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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: The Obedient Centipede

The pier gleamed under the oppressive afternoon sun.

But the light never reached them.

They walked in silence, a line of long ears, hands bound to one another. They moved like a centipede—obedient, broken. Eyes fixed on the ground. Surrendered long before reaching their destination.

All except one.

Small. Quick. She trembled, but not with submission. She trembled from cold and adrenaline.

Her eyes took in everything—every knot in the ropes, every shadow cast across the deck, every movement of the guards.

Then, in an instant—too fast to be a conscious choice—something shattered her visual pattern.

Two shadows stretched across the top of the luxury ship waiting for them.

She looked up.

Above, sheltered from the stench of sweat and fear, two men watched the boarding of the "cargo."

One had an open face, almost kind. His gaze swept over the line of slaves with a quiet, sorrowful attentiveness, as if somewhere inside him there was still room for care.

The other was his opposite.

He looked carved from ice. Straight, military posture. Impeccable. His eyes were unreadable. Nothing about him invited closeness; everything demanded distance.

A shiver ran down Lyra's spine.

It wasn't fear. It was the instinct of prey recognizing a predator that doesn't need to hunt to kill.

A presence that didn't ask for attention—it simply took it.

Two young nobles. Two worlds.

Above them, the gentle-faced cousin swallowed hard, unable to look away from the brutality below.

"Should we tell the captain?" His voice shook. "They're tightening the—"

The man of ice didn't even blink.

He turned away with calculated boredom.

"He probably already knows," the protagonist said, his voice cold and pragmatic. "Stay out of it, Elion. This is just life following its course."

Lyra didn't hear the words, but she saw the gesture. The man of ice turned his back.

Just life following its course.

The world moved again. Fists tightened. The line advanced.

Ahead, a large, brutish man shoved those who stumbled. Beside him, a thin man lashed the air with sharp words:

"Move. Quiet. Move."

Fear. Obedience. Absolute silence.

Lyra was pushed toward the rope ladder. One step at a time. The circular opening of the hold waited for her—small. One way in. One way out.

One by one, they were swallowed by darkness. The luxury of the upper deck never touched them.

Below, the air was thick and damp, a mix of sweat, rotting wood, and ancient terror.

Lyra drew her knees to her chest in the dark. Beside her, a young man tried to bite into his own arm to smother his sobs.

Without thinking—driven by a stubbornness she didn't even know she possessed—Lyra leaned closer.

She offered him the last of the water hidden in a small flask.

No gesture was too small there. In the hold, greatness hid in the smallest mercies.

She drank her own thirst so another could swallow his tears.

And as the ship swayed, carrying them away from everything they had ever known, she thought of the man of ice above.

The one who looked straight into hell and decided it was nothing more than "life."

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