Magic Claimed, page 35

Magic Claimed
Charmaine Ross
Charmaine Ross
© 2022 by Charmaine Ross
All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.
Line edits: Ray Collet
Proof reading: Jen Katemi
Cover design: Charmaine Ross
Blurb
A prophesy that rules me.
A curse that ruins me.
A wolf shifter pack who claim I am theirs.
It wasn’t my choice to be sold to a powerful psychopath by my mother when I was a baby. It wasn’t my choice to be tortured for magic I don’t possess but no-one says no to Esoti and lives.
Except me.
There are worse things than death. Not dying, for one.
In a world ruled by The Six, anyone magical is put to death, shifters are slaves and I am the lowest of the low. Until Alpha wolves Alerick, Jarom and Eike capture me. The thing is, I don’t want to be anyone’s Mate, or toy, or plaything.
They insist I’m anything but human, mastering my body and unleashing ancient magic hidden deep inside me.
The magic is untamaable. Unpredictable. But it just might give me the one thing I’ve always dreamed about—revenge.
Excerpt
I forced open eyes that wanted to stay closed, and the world morphed around me. Colors were sharper, more intense, but the angle was wrong. Sounds filtered through my confusion; the snap of a log in the fire, loud as a shot. Scents mingled in the air. There was the spice and fresh earth scent that was Jarom, but there were two other tantalizing, rich scents. One was smoke and whiskey. Eike. The other was oak and cinnamon. Alerick. How I knew it was them, I couldn’t fathom, but then I didn’t care as three enormous wolves surrounded me.
There was Jarom’s dark brown wolf I recognized, but the wolf next to him was light gray shot through with silver, and the last was a massive jet black wolf, a head taller than both the others. Alpha.
The weight of magic pushed against the back of my head, taking me to my belly. My belly? I looked down to see two huge white paws in front of me. I scrambled backwards, and the paws slipped over the floor. I couldn’t control my legs and then I was aware that I had four. All four feet scrambled for purchase on the floor, finding none. Sharp sounding yips bounced off the walls. My yips. My whines. I tried to talk, to ask what the hell was going on, what the hell they’d done to me. But no words came out because I had a snout full of sharp teeth and a jaw that couldn’t form sentient speech.
A flash of magic and the sharp tang of ozone pricked my senses and the three wolves turned into three naked men. Jarom, Eike and Alerick stared down at me with a possessive hunger in their eyes that speared my core.
Alerick reached out and grabbed the thick coat of my neck, while Eike placed a hand on my head and Jarom plowed his fingers through the fur on my back.
“Mate,” Jarom said again, and this time the word was unshakeable.
“Mate. Mine.” Eike spoke, a whisper of wonder and a promise of something warm and wonderful in his tone. He looked at me with reverence. As though I was the greatest marvel of his life.
My gaze swung to Alerick. His cruel, sensual lips parted and his possessive words shook me to my core. “Beautiful. Mate. Ours.”
There was a sense of completeness. A fullness within my soul that couldn’t be denied no matter how much I wanted to deny it. No matter how much I might wish this to be a nightmare, I knew this was undeniably true.
I’d shifted into a wolf, and Jarom’s question had been answered in no uncertain terms. I was his Mate and Eike’s.
And the Alpha’s Mate as well.
Contents
1. Chapter One
2. Chapter Two
3. Chapter Three
4. Chapter Four
5. Chapter Five
6. Chapter Six
7. Chapter Seven
8. Chapter Eight
9. Chapter Nine
10. Chapter Ten
11. Chapter Eleven
12. Chapter Twelve
13. Chapter Thirteen
14. Chapter Fourteen
15. Chapter Fifteen
16. Chapter Sixteen
17. Chapter Seventeen
18. Chapter Eighteen
19. Chapter Nineteen
20. Chapter Twenty
21. Chapter Twenty-One
22. Chapter Twenty-Two
23. Chapter Twenty-Three
24. Chapter Twenty-Four
25. Chapter Twenty-Five
26. Chapter Twenty-Six
27. Chapter Twenty-Seven
28. Chapter Twenty-Eight
29. Chapter Twenty-Nine
30. Chapter Thirty
31. Chapter Thirty-One
32. Chapter Thirty-Two
33. Chapter Thirty-Three
Chapter One
Cook’s jowls wobbled as she stabbed me with a stare that might burn if I cared what she said. Maybe it would have if not for the shadow of ingrained fear in the depths of her eyes as she slid the tray across, piled with more food than I usually ate in a month. “Take this to his Lordship and take care not to drop it, vermin.” She stepped away as though I had a communicable disease and her ample backside hit the workbench behind her. The delicious aroma of Esoti’s dinner teased my nostrils.
Esoti—my master, my ruler, the insane immortal lord of this land. Esoti my jailer. My torturer. I would kill him if I could and leave the bones for the wolves.
“Get out of my kitchen lest I have to scrub the stones you stand on.” She wiped her hands on the cloth tucked into the band of the apron tied about the dent in her waist that disappeared between her first and second stomach rolls. Her gaze flicked to the door behind me, fast and nervous, willing me out.
