Chapter 1: Bidding

Breeder Season 6 - Rejected by the Dark Lord

*Eliza*

I blinked into light so bright it was impossible to clear my vision. My head was throbbing, and Ireached back to feel along the base of my skull where dried blood was caked into my thick, darkbrown curls. Every movement of my body sent a sharp ache shooting down my spine. The slightesttouch of the fabric of the dress I'd been made to wear set my skin on fire. Nausea roiled in mystomach, but I found it impossible to swallow.

Everything was too bright, too loud, too much.

The clink of coins... the smell of sour, bitter ale... low, grisly voices dripping with violence andhunger-that was all I could hear, and as my eyes began to adjust to the lights about my head, all Icould see was the silhouette of the crowd

Men huddled around bar tables. Women walked between them, dropping pitchers of ale socarelessly in front of them that foam spilled over the rim of the glass. It smelled like smoke andmildew, and my stomach lurched as another chill ran down my spine. Where was 1? How had thingsgone so awry?

I could barely turn my neck without pain, but a movement a few feet from where I stood caught myeye. Another woman stood nearby, her body bathed in dusty, amber light.

“Three healthy sons," came a male voice, a voice I immediately recognized.

It belonged to the same man who had given me the injury on the back of my head. I closed myeyes, flinching away as he moved out from behind me, his voice booming over the muffled chatterenveloping the room.

"A professional, you could say."

A professional what, exactly? I painfully turned my head to look at the woman through my lashes,noticing her expressionless face. Murmurs erupted through the crowd as the man made her do atwirl, showing her off. Her dress didn't leave much to the imagination, but neither did mine.

I looked down at the scrap of fabric that barely covered my body, the strips of white, thin cottonthat hung loosely from my shoulders and fell over my breasts. Under this light, every inch of me wasexposed to the hungry gazes in the crowd.

“The bidding starts at twenty"

Bidding?

Noise fanned out over the crowd before the man could finish. People yelled. Some argued. I turnedto the woman and noticed her eyes shining with nervous pride.

I'd been so distracted by the scene unfolding before me that I hadn't noticed my captor had movedbehind me once more until one of his hands tangled in my hair, pulling roughly so I was forced totilt my chin toward the ceiling, blinded by the light once again. His other hand clasped my wriststogether behind my back and pulled my arms down so I had to bend back toward him, my breastsraised and on full display.

I yelped in pain and surprise as he forced me to walk forward to the very edge of the stage, hisfingernails digging into my skin.

"Virginal," he hissed loud enough to send an echo across the now quiet room.

Tears welled in my eyes as I panted, my arms trembling with the strain of having them held soviolently behind my back.

"Untouched. You could get three, maybe four pups out of her before she's worthless.”

What?

My heart was beating so rapidly in my chest that I found it hard to catch my breath. Virginal? Threeor four pups before I was worthless? Rage ripped through my fear as I took a shuttering breath. I'dgraduated two years early from the University of Mirage's prestigious history program with a dualmajor in archeology, for Goddess’ sake. How the hell how I ended up here, being measured bynothing more than my ability to bear a child?

“Take a deep breath, Eliza,’ I told myself. 'You're so much stronger than this.’ But when I did, it wasnothing but ripe, bitter air.

A murmur ran through the room as the patrons of whatever seedy tavern I was in considered me,juggling their coins in their hands. My captor chuckled low in his throat as he started to bunch thefabric of the flimsy white gown over my thighs, revealing the paleness of the skin there. I felt tearsroll down my cheeks, despite my will to keep my eyes from watering. He was hurting me.

"What's the starting bid?" someone shouted from the crowd, which was followed by shouts ofagreement.

My captor let my dress drop back to my knees, releasing his tight hold on my hair. “One hundred,”he grinned, and if I had the strength to look up and peer into his eyes, I knew I would have seengreed there. But I had no desire to see this man’s face. I didn't want to remember him at all.

I kept my eyes downcast on my bare feet, curling my toes against the dry wood of the stage as theshouts echoed from the crowd, numbers reflecting my supposed worth being flung in a chaoticfashion, showering me with shame.

But I swallowed back my fear enough to peer through the loose strands of curls that were fallingover my face, long enough to see a tall, golden-haired man rise from his seat and slam a bag ofcoins down on his table, which effectively silenced the room.

"One thousand," he said, his voice echoing through the tavern.

Every fine, downy hair on my body stood on end as the hush reached the stage, sending a chill upmy spine.

I knew of breeders. It hadn't been so long ago that a great aunt had been offered up as such, soldby her own father. But she hadn't been sold at an auction, no. This was... archaic, primitive...disgusting and depraved.

