nets in freezing rain, the sting of rope burn on raw palms, the exhaustion of sixteen-hour days at sea. But this was different. This was fire crawling through my veins, burning away reason, leaving only desperate, animal need.I curled tighter on the moldy straw, trying to make myself small. Trying to disappear. The rough linen shirt scraped against skin that felt raw and oversensitive, every fiber a brand. My breath came in short, sharp gasps that echoed off the damp stone walls.What's happening to me?The binding cloth around my chest—the one Davelina had wrapped so carefully on the ship—suddenly felt like iron bands crushing my ribs. I clawed at it with shaking fingers, desperate for air, for relief, for anything.The knots finally gave way.Cool air touched my bare skin, and I nearly sobbed with relief. But the reprieve lasted only seconds before a new kind of awareness flooded throu

  • Vanished Sisters: The Lycan King's Slave Island   Chapter 5

    Natasha's POVAn older woman in severe black—clearly the head servant—was circling my sister like a merchant inspecting livestock. "The water's too hot," she snapped at someone. "Add cold. We can't scald her skin before presentation."I forced myself to move, to walk forward on numb legs, to pour the buckets into the bath as ordered. My eyes stayed down, but I was close enough now to see the tremors running through Davelina's body, the way her hands clenched at her sides."You. Yes, fisher boy." The older woman's voice cut through my thoughts. "Come here."I approached slowly, keeping my cap low, praying she wouldn't look too close.She grabbed my chin with surprising strength and jerked my face up, her pale eyes boring into mine. They were sharp, calculating, missing nothing. Her gaze traveled over my features."For a fisherman's son, your hands are remarkably uncalloused," she said softly. "And your face is... very clean. Very pretty. Too pretty for a boy who's supposedly hauled net

  • Vanished Sisters: The Lycan King's Slave Island   Chapter 4

    Natasha's POVThe ship's violent shudder woke me. My head throbbed where it had struck the wooden wall during the night, and for a moment I couldn't remember where I was. Then the stench hit—vomit, unwashed bodies.My hands flew to my chest. The binding cloth was still there, tight enough to make breathing uncomfortable. Thank God."Lina," I rasped, shaking the warm body beside me. "Wake up. The ship's stopped."Davelina stirred, her face pale in the dim light filtering through cracks in the hull. Around us, other prisoners were beginning to move, groaning and crying out. A child somewhere was sobbing for his mother.The hatch above exploded open. Blinding grey light poured in, and a voice like grinding stone bellowed: "On your feet! Anyone still down in ten seconds gets the whip!"Bodies scrambled upward. I helped Davelina stand, her legs shaking beneath her. We climbed the ladder with the others, pushed from behind by desperate hands, pulled forward by terror.The deck was chaos. Cr

  • Vanished Sisters: The Lycan King's Slave Island   Chapter 3

    Natasha's POVMy cap flew off, short curls whipping around my face as I stumbled over rocks. But the fog swallowed everything in seconds, reducing visibility to mere feet. I couldn't see the shore, couldn't see the path—Davelina's hand found mine in the whiteness, fingers locking around my wrist with desperate strength.That's when I heard it.A sound like nothing in nature. Part growl, part breathing, but underneath, something that might have been words in a language no human throat should produce. Heavy footsteps. Multiple sets. Moving with purpose."Oh God," Davelina whispered. "Thomas was right—"The black ship materialized like a phantom made solid.Exactly as Thomas had described—massive, easily three times the size of any fishing vessel, with a hull like charred wood. No sails. No oars. No visible crew. But I could feel eyes watching.Shapes emerged from the fog.My bladder almost let go.They were huge—easily seven feet tall—with bodies caught between human and beast. Thick f

  • Vanished Sisters: The Lycan King's Slave Island   Chapter 2

    Natasha's POV"The women they take there," Thomas continued, voice heavy, "they use them as playthings. As sex slaves. The creatures—they're not just werewolves. Bigger, stronger, and their appetites..." He shook his head. "Most women don't survive more than a night. Maybe two if they're unlucky."Beside me, Davelina had gone very still. Her fingers dug into my arm."That's barbaric," someone muttered."That's reality," Thomas said flatly. "My father said you could hear the screaming from ships that got too close. Women screaming through the night. By morning, silence."I wanted to laugh it off, but the words stuck. Because Thomas didn't look like he was telling a campfire tale. He looked like he was delivering a warning.Old William nodded slowly. "My grandfather said those creatures weren't always monsters. Centuries ago—four, maybe five hundred years—they lived peacefully. Some say they even helped ships in distress.""What changed?" someone asked.Thomas stared into the fire. "Hun

  • Vanished Sisters: The Lycan King's Slave Island   Chapter 1

    Natasha's POVWestbay, Southwest England."Natasha Hastings, get down from that mast this instant!"My mother's voice carried clear across the harbor, shrill with that particular mix of exasperation and resignation I'd been hearing my whole life. I pretended not to hear, shinning up the last few feet to check the rigging. The view from up here was worth the lecture—all of Westbay spread below, the autumn sun turning the sea to molten copper."Let the girl be, Mary," Father called from the deck. "She's got a better eye for loose lines than half my crew.""She's not a girl, she's a menace!" Mother stood on the dock, arms crossed, face red. "Look at her—dressed like a ragamuffin boy, climbing around like some monkey. She's seventeen, John! Seventeen! She should be learning to keep house, not—whatever this is!"I slid down with practiced ease, landing soft on the deck. My worn sailor's trousers were tar-stained, my loose shirt two sizes too big—borrowed from my older brothers before they'

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