I gave her a hard stare, satisfied when her face paled, then hefted the tray. Scullery maids darted out of my way as I stepped into the dark hallway that would take me from the kitchen to my master. I didn’t give them a backward glance as I walked from the kitchens through the castle’s underground labyrinth. Firelight danced across rough stone walls that held light, but no warmth.
It didn’t matter what I might or might not say. Prejudice isn’t based on fact or logic. It was far too insidious for that. Instead, it relied on years of decayed judgments based on unjustified opinions of circumstances that had happened to nameless ancestors who’d passed to their next life generations ago.
Lucky dogs.
My fate was not as easy as death. No. My fate hinged on a series of events that had happened long ago. A fate that kept me a prisoner of time with a body that could never die no matter how much I might wish it.
Fate labeled me a pariah while I’d been too young to know better. An anomaly that nobody understood, and what society didn’t understand, they shunned. It was ironic. From what I could gather of my unfortunate beginnings, magic had shaped me and yet I could no more wield magic than I could stop the sun from rising in the morning and setting at night.
Believe me, I’d tried.
If there was a way to end this nightmare I would have done so long ago.
I rounded a corner and headed for the five flights of stairs that would take me to Esoti’s quarters. Life in this part of the world was filled with stairs and hills. What was once known as the Swiss Alps was now Exertor. The Six has renamed the world when they’d seized power after the Bloodthirsty War a millennia ago. As a member of The Six, Esoti could live anywhere in the world he wanted to, including this fortified castle.
His living quarters were on one entire floor, while I didn’t have a broom closet to sleep in. A being as powerful as Esoti could damn well do whatever he pleased while the lowest lived in the shadows—except when called upon.
My stomach turned to lead as I made myself walk the well-worn path to Esoti’s rooms, wondering what he might do to me this evening. I was his gutter-rat. His vermin. His slave. His beating post when he was angry, or frustrated, or tired, or whenever he felt the urge to lash out.
I was indestructible and he hated anything he couldn’t destroy.
My throat tensed beneath the band of silver that encircled it. My life centered around his every whim; drawing his bath, cleaning his clothes, changing his bed sheets, bringing him meal after meal after meal.
I had no choice.
Then again, few did. Freedom were carefully woven lies manufactured by The Six. Their laws defined this world.
If society saw what I did on a daily basis, perhaps they’d see our all-powerful leaders in a different light, although it wouldn’t matter. They’d follow. There simply wasn’t a choice. The Six were omnipotent, but at least people would know they were being controlled instead of thinking they had choices.
It was easier living a lie.
I passed a guard. He didn’t move a muscle, but his eyes tracked every move I made and his fist tightened on his long-handled axe. I gave him a death stare and smiled when he flinched. That’d teach him to cut off my fingers with that axe. They grew back overnight and ever since he’d kept well away from me.
I made my way up the third flight of stairs and past another guard to where I knew there was a blind
I didn’t expect it. It had been that way since I’d been a young girl. One of my first memories was her smacking my hand away from a bruised apple when I’d been so starved I’d gone through kitchen scraps for food. She’d grabbed my slave collar and sent me flying out of the kitchen shouting that the pigs should be fed before I ever needed to be.
After that, I’d learned quickly to take food from Esoti’s tray when I could or fight the pigs for kitchen scraps at the end of each day. Esoti ate a lot, but had no idea how much food Cook really put on his tray. I gobbled down a few bites. I’m sure I would have died of starvation long before now, but every day I breathed, my eyes opened and I was still a slave despite my best efforts wishing it was anything different. It would go on this way until the day I drew my natural last breath, or so Esoti told me many times.
Why I couldn’t die, I didn’t know. I’d asked once. He’d killed me hour upon hour for three days in a row in every way imaginable until he lost interest and I’d never asked again.
The fires from the sconces on the walls flickered. Golden globes spiraled from the tips of the flames to the ceiling and bubbled along the join where wall met the ceiling and congregated in the corner.
I picked up my pace despite my weary muscles and hurried the rest of the way to Esoti’s personal chambers, knowing he would be agitated if I tarried. I knocked on the door and quietly let myself in. I kept my gaze lowered and waited. I never knew where he wanted me to set the tray and failure to do everything he asked was met with a painful spell. If only I had the magic in me everyone thought I did, life would be very different. Oh, the things I could do to Esoti. Beautiful, torturous things that ended in lots of bloodshed and severed limbs. Those thoughts were the only things that kept me sane.
“On my desk.”
Esoti stared through the window as he sprawled in the chair behind his desk. His full head of salt and pepper hair spiked in all directions. He rubbed the stubble on his cut jaw-line with long, lean fingers that hadn’t seen hard work in millennia. The way he sat, his strong hooked nose was in profile, as were his smooth brow and chiseled cheeks. For such an evil son-of-a-baseless-whore, he was handsome, but I’d learned that evil had no face.