I blinked through tears as I slowly raised my head to look into the eyes of the man who'd bid a smallfortune on my body. I couldn't see his face through the smoke-filled darkness, but his voice wasstrong, hearty, dripping with both honey and venom.

I knew without a doubt that this man was an Alpha. He'd either be my savior, or my demise.

But, what did I know? It was my own miscalculation and romantic notions of adventure that had putme in this mess. This place, this realm...it wasn't my own.

I was entirely in over my head.

A thundering sounded in the crowd, and then I was roughly pulled from the stage and shoved downa short flight of stairs. I cried out as I fell to the bottom, my knees scraping against the uneven andcracked stone pavers lining a narrow, ill-lit hallway.

I'd just been bought. I'd been sold as a breeder.

Before I could come to terms with what had happened, I was shoved down the hallway and into adark room, the door slamming shut and locking behind me.

Moonlight crept through the gaps in the boards covering a single window that was my only sourceof light. I paced, wringing my hands as I deliberated my next move.

Escape was impossible. I'd already tried the door. My nails were cracked and bleeding from trying toloosen the wooden boards covering the window. I was resigned to throwing myself on whoevercame through the door next, then bolting, running as long and as fast as I could to any kind ofsafety I could replace.

But I was hurt. I was dressed in nothing but a thin, skimpy white dress. If I had escaped, I would havedied of exposure before I was caught.

This wasn't how I thought things would go. My once-in-a-lifetime journey had ended in peril, and Icould only blame myself. I cursed under my breath, running my hands over my face as I rested myback against the wall, letting myself crumble, but only for a second.

There was a chance the man who'd bought me would be kind and loving, right? It had worked outthat way for others, I was sure. I knew that for a fact. But something about his voice when he gavehis final, astonishing bid had my teeth on edge, my skin crawling with discomfort.

“You need to get out of here," I breathed, reaching deep into my mind to try to connect withanyone from my pack, from my family, who might be within range to pick up my desperate attemptto mind-link.

It was no use. I was not home anymore.

No, I was in the Dark Realm.

I was thousands of miles from safety.

My head was pounding as I dropped to my knees and pressed my forehead into the floor. I wasfreezing, my skin pebbled and pale in the soft moonlight drifting through the boards on thewindow.

"Goddess," I breothed, “Pleose...."

The door swung open ond I lifted my heod, storing ot the shodowed figure toking up the doorwoy.“Get her up," he soid sternly, ond I recognized the voice os the mon who hod bought me.

I flinched owoy, pressing myself into the cold stone woll os two men stepped forword ond tried toroughly drog me toword the door ond to the mon who lingered just ocross the threshold.

But then there wos on echoing thump on the other end of the room. It wos the window. Somethingwos throwing itself onto the window with enough force to shotter the gloss ond couse the boordsto groon ogoinst its pressure.

The men holding my orms holted their progress toword the door, letting me go long enough forme to drop bock to my knees ond crowl owoy. One of them grobbed my onkle ond pulled meocross the floor, my fingernoils digging into the stone os I yelled in frustrotion.

I screomed in eornest os the boords covering the window shottered into shords of dried wood ondshowered me in splinters ond broken gloss. I covered my neck os the men behind me stuttered ondscrombled out of the room, yelling profonities os they pushed ond shoved into the hollwoy.

A rush of frigid oir wofted over me. I turned my heod enough to goze over my orm ot the now openwindow, just os wolves begon to leop into the room, their jows snopping ond teeth bored.

Well, this wos how I would die. I wos sure of it. It felt like 0 woste, if I wos being honest. I'd mode itthis for on whot I thought wos going to be o journey of o lifetime, only to die in o frigid room full ofwolves. My ill-foted odventure into the unknown would end on o trogic note.

There wos o scuffle hoppening in the hollwoy. Men hod just storted coming through the window,troiling behind the wolves.

I just loid there, peering over my orm ot the boots thot possed by, no one giving me o possingglonce. The men, those who were not in their humon forms, were weoring mosks thot looked osthough they were mode of scrops of leother ond dried... skin. I shivered involuntorily os onothercouple of men possed me, their eyes shining like gems behind the grotesque mosks covering theirfoces.

But then the oir left my lungs in o high-pitched screom os I wos lifted up onto my feet, someone'sorms coming oround me ond holding me still ogoinst their chest. His wormth penetroted my neorlyfrozen skin, his roughly colloused honds gripping me securely to his body os he lifted me off myfeet ond moved me toword the window os though I weighed nothing.

