~Jada
Seeing this is making me shy away from my initial excitement.
The facility is imposing, a building behind the main office scaling larger than any other. The plaster cladding is an ash grey, the windows tinted dark and reflective. The office is slightly warmer, manicured gardens consumed by small topiary line a gravel footpath up to the main doors. The other buildings are similar, with more windows. But outside the ajar car door, despite the cold atmosphere, birds chatter and cherry blossoms from the drive sweeten the air.
“Inside, we will have your other contract ready for you to sign if you are willing,” Prior says, as I nervously slide out of the car, leaving the plush seats of the SUV behind. “And then we will proceed from there.”
I follow her as she abnormally strides along the gravel in her heels, leading me through the front door.
My assumptions were that this is an office. But there is no reception desk, no manicured lady or short sofas partnered with sleek coffee tables and lush green pot plants. Instead it’s a blank room with charcoal coloured carpet and white wash walls. The room folds to the left into a hallway lined with doors. Prior ignores the doors in front of us, and leads us down the hallway.
“If you want to leave, you can,” Prior tells me, not even bothered to glance over her shoulder to look at me. “Before you sign the contract.”
The flatness of her tone tells me that once this contract is signed, there’s no way out. And that makes me nervous. So much so that the walls seem smaller than they are as she leads me into a square, closed off room with a large one way mirror I can’t see behind. Someone is watching me on the other side. It sets the fine hairs on the back of my neck standing up.
The room only has a sturdy metal plated desk in the middle which reflects the harsh light from above it, sided by two chairs where myself and Prior sit.
I’m cold. An air conditioner smoothly berates my skin with brittle air. I didn’t have time to pack. I didn’t have time to shoulder on a cardigan before I left. Could this moment get any worse?
I surprise myself, waiting patiently for Prior to inform me on what I’m here for. These people won’t be pushed. They have an agenda that they will stick to, whether I press them or not. So I wait, rapping my bitten finger nails on the metal surface as Prior pulls a contract from her briefcase, setting it in front of me with a blue ballpoint pen. This contract is thicker by a few extra papers.
“You can read the fine lines, or I can explain to you how these next few weeks may go,” Prior offers. I swallow nervously, glancing down at the words which jumble up in an utter mess before my eyes. I would much rather hear it from Prior, so I can question her if necessary.
“Go ahead,” I murmur.
Prior glances at the reflective mirror before she starts speaking. “As you know, this is a competition. You will be placed in a sect to compete. There are four sects containing ten different people, who have been selected for the same programme as you. Only two will be offered the opportunity at the end. The eliminated will be escorted to the prisons where they will remain.”
My throat goes uncomfortably dry. I knew that would be my fate regardless, however, the idea of going seems now repulsive. I don’t expect to win, but I also hope that I don’t get sent back. A part of me wants to run away.
“What does the end entail?” I question, my voice impassive and soft. My tact has changed. I’m simply curious and slightly anxious.
“Working for Alpha Kael, of course. Ever heard of Silents?”
I freeze. I have heard of Silents, however, I never believed in them. Sure, we never heard much from Kael, but believing he has a sect of Silent’s that defend him, that obey his every wish willingly, seems absurd. Girls back at the institute used to gossip, saying they had seen them sneaking around, slinking through the shadows. Some would whisper that they knew one personally, or perhaps their long distance boyfriend was one. I always rolled my eyes and turned my head the other way.
Sitting here, staring at Prior’s steely eyes, there’s no joke. There’s no lie. And when I glance down at the contract, I see the Alpha’s name, and the word Silent. An offering...for me to become one.
“What does being a Silent entail?” I ask. My voice is hoarse, so I clear my throat. The sound rings loudly, shocking me into a freezing reality. What have I gotten into?
Prior gives me a tight smile, but I see some kind of sympathy there. Perhaps I should regret signing the first contract. Perhaps I should have pushed away. But no, I shouldn’t have. Otherwise I would be living a life as a prison wardens slave. Perhaps I could have escaped, but where would I go? I have nothing in my life anymore. Nothing but this opportunity, with a thin slice of success at the end.
“You’ll find that out later. It’s not something you can be informed of, but something you find out,” she tells me, to which I strongly refrain from rolling my eyes. I should have seen that coming. I’m not sure how keen I am to find it out. I would much rather know with certainty what I’m getting into.
“How does the competition work?” I ask, fingertips smearing across the metal table, which was once immaculate. “Are there judges?”
“Kael will make the final decisions, since they are his Silents. However, he has many trusted associates who he may consult in if necessary. Those who inform and train you also have a say, although it’s minor,” Prior tells me. Hearing the word training has the compression in my chest easing.
I’m not going in this blind. Hopefully.
“Explain the process to me.”
