The bedroom door shut with a final, echoing click, and Jasmine stood frozen in place.
The room was lavish, almost deceptively so rich velvet drapes, gold-framed mirrors, and a carved four-poster bed dressed in silks. But none of that mattered. Not the gleaming chandelier, not the scent of fresh roses wafting from a crystal vase.
She didn’t care.
All she saw were bars. A gilded cage was still a cage.
She whirled around and ran to the windows, yanking the curtains open. The forest beyond glowed under the amber wash of the setting sun, but the windows wouldn’t budge.
She pressed her hands to the cold glass, searching for locks or hinges. Nothing. It was sealed.
Her heartbeat picked up.
She turned back to the room and began scouring every inch. Behind the armoire, under the bed, inside the wardrobe. Nothing. No secret passage, no hidden doors.
Only a single oak door, the one she’d been forced through, and it was locked tight from the outside.
She clenched her fists, her breath coming fast. "Think, Jasmine. Think."
Her eyes darted to the shadows gathering outside the windows, to the wilderness beyond the glass. And then her heart dropped.
Marro.
She hadn’t even gotten the chance to warn him. She’d left him, left him in the forest with kire, the wolf that had followed them loyally.
What if Alpha Hunter’s wolves found him? What if Kire couldn’t protect him alone?
"No," she whispered, her knees buckling as she slid down to the floor. Her hands clutched her stomach. "I left him. I left him out there."
Tears stung her eyes, and she gasped, trying to control her panic. It spiraled anyway.
What if Marro had tried to follow her?
What if they caught him?
She was in such a lovely room and then she wondered how Marro was.
She wondered what Xaden was going through, what condition he was even in.
She felt her tummy twist.
She wept and was so overwhelmed with exhaustion that she slept off.
She heard a knock at the door that jolted her awake. She scrambled to her feet just as the lock clicked and the door opened. Two maids stepped inside.
Their eyes were downcast, their expressions blank. Between them, they carried a dress. Long, emerald green silk. Fitted bodice. Embroidered in gold thread. Beautiful. And threatening.
"Alpha Hunter requests your presence at dinner," one said softly, offering the gown forward.
"I’m not hungry," Jasmine muttered.
"He said to dress you regardless," the other replied. "He will not like it if you’re late."
Jasmine stared at the gown. The way it shimmered under the candlelight made her stomach twist. She didn’t want to wear it. She didn’t want to look like one of them.
But then her thoughts drifted to Xaden .
She was here for him.
Who knew what hunter would do to him.
If she refused to cooperate, would Hunter harm him?
One wrong misstep could ruin everything.
She took the dress without a word.
The maids helped her change. They brushed her hair, tightened the bodice, slipped gold bangles around her wrists. When they finished, they stepped back, silent as shadows, and opened the door for her to leave.
The halls beyond were colder than she remembered. Long corridors with smooth stone walls and heavy tapestries muffled every footstep.
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: The Alpha's Unwanted Bride