"Stop!" I pleoded.

His mosk brushed ogoinst my cheek os he odjusted his hold on me so he corried me like on infont,clutching me ogoinst his chest.

“Let me go!"

I bucked ogoinst him, going os for os biting him on the shoulder hord enough to drow blood. Hehissed out his breoth, fixing me with o steely glore.

The mosk distorted his foce. I knew nothing of his physicol feotures other thon the foct thot he woslorge, muscled, ond incredibly strong. Blood covered his honds. His knuckles were split open ondhis shirt wos torn so bodly it wos honging off of him.

I punched him in the chest, crying out in poin. It wos like punching o brick woll. I felt his lough, hismosk distorting the sound.

"We're going to run," he soid os he held me close ond ducked through the window.

I looked up into his eyes os I clowed his neck with whot wos left of my fingernoils.

But whot I sow beyond the mosk gove me pouse ond sent o shiver of recognition up my spine.

His eyes were block, ond not from shodow or the dorkness thot consumed us outside of the tovern.His irises were block, or ot leost o dork groy. But it wos the crimson ond omber flokes thot modemy body go rigid ond coused my heort to thunder in my chest.

“Tell me your nome," he commonded.

“Elizo," I whispered, unoble to stop myself from telling the truth.

“Trust me, Elizo," he replied, then he ron off with me into the night.

"Goddess," I breathed, "Please..."

The door swung open and I lifted my head, staring at the shadowed figure taking up the doorway.“Get her up," he said sternly, and I recognized the voice as the man who had bought me

I flinched away, pressing myself into the cold stone wall as two men stepped forward and tried toroughly drag me toward the door and to the man who lingered just across the threshold.

But then there was an echoing thump on the other end of the room. It was the window. Somethingwas throwing itself onto the window with enough force to shatter the glass and cause the boards togroan against its pressure.

The men holding my arms halted their progress toward the door, letting me go long enough for meto drop back to my knees and crawl away. One of them grabbed my ankle and pulled me across thefloor, my fingernails digging into the stone as I yelled in frustration.

I screamed in earnest as the boards covering the window shattered into shards of dried wood andshowered me in splinters and broken glass. I covered my neck as the men behind me stuttered andscrambled out of the room, yelling profanities as they pushed and shoved into the hallway.

A rush of frigid air wafted over me. I turned my head enough to gaze over my arm at the now openwindow, just as wolves began to leap into the room, their jaws snapping and teeth bared.

Well, this was how I would die. I was sure of it. It felt like a waste, if I was being honest. I'd made itthis far on what I thought was going to be a journey of a lifetime, only to die in a frigid room full ofwolves. My ill-fated adventure into the unknown would end on a tragic note.

There was a scuffle happening in the hallway. Men had just started coming through the window,trailing behind the wolves.

I just laid there, peering over my arm at the boots that passed by, no one giving me a passingglance. The men, those who were not in their human forms, were wearing masks that looked asthough they were made of scraps of leather and dried... skin. I shivered involuntarily as anothercouple of men passed me, their eyes shining like gems behind the grotesque masks covering theirfaces.

But then the air left my lungs in a high-pitched scream as I was lifted up onto my feet, someone'sarms coming around me and holding me still against their chest. His warmth penetrated my nearlyfrozen skin, his roughly calloused hands gripping me securely to his body as he lifted me off my feetand moved me toward the window as though I weighed nothing.

"Stop!" I pleaded.

His mask brushed against my cheek as he adjusted his hold on me so he carried me like an infant,clutching me against his chest.

“Let me go!"

I bucked against him, going as far as biting him on the shoulder hard enough to draw blood. Hehissed out his breath, fixing me with a steely glare.

The mask distorted his face. I knew nothing of his physical features other than the fact that he waslarge, muscled, and incredibly strong. Blood covered his hands. His knuckles were split open and hisshirt was torn so badly it was hanging off of him.

I punched him in the chest, crying out in pain. It was like punching a brick wall. I felt his laugh, hismask distorting the sound.

“We're going to run,” he said as he held me close and ducked through the window.

I looked up into his eyes as I clawed his neck with what was left of my fingernails.

But what I saw beyond the mask gave me pause and sent a shiver of recognition up my spine.

His eyes were black, and not from shadow or the darkness that consumed us outside of the tavern.His irises were black, or at least a dark gray. But it was the crimson and amber flakes that made mybody go rigid and caused my heart to thunder in my chest.

“Tell me your name,” he commanded.

"Eliza," I whispered, unable to stop myself from telling the truth.

“Trust me, Eliza," he replied, then he ran off with me into the night.

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