Prior considers my uneasy demand. “You’ll train, with your sect. And compete against them. If you make it far enough, you can start competing against the other sects. Remember, there are only two winners.”
I so badly want to beg her for more information. What will I be doing as a Silent? Will I even want to be one in the end? I’ve heard almost nothing about Kael other than whispered rumours and the uncommon television appearance, which would leave more questions than answers. Sure I snuck around the halls back at the institute at night, but being an assassin sounds unreasonable.
“And what happens if I’m eliminated? Or anyone else?” I question. “Is that it? It’s all over?”
Prior seems grim. “You’ll be sent to you initial arrangements. Since no university or secondary school selected you for their programme, you’ll be sent on default to the prisons. A warden will assign you from there.”
I already knew this, I just wanted to hear it from someone else. I need to win this, or at least try to. Maybe then I’ll have a chance to escape, or at least lead a life above ground.
Prior decides she had enough talking for the day, and with anticipation and fear in my stomach, I sign away at the contract, understanding that from here out, there’s nothing that I can do. She takes the paper, nods at the reflective mirror and tucks it into her briefcase. It’s a sign of finality. My life previously is over.
“I’ll take you to your room. You’ll be living on the same floor as a few of the others in your sect. We advise staying in your room for tonight, your dinner will be brought up to you. We believe it helps those settle in if they have time to themselves,” Prior explains, leading me out of the enclosed room back into the hallway.
She continues down the corridor, and out a glass door at the end. We walk a small gravel path to another building, which she pops open, leading me inside.
The main floor has a kitchen and dining area that reminds me of where I used to live. However, it’s much more modern and I can practically see my reflection in the polished linoleum floor. I have hardly enough time to delight in the commodities I would get my hands on tomorrow, before Prior whisked me up winding stairs.
The carpet in the hallway is a dark maroon spotted with navy blue print. The door we stroll past are made of solid dark wood, hopefully blocking out enough sound for me to get sleep tonight. That doesn’t seem like an issue, though, considering the fact that I can hear my own footsteps on the plush carpet.
Prior finds my room and ushers me in, placing a key in my palm.
It’s not significant. In fact, it’s almost identical to what I had at the institute. A single bed with a metal frame pressed against the wall, white linen sheets pulled over; crisp and precise. A mahanhony bedside table hugs the beds side, a chest of drawers to match. It’s all very basic, I notice, as I brush my fingers through the thick dust that rests upon the surface of my desk, the three floating shelves above it sharing a similar aesthetic.
“The last student here was the first to be eliminated last round,” Prior tells me. “Thought you might like to know.”
Great.
“Report to the dining room by sunrise tomorrow. We removed the curtains off your window so you won’t sleep in. Good luck,” she tells me, before she shuts the door behind her.
I stand in the middle of the room, uncomfortable. I’m not sure how much I like it here, and it’s only the first day. And I have so much left to know. What my schedule is, what the training entails. I’m walking in blind, which was what I was most afraid of.
Falling back a few steps, I sit on my bed. What have a I done?
I can’t go back.
~JadaI didn’t sleep easy that night.
~JadaI wasn’t aware we would be meeting the Alpha so early.
~JadaEven if I wanted to talk, I couldn’t. Fright has seized my voice.
~JadaThe next day, no one spoke.
~Jada“There has to be a mistake.”
~JadaI startle so hard, whoever is in the other end of that voice loses their grip on me.
~JadaFinding an excuse for why my face is cut and bruised isn’t coming to my mind as easily as I had hoped.A first aid kit I had found underneath the bed is a blessing. A smear of antiseptic cream and a plaster strapped over wound is all I can do. The bruises, which surround both my eyes, and part of my forehead, a dark mess of blue and purple, have no hope of being hidden. And at this point, no hope of being explained.Naturally, at breakfast, it was Parker who pointed it out.“Someone is desperate to win this competition,” he say
~JadaI have no idea how to respond.There’s no flinch in his gaze. No sudden smile to express his joke. No reprieve for the increasing silence, heavy with expectation. He simply stares, those dark eyes slightly narrowed. This must be how he interrogates information out of people. I feel as though I’m about to spill every secret I have ever kept. Even the most mundane kind.I tread carefully. “I have no doubt you’re already aware of any secret that I might have.”If he is offended by my tone, he makes no mention of it. The impassive
~JadaTwo months later.I love our new home.It took some time to be built exactly how Kael and I wanted it, but I’m glad we waited. It’s traditional, yet fits in with what Kael and I both love the most. What I believe makes it so special is it is right in the outdoors, rather than in a stuffy city. Being underneath the shade of trees, a garden right outside to grow things in is like medicine.Kael and I decided it would be best to leave the Discipline Pack after he gave his title to a friend of his who he has always trusted, Carson. Kael wanted to put distance between him and his old life, and as someone who has always wanted to travel, I couldn’t be happier.