He idly twisted his favorite wand in his dexterous fingers while I set the tray on his desk and stood back, hands clasped behind my back, waiting for my next command. Tonight, the band about my neck felt exceptionally tight.
“You really need to take a bath more often. It’s putting me off my food,” he drawled.
I clenched my teeth so hard my jaw cracked. If I had access to any sort of washing facility, I would. I used the hose they washed down the horses with, but it was the middle of winter and I didn’t want to die of pneumonia. It wasn’t a nice way to go. I knew that from experience.
I dug my fingernails into my palms behind my back as Esoti spun in his chair to face me, his light blue eyes raking my body. The end of his full lip curled in disdain. I knew what I looked like. My face was smeared with dirt. My hair hung in lank strands down my back. The dress I’d found in the rag bin was three sizes too large, but at least it was warm and I used a long scarf to bind it around my middle to stop the hem dragging on the floor.
He placed the wand on the desk and picked up a steaming fresh roll. He plunged two thumbs into the middle, tore it apart, then slathered a chunk of butter over the fluffy insides. My mouth watered as he slowly ate the doughy, buttery goodness. He licked his fingers and regarded me thoughtfully. “I find your presence bothersome.”
My blood turned to sleet. I knew that look and I knew what it meant. If I could run, I would, but the pain from the magical collar he’d put about my neck was far worse than the pain of dying. At least, with death, the pain ended. For a time, at least.
Esoti cut a hunk of steak and chewed it. His lips shone with grease. “I’ve ordered a new wand from Samuel. I want you to retrieve it for me. It’s powerful. I want to test it out on you.”
I flicked a gaze to the window. Rain struck the glass against the inky darkness. As though sensing my trepidation, wind howled and hammered against the pane. My mind whirled. Esoti hadn’t given me a time when he wanted me to return from this task and often liked to keep me guessing so he could punish me when I got it wrong. I wondered if he was in one of those moods. If so, I was in for a long night.
I swallowed heavily and took the chance to speak. “In the morning?” Esoti’s brow lifted. “Master?” I continued. I wished to the seven hells and back he wasn’t my master, but he insisted I call him that. As if his ego needed any more of a boost.
“This is a matter of some urgency. You will go now,” Esoti said. A shadow flashed in the dark depths of his eyes as his gaze raked me over like I was his favorite mystery waiting to be solved. If I knew the answer, I’d gladly give it to him if it meant I’d never have to see his face for another second.
Below the hem of my dress, my bare toes curled on the cold stone and dread made my limbs heavy. I’d be lucky to get back to the castle unscathed in this storm and at this time of night.
I didn’t know why he wanted me to go, but I knew better than to ask. Sometimes he liked to settle in his quarters to his own devices for the evening and he’d forget about me. I counted myself lucky on those evenings. Tonight wouldn’t be one of those.
Samuel was the county’s best wand-maker. Esoti often had him craft numerous wands for himself, as well as for his best sorcerers—humans he deemed worthy of being gifted with his magic.
“That is all.” His eyes were glacial. Until later. My mind supplied the rest of his sentence.
“Yes, Master.” The words were sludge on my tongue when I really wanted to tell him to fuck off. He turned to his meal, and I took it he had finished with me for now. I opened the door to slip through, when he said, “I’ll have that roll you stole.”
I froze, my gaze finding him over my shoulder. He didn’t look at me. Just speared a perfectly cooked carrot and popped it into his mouth. Slowly, I pulled the roll from my pocket and left it on the corner of his desk before hurrying from his quarters.
Tonight I’d pay for that, as well as for the crime of my existence.
Chapter Two
The thing about being despised is that people want nothing to do with you. Those deemed naturally magical are the most loathed of all, thanks to a war I had nothing to do with. The Bloodthirsty War was deemed to be the most ruthless of them all in human history.
I crept along the hallways and down the stairs to the ground floor. A gaggle of humans flounced toward me. I flattened myself against the wall to let them pass, knowing if I didn’t move, they’d knock me over without a second look. They had body mass on their side. They were well fed, while I was nothing but skin and bone.
“Ew. What is that stench?” one of them gasped. As far as I was concerned, I smelled no worse than the horses I often slept with in the stables for warmth.
“Shit stinks, Rosemary. Hold your breath as you pass.” They held their noses as they passed, carefully keeping their eyes off me.
“Watch your fat asses too.” I really should be used to everyone’s treatment of me. I wished I was. I wished I could hold my tongue better than I did, too.
Rosemary gasped, her gaze jumping to me. I smiled, peeling back my lips and revealing all of my teeth. She stumbled and then raced after her friends and disappeared around the corner.
The girls looked to be about my age, as if I knew how old I actually was. By my estimation, I was at least twenty years old. If I could eat more, I’m sure I would have breasts that were bigger than my thumb and skin that was dewy and glowed like those girls. I sighed. No use wishing for something that would never be. Not unless the world drastically changed, and I was more than a mistake of life.