~JadaI don’t think I want to be apart of their family.Kara sweeps back to her seat, motioning for me to sit on a vacant one also. With my eye on Kael, I sit next to him, wishing I hadn’t walked in on their conversation. Now they are distracted by me, and aren’t going to finish their conversation. I wanted to know more about the Sinful manipulation thing.“I’m so happy Kael has a mate. Especially one as beautiful as you. I’m sure you two will treat each other well,” she says softly. There’s a flicker of sadness in her eyes as she says that, which Kael seems to notice also, as he shifts uncomfortably in his seat.Kara is so sweet and so stunn
~JadaIt was almost like looking in a mirror.When have the same green eyes, the same hair. It’s so jarring, for a moment I’m stunned, stumbling back a few steps as I eye her skeptically. There is no denying I’m related to her, and that she is the woman in my nightmares who raised me, who hid me from Kael’s father’s power, and was supposedly sent to the prisons where she was executed privately, along with my father.Yet, here she is, standing in front of me as if all the grief I spent dealing with in my childhood was all for nothing. Did Axel know my mother was alive all this time, and didn’t tell me? I’m not sure why I’m questioning his morals now…
~JadaIt’s clear how bothered Kael is that he can’t detain Axel.We all sit in one room, Axel on one side of the table, myself and Kael on the other. He looks at us, cocky and entitled, knowing there is nothing we can do but listen and negotiate with him until he gives us the information we need. Kael is fuming beside me, quietly calculating his next move. At least no one else knows with this exchange.“Well, aren’t you going to ask me where she is?” He questions, leaning comfortably back in his seat. It bothers me how calm he is about this, knowing he has a chance of getting out of here alive. I want to wrap my hands around his neck for what he tried doing to me.
~JadaAt first, I didn’t know if he was serious.A half smile slipped onto my face as I readied myself to turn him down. To let him know this isn’t me admitting to him that I love him, and want to be with him over Kael. However, it doesn’t seem that that idea was flirting with his mind, as an almost sinister expression moves across his face. I freeze, realising this might not be as innocent as I first assumed.“I just thought we could talk is all. I would like to fix things,” I murmur, leaning he palms of my hands against the office desk. Axel takes a few steps forward, folding his arms over his chest. In that moment, I looked into his eyes and felt genuine fear.
~JadaI’m not tired, even as we return back to our room.Kael peels his jacket off while I sit on the edge of the bed, pulling my shoes off my feet. My eyes linger on Kael’s body as he tugs his shirt off, tossing it away. I’m not sure what intrigued me so much about the way he looks with the light reflecting through the window, the smooth, buttery light casting shadows over his already perfect abdomen.Something within me flutters, heat moving down from my stomach to between my legs. It’s a feeling that makes a blush reach my cheeks, which I turn away to conceal. Why am I suddenly feeling this way just by him taking his shirt off.“I’m hoping we ca
~JadaIt feels good to have no worries.Kael and I had a swim in the sea and a walk down the beach as the sun began to set. As dusk falls me, we moved to a restaurant on the beach. It’s surprisingly busy here, people laughing and talking amongst each other as they drink and eat. Everything here feels so calm, the people enjoying themselves with no worries on their shoulders.Naturally, everyone stares blatantly at Kael, whispering between each other as they try to decipher whether Kael is actually the Alpha of the Discipline Pack or not. Luckily, no one comes up to him to ruin our meal.“This place is so nice,” I comment once Kael and I got our drinks. He sits oppos
~JadaKael never left my room that night.We sat up all night, talking to each other about almost everything that we could. By the time dawn flooded through the windows, it was too late for us to get any sleep. I don’t even want to get up. I just want to lie next to my mate, still naked, my head resting on his chest while he plays with my hair.“Can we just stay in bed all day?” I ask. I don’t think I want to face the reality of our lives yet. I don’t want to see Blue, I don’t want to deal with the fact Kael might still pursue his mother against both her and Sinful’s wishes. It’s all so much.Kael loosens a breath, rolling over to look over m
~JadaI feel guilty seeming so relieved.Sinful lets me go, and I fall into Kael’s arms. When I look up at him, he smiles down at me, as if he isn’t regretful, however, I know It can’t have been easy to completely disregard ever being able to commit to finding his mother again. I’m going to have to make it up to him, however, I doubt anything will come close to that.“Noble of you, Kael,” Sinful says, and for a moment, when I turn back around to glance at him, I see a hint of sadness. Maybe it’s because he knows his mate would never do the same for him. As much as I despise him, that even makes me feel somewhat sad.